her lover to be killed by a pack of wild donkeys
The flashbacks retell the story of Stanley's great-great-grandfather as well as the history of Camp Green Lake, with Kissin' Kate Barlow and Sam the onion man.
The Warden was in charge of Camp Green Lake
because its not a camp its a junliele center
the title is holes because that's what the boys in camp green lake do everyday, and anoher reason the boys dig holes is because there is a treasure hidden under the dried lake (the treasure is buried by the outlaw kissin kate barlow , she robbed every bank from Texas to Houston)
Camp Green Lake is a deserted place with no shade and nothing surrounding it.
Kate barlow
He realizes that she lived in Camp Green Lake and she kissed everyone of her victims after she killed them. And that she robbed Stanley's great-great grandfather
The flashbacks retell the story of Stanley's great-great-grandfather as well as the history of Camp Green Lake, with Kissin' Kate Barlow and Sam the onion man.
Barlow girl and Jeremy camp <<< OWL CITY>>>
Haleigh Trickett. I went to high school with her.
The Warden was in charge of Camp Green Lake
According to Sachar he began thinking about a dried up lake in Texas called Green Lake and started writing about Camp Green Lake. He states, " I suppose the initial inspiration for writing about the camp came from the heat of summers in Texas. At the time I began the book we had just returned from the relative coolness of a vacation in Maine to the Texas summer."
because its not a camp its a junliele center
At the end of the story,when Stanley got out of Camp Green Lake
Camp Green Lake in Texas is not located in a desert.
the title is holes because that's what the boys in camp green lake do everyday, and anoher reason the boys dig holes is because there is a treasure hidden under the dried lake (the treasure is buried by the outlaw kissin kate barlow , she robbed every bank from Texas to Houston)
Yes, Stanley Yelnats is sent to Camp Green Lake as a punishment for a crime he did not commit in the book "Holes" by Louis Sachar.