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Fish Girl: A Graphic Novel

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Who is Fish Girl?
What is Fish Girl?


She lives in a tank in a boardwalk aquarium. She is the main attraction, though visitors never get more than a glimpse of her.

She has a tail. She can't walk. She can't speak.

But she can make friends with Livia, an ordinary girl, and yearn for a life that includes yoga and pizza. She can grow stronger and braver. With determination, a touch of magic, and the help of a loyal octopus, she can do anything.

186 pages, Hardcover

First published March 7, 2017

36 people are currently reading
2082 people want to read

About the author

Donna Jo Napoli

138 books1,112 followers
Donna Jo Napoli is both a linguist and a writer of children's and YA fiction. She loves to garden and bake bread, and even dreams of moving to the woods and becoming a naturalist.

At various times her house and yard have been filled with dogs, cats, birds, and rabbits. For thirteen years she had a cat named Taxi, and liked to go outside and call, "Taxi!" to make the neighbors wonder. But dear dear Taxi died in 2009.

She has five children, seven grandchildren, and currently lives outside Philadelphia. She received her BA in mathematics in 1970 and her Ph.D. in Romance Languages and Literatures in 1973, both from Harvard University, then did a postdoctoral year in Linguistics at MIT. She has since taught linguistics at Smith College, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Georgetown University, the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and Swarthmore College. It was at UM that she earned tenure (in 1981) and became a full professor (in 1984). She has held visiting positions at the University of Queensland (Australia), the University of Geneva (Switzerland), Capital Normal University of Beijing (China), the University of Newcastle (UK), the University of Venice at Ca' Foscari (Italy), and the Siena School for the Liberal Arts (Italy) as well as lectured at the University of Sydney (Australia), Macquarie University (Australia), the University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa), and the University of Stellenbosch (South Africa) and held a fellowship at Trinity College Dublin. In the area of linguistics she has authored, coauthored, edited, or coedited 17 books, ranging from theoretical linguistics to practical matters in language structure and use, including matters of interest to d/Deaf people. She has held grants and fellowships from numerous sources, including the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Mellon Foundation, the Sloan Foundation.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 549 reviews
Profile Image for Calista.
5,432 reviews31.3k followers
September 29, 2018
I’m not sure how I really feel about this book. I think I need to throw up a spoiler warning to speak about it so:

SPOILER Ahead

It’s an interesting tale. I believe this is David’s first graphic novel and he certainly pulled it off well.

We have the example of the little mermaid who was a mermaid that wants to be a human. There is precedent. The funny thing is that most children seem to want to be mermaids or something else. This Fish Girl is a mermaid and she doesn’t seem to desire to be human, she simply desires to be free. In the end, she is completely human and she can’t go back. Maybe this is saying as we step into ourselves and stand up, we have to give something up. There are sacrifices needed to take our shackles off. I feel like he is speaking of growing up and getting out of our parents house and into our lives.

Fish Girl lives in an aquarium with some man calling himself Neptune. He has the girl convinced he is THE Neptune. She does find out he uses machines to do the things she thought we his power of the seas. The man is simply trying to pay bills and he is providing for the Fish Girl while also limiting her experience of life.

The girl gets out of the tank at night. She becomes more bold and eventually she finds out she has legs. When she gets back in the water, her tail comes back. At least until the end, when she gets her legs for the last time. She tries to go back in the water and her tail doesn’t come back. She can not ever go back to her home in the ocean. She has a best friend of an Octopus who seems to be able to change sizes and I wonder if he is the real Neptune??? The octopus must go back to the ocean and the girl finds a human family. We assume she is not going to be put in the foster home system, because that would be cruel after what she did.

The artwork is lovely in the giant building of an aquarium. The building must have been reinforced somehow to how that much weight. There was wonder in the story and the story has something to say. I go back and forth between 3 and 4 stars. After discussing it, I still don’t know how I feel. I thought the setting and characters were good and a great seed of an idea for the story. I thought it was a good story, but I don’t have a fully positive feeling after the story either and maybe that’s ok. Not all stories are to lift us up. This story left me feeling sad and unsatisfied over the story I think. THat is why I’m at 3 stars. I somehow feel unsatisfied.

