Marcel the Shell is based on a series of Youtube shorts that follow Marcel the Shell on its daily adventures and allows us to see what it's like to be a shell. In this story of The Most Surprised I've Ever Been, we see Marcel going about his day, walking his piece of lint-Allen (Al for short), when all of a sudden, Marcel gets thrown into the air for a new adventure all the way across the room.
In this story, what I really appreciated was the language used throughout the story. If you have seen the videos, you know Marcel the Shell has a quirky little voice that can be really fun to incorporate in reading it aloud. And while the humor stayed true to the original videos, it was simplistic enough to be understood by a child, but equally as enjoyable for an adult to read. Additionally, I liked how Slate chooses to describe Marcel's journey as "surprising" rather than scary. From my perspective, the situation of being thrown in the air would appear startling to me, but Jenny Slate takes the opportunity to make this a surprising adventure that Marcel goes through to experience life from a new point of view, which, I am not sure if children comprehend, but perhaps it may allow them to maybe not be so afraid of new or unexpected situations.
In this story I find the illustrations to be quite interesting. The illustrator switches between a view of Marcel and Marcel's point of view. And I think its helpful to have along with the text, because the reader I being told the story by Marcel, so I like that we get the perspective as we would see a little shell in the air. But by getting illustrations from Marcel's point of view we get a better understanding of exactly what the shell sees as well as Marcel's thought process as he goes through this phase of discovery and interpretation of the foreign things around the house.