Mystery at Camp Survival Audiobook By Gertrude Chandler Warner cover art

Mystery at Camp Survival

The Boxcar Children Mysteries, Book 154

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Mystery at Camp Survival

By: Gertrude Chandler Warner
Narrated by: Aimee Lilly
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About this listen

The Boxcar Children know how much work it takes to live in the wilderness. They also know how much fun it can be! The children love exploring and learning new things at a primitive skills summer camp. But when strange things start happening around the camp, they need to use another of their favorite skills - mystery solving!

©2020 Gertrude Chandler Warner (P)2020 Oasis Audio
Action & Adventure Fiction Mystery Camp Survival
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What listeners say about Mystery at Camp Survival

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Overall I think your performance was great because I love camping in the woods you really strike my imagination so, good job.

I really really like this trip was about camping in the woods and I have downloaded every single one of your stories on my phone I am 7 years old and I live on 208 At morning side way it's a little bit scary to read at night but I really really really like it!

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Great Book

It is a extremely exciting book I really like the mystery I have listened to it a lot but it is always exciting

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  • Overall
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Well this is why I like the boxcar children😍😍😍😍😍

I love this well my brother kind of actually does not like this that much but I love it love it love it love it love it I guess this is goodbye😍😍😍😍🧐

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Amazing great story

I love the mystery and how they had so much fun solving it I recommend this story everyone

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It’s not exactly the original boxcar children

On the cool side:
It teaches some survival knowledge which not many kid’s books do.

On the other side of the coin:
First, mushroom hunting is dangerous for the untrained. There’s a saying that you can be an old mushroom hunter or a bold mushroom hunter but not both.

Kids are impressionable. If a story they like makes something look easy they will probably want to try it. I would have focused on anything but mushrooms or had the counselors stop them from eating dangerous ones ; rather than having them stumble on safe ones.

However my biggest complaint about the newest Boxcar Children stories is the unexplained and unexpected time traveling. How did this family move from around 1930 to 2020 without getting any older?

If you are looking through the stories because you are feeling a nostalgic and wanting to hear something along the lines of the stories that you grew up with, this will likely miss that spot!

On the other hand, if you are looking to get your children to like reading, I can see how modern characters would be easier for today’s kids to relate to. And kids still like stories with kids who are left unsupervised.

Still it would help to differentiate the stories if the new authors would take credit in some way. Saying that this is by the original author with no caveats is a little confusing and misleading.

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