I love David Wiesner as a storyteller. I guess this has to do with where I’m at this moment. The story does ask questions and provokes thought, so it does its job. It’s a story on in the middle on.
Profile Image for Dave Schaafsma.
Author 6 books32.1k followers
June 15, 2018
Fish Girl joins the talents of popular novelist Donna Jo Napoli and popular children’s picture book maker David Weisner. Neither had done graphic novels before, but clearly Napoli is as established a storyteller as Weisner is an illustrator. I think it’s okay on a kind of basic level, with a pretty bland theme of empowerment for the Fish Girl, who finally gets to stand (literally) on her own. But I have to say it has some creepy elements to it, and maybe it has a good point to make for middle grade girls in this respect. Maybe, too, I should say spoiler alert here since I can’t discuss the story much at all and say anything of significance about it without revealing the plot. So readon at your own risk!

Fish Girl is a mermaid who works (and this is the point, that she works for a living, as child/mermaid labor, with all the other creatures there) for Neptune at his seaside aquarium-for-profit. They’re not rich, but the Fish Girl is for some reason asked not to show herself very clearly to visitors; they look in the aquarium and sometimes think they spot her. I was never sure what the point of this hiding-the-main-feature-of-the-exhibit really is, actually.

Anyway, Fish Girl grows up, trusting Neptune, loving him as he also loves his “treasure” (her; and this is really true, financially, because he makes no money without her cooperation). He’s not her father, but a strong and somewhat overbearing father figure to her. At one point Neptune tells Fish Girl of her origins, as a reward for her working hard one day; when she doesn’t work hard she is ignored by him; he gets very angry when she does not do what he wants, when she violates his rules. Think of King Triton with his trident angrily keeping Ariel from the human world; Neptune’s trident operates as the same symbol here to separate Fish Girl from the human world.

Fish Girl has an octopus for a best friend, and she loves her home, under water in the tank. But one day a girl named Livia sees her and over time befriends her, in secret, until they are angrily discovered by Neptune. But the clandestine friendship continues. And, as with The Little Mermaid, this mermaid Fish Girl suddenly becomes interested in all things human and gradually ventures more and more into the human world; in the evenings she literally goes out, because she finds she can wear human clothes, and . . . uh, she discovers she has legs. There’a big ol’ world out there, she sees, and she wants her piece of it. Cue Mary Tyler Moore music here. "She's gonna make it after all . . ."

So Fish Girl finds that Neptune is not Neptune, but just a guy who has made her and kid visitors of the exhibit think he has mythological powers. "Neptune" has in fact abducted this young girl, binding her legs, and has imprisoned her. She is not a mermaid; she was lied to! The origin story he has told her is a lie! He is using her to make money. Are there echoes here of Pinocchio? Pygmalion? Maybe. Or maybe this is Brothers Grimm mean adult territory.

So if we see this story as a kind of parable for growing up, well, maybe it is okay--girls need to break from their fathers, make their own way, make their own friends; this can be seen as a coming of age story, of empowerment and connecting with friends instead of lovers (as with Ariel). And it's feminist, in the #metoo moment; girls need to break free from domineering men who use them for their own purposes. And it's not a romance, to get free from Dad to marry out of species, as with Little Mermaid, so that's different. And when the aquarium is finally destroyed, by a sudden convenient storm (?!) all the fish and sea animals also become free to live in their natural habitat, so free-to-be-you-and-me is the useful point, I guess; this dude is imprisoning sea creatures for his own profit!

We live in a time of true crime abductions and abuse of young girls by domineering men and this bears real resemblance for me to those stories. So I am glad she is free to live with her friend in the end, or I think that is what we are meant to think will happen, but. . . it feels pretty creepy for a middle grades book. There's no hint of sexual assault here, just to be clear, but the abduction, the lying, the imprisonment: It's got the creep factor here.

But another thing, how can she suddenly can talk in the end? If we see this as a coming of age myth, and this is allegory, well, okay, she "finds her voice," but how does it suddenly happen? Why couldn't she literally speak any time before this? We do see her trying, too. I guess the point is Fish Girl breaking free from her abductor, which frees her to speak and be the person she wants to be, be herself. So I have a few questions, and concerns. I liked the art a lot, of course, very much. But maybe the thing I seem to be objecting to in this book is the very point of it?
Profile Image for Rebecca Shelton.
458 reviews11 followers
February 24, 2017
Review of an ARC.

