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Summer reading series: Leaving behind life in DC for a family camp in the woods

April 26, 2026 | Author Carolyn Parkhurst discusses her new novel 'Harmony' (海角精品黑料's Rachel Nania)

WASHINGTON 鈥斅犫淗ow bad would things have to be for me to say, 鈥榊ou know what? Forget it. I鈥檓 just going to change everything.鈥欌

That was the question author posed just before sitting down to write her latest novel, 鈥.鈥

The book, released Aug. 2, shares some parallels with Parkhurst鈥檚 life. Both Parkhurst and the fictional Hammond family live in D.C., and both have a child with an autism spectrum disorder.

鈥淚 think that there are a lot of stresses on all parents, but especially on parents of kids with special needs, and it can be very lonely and isolating,鈥 Parkhurst said.

鈥淪o I really wanted to write about the day-to-day struggles and put the reader inside that experience.鈥

Tired of searching for answers that don鈥檛 seem to exist in the daily grind of Washington, the Hammonds (mom, dad and two daughters) pack up their life and move to the woods of New Hampshire. It鈥檚 there where they enroll in Camp Harmony, a camp for families with special needs children, run by behavior guru Scott Bean.

鈥淲hen you meet someone who says they can help you, I think that [parents who have children with special needs] are more vulnerable than other parents might be to that kind of promise,鈥 Parkhurst said about the Hammond鈥檚 desperate and drastic move.

At first, Parkhurst describes Bean as a charismatic character whose perspectives on life make sense on a very basic level 鈥 that modern life is over stimulating and driven by digital devices.

鈥淚 think a lot of people think that getting back to nature is not such a bad thing,鈥 Parkhurst said.

As the story progresses, Bean becomes more controlling and less stable, and suspense builds. 鈥淗armony鈥 shows just how far families are willing to go to bring peace to their everyday trials.

Parkhurst says while the book is meant to be an entertaining read, it also carries an underlying message to parents with similar family dynamics.

鈥淎 lot of the impulse for writing the book came out of that. My experiences with raising [my son] have been filled with unexpected challenges, and some unexpected rewards too, and I hadn鈥檛 seen that reflected before in a lot of books or popular culture,鈥 she said.

Carolyn Parkhurst will be reading from her latest novel, 鈥淗armony,鈥 Saturday, Aug. 6 at at 6 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.

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