I'm not sure how appropriate this subject matter is for middle grade readers. Just because the author sugarcoats it into a nice mermaid story doesn't hide the fact that this is about abduction and abuse. On the other hand, it may be a good thing. To show how strong and resilient the human (haha) spirit is. I don't know though, I was pretty angry most of the way through.

Update 12-16-16:
I've had a day to think about this book and my reaction to it. It's not often that a book lingers with me after I read it so when it does I know that it's made an impact. I stand by the fact that I still don't think this is a graphic novel for middle grade readers. The story is about a young mermaid who lives in an independently owned aquarium. The aquarium owner plays Zeus to his visitors. The problem is that Fish Girl believes him and the stories he tells about her origins. Why shouldn't she? He's had her since she was a baby, of course there would be no reason that he would lie to her, right? Unfortunately for him, she begins to unravel the mystery and realizes just how controlling, manipulative and mean he's been to her. Having grown up witnessing several abusive relationships, this book struck a chord with me and I can't unwrap my mind from that aspect of the story to enjoy anything else about it. I'm proud of Fish Girl for escaping and choosing her own life. The outcome for her is a lot better than it is for most children who go through what she's been through.
Profile Image for Charles Lint.
Author 446 books3,993 followers
June 1, 2017
I would have given this five stars but the prose just doesn't sing the way the art does. It's a touch too simplistic. But oh the art is gorgeous. And the narrative hits all the right notes.
Profile Image for Erin Cataldi.
2,538 reviews63 followers
April 10, 2017
As a child I was obsessed with David Wiesner's gorgeously illustrated children's novels (Jumanji, The Polar Express, Zathura, etc.) and as a teenager I was completely taken with Donna Jo Napoli's young adult books, especially since the majority of them were fairy tell retellings. I re-read Sirena (a book about a mermaid coincidentally) soo many times in middle school. When I saw that these two literary power houses had teamed up to write a graphic novel I knew I HAD TO READ IT! Fish Girl is by n means complex, but it's simplicity is wonderful and inspiring. Fish Girl lives in a giant aquarium by the beach and helps Neptune put on a show for the humans who come in from the boardwalk. It's a lonely existence and she only has her octopus and the fish to keep her company, if she's lucky Neptune will tell her a goodnight tale while she gathers coins at the bottom of the tank. One day a little girl sees her, really sees her and nothing is ever the same again. A wonderful quick read. I found it absolutely refreshing and wonderfully drawn.
Profile Image for Sesana.
6,276 reviews329 followers
March 25, 2017
The art is gorgeous, and I love the idea of a mermaid with an octopus for a best friend. But the story just fell flat for me.
Profile Image for Agnė.
790 reviews67 followers
May 20, 2017
I LOVE David Wiesner's picturebooks and Donna Jo Napoli's fairy tale retellings, but this graphic novel is nothing like their previous works (unfortunately).

Wiesner's artwork in Fish Girl is mostly flat and rather boring:


...with the exception of a few spreads, which hint at the illustrator's full potential:




Although the theme of abduction and Stockholm syndrome did capture my attention, the story in Fish Girl is rather simplistic and seems rushed, the dialogue (and monologues) feels unnatural, and the plot is full of holes . Too bad...
Profile Image for Jerry (Rebel With a Massive Media Library).
4,896 reviews87 followers
March 26, 2019
From a young age, I've been fascinated by mermaids. Even though one of my earliest nightmares was about Ursula, I still found those fish people enthralling...and I still do. I even willingly watched the entire series of H2O: Just Add Water; all it took was a television grid listing to make me want to check it out.

So, as you'd expect, something like this is right up my alley. Did I enjoy it? Yes; it felt like a Disney Channel Original Movie. The artwork was great, and the story was touching.
Profile Image for MaryLibrarianOH.
1,965 reviews26 followers
March 15, 2017
There is no question that David Wiesner is an amazing artist. Here he joins forces with Donna Jo Napoli for a tale of a mermaid who lives in an aquarium and makes a human friend for the first time. Overall, the story is interesting and the interactions between Fish Girl the mermaid, Livia the human girl, and Neptune the aquarium owner move the plot along. I didn't feel that there was enough back story to explain how Neptune had come to have Fish Girl for his show and the ocean's storm also felt a little out of left field.

Still fans of Roller Girl and Raina Telgemeier will like this new graphic novel that comes out in March.

Review based from reading advanced copy.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for La Coccinelle.
2,259 reviews3,568 followers
November 22, 2017
This is a nicely illustrated graphic novel with a sort of fairy tale flair. At first glance, one might think that The Little Mermaid would be the obvious tie-in. But I actually saw more similarities with Disney's Tangled, a "Rapunzel" story. Poor Fish Girl (she doesn't even have a proper name at the beginning of the story) has a bad case of Stockholm Syndrome. She's kept in a fanciful aquarium on a boardwalk in an old house that's been converted to display all sorts of marine life. Neptune is her protector... at least at first. But as Fish Girl starts to understand the outside world, she starts to wonder if her protector is really that... or if he's her captor.

The illustrations were really quite lovely, especially when it came to Fish Girl herself. She's realistically drawn and quite pretty, and though she spends much of the book technically naked, she's always strategically covered by her fish friends (making this book completely suitable for younger readers). I liked the whole idea of the house converted into an aquarium; the way it was displayed on the pages was well done. Fish Girl's discovery of the outside world, including things like pizza and yoga, was touching. I really felt for her, and I wanted her to do well as she explored a new side of her life. Despite being naive, she was actually pretty smart... which is refreshing in a world of so many clueless heroines. I was, however, a little confused for the first few pages as I tried to figure out who was telling the story. I'm not sure if that was intentional or not, but I found it a little frustrating. Once I figured it out, though, it was smooth sailing for the rest of the book.

The plot is a little on the light side, and you do have to suspend disbelief a little to go with the events at the climax (I mean, even more than believing mermaids really exist). But, overall, this is a cute, quick read that would probably appeal to fans of graphic novels as well as fairy tales.

Read this review on my blog.
Profile Image for Colona Public Library.
1,062 reviews28 followers
May 9, 2017
I've been thinking about this book even after I finished reading it. This is a story about a mermaid who is the secret main attraction in a aquarium, Her mystery is what keeps the costumers coming back to try and find her. Her closest friend and guardian is an octopus, until a girl spots her and says she is beautiful and makes friends with her quickly. The mermaids friend starts to question why she is treated the way she is and wonders how Neptune does his act. The mermaid has only ever know Neptune as a god so when she finds out he has been manipulating her she questions her freedom and who she can trust. Soon she finds out she has some new legs to stand on and wants to escape. The art in this book is also gorgeous! You really lose yourself when you are reading this story. ~Ashley

This book is really powerful to me because this mermaid was lied to and manipulated all her life, she is trapped in a house aquarium all her life, no one is allowed to see her (only briefly to make money), and this is the only life she's ever know until she makes a connection with a true friend does she start to question her treatment. Neptune is no god and she now is growing more confident and working hard to leave. It's not easy having a controlling figure in your life (especially a parental one) and leaving these toxic and awful relationships can be hard. I really liked this book a lot because it was kinda a fantasy but also metaphorical. The message at the end is very empowering and is why I've been thinking about it so much. Great story and I highly recommend.
Profile Image for Jason.
3,956 reviews25 followers
June 5, 2018
It's about TIME Wiesner did a proper graphic novel, since he's been making them as picture books for the past twenty-odd years. I loved this so much--the singular location kept the story simple and allowed the creators more time and space to develop the characters, Mira in particular--she really is the whole story. And she is enough for the whole story, too. Her growth from naivete to empowerment is exciting to witness, and should provide inspiration to many young boys and girls who are struggling to find their own voices. Most interesting is the character of Neptune, whose behavior is never excused but who is also presented as a broken man who ends up hurting others out of his brokenness. He has a genuine love of the things of the sea, but his shallowness doesn't allow him to enjoy them unless he can control them, and that struggle to control is his undoing in the end. I want redemption for him, too, just like I wanted freedom and agency for Mira. And I want these things because of the brilliant portrayal of both characters by the creators.
It goes without saying that the art is incredible. Those of us who grew up well into adulthood with his picture books would have high expectations for the art and it does not disappoint.
I would LOVE to see more of Mira's story, possibly even her return to her people, but that would be a completely different kind of story than this one, so maybe it's best to leave well enough alone. Either way, please keep making graphic novels, David Wiesner!
Profile Image for Nancy Kotkin.
1,405 reviews30 followers
April 15, 2017
Story: 4 stars
Art: 5 stars

Fish Girl is a middle grade graphic novel about a mermaid who is held captive in a boardwalk sideshow by the owner, a former fisherman who impersonates Neptune the King of the Seas to entertain paying audiences. But Fish Girl is the main attraction of the aquarium, and she believes her captor really is Neptune the God. At least at first.

But Fish Girl is clever and observant in her search for truth, freedom, and humanity. She has help along the way by an octopus, who has been her loyal companion since she was a baby, as well as a new female human friend and a magical ocean. Spectacular full-color art.

While Neptune is a manipulative and creepy adult male who is imprisoning a young girl, the fantasy elements make this story a gentle way to introduce this seedier, tragic aspect of life to middle grade readers. The loving friendship between Fish Girl and Octopus is heartwarming and palpable, despite the fact that neither can speak.

I just wish the ending was more conclusive, given the targeted age group and all that Fish Girl has endured.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,149 reviews
March 9, 2017
Oh I loved this! I adore David Wiesner's illustrations, and have just come off of reading aloud many of his books, including my favorites-Flotsam and Sector 7- to a few classes. His incredible sea creatures and octopi take center stage here, along with a mermaid. And speaking of mermaids-Donna Jo Napoli is also an author I like.
I was charmed by this imaginative story and I loved the pictures. Wiesner and Napoli were an inspired pairing and perfect for this book. I'm looking forward to sharing it with others.
Profile Image for Alia.
123 reviews14 followers
March 6, 2017
Pretty big let down for me. The writing and dialogue felt unnatural & the story wasn't super interesting/slightly disturbing. I went in with high hopes (Donna Jo Napoli!!) and came out just meh. It's just okay.
Profile Image for Charles Hatfield.
117 reviews42 followers
June 5, 2025
Wiesner's first graphic novel is an event, of course, but alas not a book on par with his best. His stock in trade is a kind of surrealism, inviting comparison to peers Chris Van Allsburg and Shaun Tan, a mode that invites lingering and contemplation even when Wiesner nods, as he often does, to comics books via sequential panels. His surreal images tend to spread across landscape-format picture book openings; in that form, he often works almost wordlessly, or separates text and image cleanly. What he doesn't do, and until recently relative few picture book artists have, is incorporate hand-drawn lettering within his eerie images. And he doesn't do that here either, despite cleaving to traditional comic book/GN form: pages taller than they are wide (portrait dimension), panels stacked into tiers, dynamic layouts within a traditional grid.

Fish Girl offers relatively few of the spectacular spreads that have been his trademark, for good reason: it's a novel-length story requiring some profluency and momentum, some brisk page-turning. Wiesner has indicated (see his recent interview at The Comics Journal) that he could not fuss over the painted artwork to the same extent as he does for most of his picture books; he had to get the story out, and done. The art is still quite handsome, but it seems to me that it tentatively splits the difference between Wiesner spectacles like FLOTSAM and more convention naturalistic comic book art, and in taking on the quick rhythms and dialogue-driven storytelling of comic books, Wiesner may lose dedicated readers expecting his usual frozen tableaux and insinuating visual wit. But what gets me is that the artwork ought to have been even less Wiesner-like, I think, even more schematized and simplified, to gain real momentum. It's still too stiff. Cartooning, looser, more elastic, would help here. But Wiesner simply isn't a confident cartoonist of human expression and action; his faces are quasi-realistic to the point of grotesqueness, and don't move.

The story, co-authored by Wiesner and Donna Jo Napoli, is also a bit stiff, awkwardly trying to get out from under Wiesner's essentially visual conception (I think he was enamored of the setting, mainly) and develop some characters that click. The text in the book seemed obvious to me; the arc toward friendship between two girls struck me as not quite believable, and the narrative moves seemed sort of... programmed.

And, this is going to sound parochial, but: I don't like the lettering. I mean, I *really* don't like it. It is too obviously machine-generated, too resistant to integration with the rest of the art. This wouldn't bother me in a classical Wiesner picture book. It doesn't even bother me in his THREE PIGS, which uses some word balloons but pays homage to children's book tradition through shifting typefaces. Being machine type is part of the gag there. Here, though, Wiesner would have benefited from a lively hand-letterer, or at least a specially made custom typeface that wouldn't look so standard. Part of the problem isn't just the lettering, it's the neatly oval word balloons -- too obviously imposed over already-completed art, rather than made integral to the art at the drawing stage. Compositionally, the balloons seem well placed, in the sense of drawing the eye across panels and pages; Wiesner surely thought about this long before getting to the watercolor stage. But the balloons are too stiff: template stuff, not adapted to the shapes of the dialogue, the result being text that sits lonely inside ill-sized balloons. A fundamentally bad choice, I think.

There's are some lovely images to dig here, because it's a Wiesner book (and one that harks back to some of his preoccupations from thirty-plus years ago). But it's too clean, too aseptic and, again, stiff to really move like a crackerjack comic book. The fact that the story tightens around a lonely character and has to spring her from captivity through a series of juryrigged plot devices doesn't really help.

I think the landscape format of the picture book remains Wiesner's best habitat. I'd like to see him assay the graphic novel again, but in a style less beholden to his elaborate trademark surrealism. FISH GIRL is exciting insofar as it shows Wiesner trying something new, which I admire. It's just proof that terrific artists don't necessarily leapfrog easily from genre to genre without practice.
Profile Image for Sam.
2,299 reviews31 followers
February 23, 2017
Huge thank you to Raincoast for this ARC!

I'm going to be completely honest: I wasn't sure I was going to like Fish Girl. In fact, when I received it in the mail I did that dreaded thing you sometimes shouldn't do: judge a book by it's cover. I wasn't sure I was going to like the artwork, and the story sounded merely all right. I was colourfully surprised by how much I enjoyed Fish Girl

However, I say this with an air of caution: Fish Girl is a misleading book. While it's aimed at middle grade audiences, it does shed light on themes of abuse and abduction in a way that is creepy, and seeing it from that point of view can make it a tough read. On the other side of it, this book reads like a fairy tale as well, sharing both consequences and the potential for a positive outcome. It's a rough read all around, and I think it definitely offers some interesting discussions that can be had with younger readers on these topics.

I actually do think Mira, our Fish Girl, is a wonderful character. She longs to not be an aquarium attraction and wishes to be like the people on the land who come to see her. She wants legs, and adventures, and yet she's trapped in a fish bowl by a man who wants nothing more than to gain profit from her existence. It's a solid story, and it shows that people can take destiny into their own hands. Or in this case, also escape abuse. I like the message that this book presents, and I think the ending does a great job of highlighting ways in which people need to stir a course towards what they truly want from life.

I admit, at times I did have a heart time with the artwork, but it did grow on me as I read on. There's a lot of very realistic looking artwork, the use of pastel colours is really pretty, and there are moments where the artwork is breathe-taking. There are also moments where it doesn't fit either, which I found somewhat disappointing. That being said, once I got over my initial feelings, I found myself really digging the art style and coming to the consensus that it actually does a great job fitting the story that is being told.

Fish Girl is definitely not for your average middle grader, and that is okay. I think it teaches a lot to the reader, and it doesn't feel heavy handed in its approach either. I will say I don't think the art style will be for everyone, but I do believe there is a very special story being told in this book.
Profile Image for Abby Johnson.
3,373 reviews353 followers
February 22, 2017
I love the visuals of a house converted into an aquarium. This is a palatable mermaid story that will please legions of young mermaid fans and works for a wide range of ages. If the story's a little slight, that's okay; kids will still check this one out.
Profile Image for Marianne.
1,527 reviews51 followers
June 5, 2018
A book about what it is to be free.

It was exceptionally well-timed in my life, also. I found it deeply comforting on an allegorical level. (warning to sis, might be triggering for related reasons).

And the art is beautiful and sensitive.
Profile Image for Elsa.
162 reviews
August 14, 2021
I LOVED EVERY PAGE <333333333333333333333333333333333
Profile Image for Allie Davis.
16 reviews3 followers
March 3, 2017
Fish girl is a fantasy story about a mermaid called Fish Girl, (Mira), who is trapped inside of an aquarium and her only friend is an octopus. Soon she meets a human named Livia who inspires Mira to seek for her own independence outside of her boardwalk aquarium. As the two grow a friendship, Mira seeks for her own freedom with many challenges along the way. This book is aimed towards intermediate grade levels, while the book could still be read by slower readers, some words are more advanced, such as “spectacle” and “fortunate” that may be more difficult for a slower reader to comprehend.

Text-to-Self: At the beginning of this story, Mira is comfortable within her aquarium tank, however over time she begins to realize that it is not as nice as she once believed it was. I think this is relevant to moments in my own life where I was comfortable or content in a particular friendship, job, or setting and later recognized that it was not as good as I believed or expected it to be. For example, I know there were times as I was maturing, (I still am), where I thought I had a great friend to seek advice from, however I later learned that maybe that person was not such a great friend, and instead I realized I had better friends who cared about me.

Text-to-Text: Fish Girl reminds me of The Little Mermaid as they are both similarly mermaids who are longing for some aspect of freedom. Fish Girl, (Mira), would wants freedom outside of her boardwalk aquarium and the chance to be independent, while Ariel from The Little Mermaid would like her independence as a human and not a mermaid. These books are very similar as they both display the same storyline message to the reader of independence and maturity.

Text-to-World: Just like this book has related to my own personal experiences, I know Mira’s character connects to others as well. During adolescence we begin to grow and adapt our view and try new things. Often times we are peer pressured by friends to try and do things others are doing, whether we like the idea or may be hesitant to it. Mira is a bright, young girl who faces several challenges while she is growing up, until she meets Livia who becomes her friend and pushes her to become independent out of a place that she has known her entire life. I believe that this book informs readers in an encouraging way to re-assess ones surroundings, to try new things even when it may be uncomfortable and to seek for independence.
Profile Image for Laura Harrison.
1,167 reviews132 followers
February 19, 2017
No doubt this graphic novel by a great author and a Caldecott award winning illustrator will get a lot of praise. I wasn't so thrilled with it. Be warned it is definitely not a feel good story. A mermaid and her fish friends are kept in a tank at an amusement park. The mermaid can only show bits of herself to the audience. "Neptune" as he calls himself runs the exhibit. He is pretty darn creepy. Fish Girl kind of thinks of him as a father/God figure. But he is abusive and won't tell her stories at night if she doesn't do her job well during the day and earn enough change for him. A child about Fish Girl's age see's all of Fish Girl one day. They become friends which Neptune doesn't allow. Fish Girl gets out of her tank and discovers via a photo album that Neptune was a fisherman who abducted/stole/found (unclear) the mermaid as a baby and her friend Octopus and other creatures. She had believed Neptune was the person hugging her as a baby but it was the Octopus all wrapped around her lovingly. There is a side story where Fish Girl (who gets legs when she is out of water long enough) wanders through the amusement park and a guy wants to take off with her in his car. Ugh. There is also a pizza guy who wants to call the authorities to either help her or get her arrested. Not sure there. Fish Girl is pretty miserable throughout the whole story. Eventually there is a fierce storm that pummels the building the tank is in. Fish Girl tells her octopus pal to destroy the rest of the building. I don't know how an octopus could do that. All the creatures go back into the ocean. However, Fish Girl can't turn back into a mermaid. She doesn't think the ocean wants her and she would prefer being a human. She sees her friend on the beach who believes Fish Girl has died. They all walk off together with the girl's mom. That's it. I would have liked it better if Fish Girl went into the ocean and found her mermaid family. The human world didn't do Fish Girl many favors. Wiesner clearly did a lot of research for this book. It does stay with you. Not really in a happy way :(
Profile Image for Milliebot.
810 reviews22 followers
December 21, 2016
This review and others posted over at my blog.

This is a light, middle-grade graphic novel focusing on Mira’s journey for the truth and independence. I love Donna Jo Napoli’s work (Zel anyone!? That’s one of my favorite middle-grade novels) and mermaids, so I was excited to receive a copy of Fish Girl.

Art style is a big factor for me when it comes to graphic novels (part of the reason why I don’t purchase too many of them) and unfortunately, Wiesner’s style wasn’t for me (in Fish Girl anyway. I loved Art & Max). However, it didn’t take away from my enjoyment of the story; it just didn’t add to it either.

Mira’s narrative in regards to her life inside the aquarium and her experiences is a bit obvious because, due to the nature of the graphic novel, it’s easy to see what she’s doing and her recap of events wasn’t always necessary. The book is aimed at younger readers though so extra narration might be useful in some cases.

Mira and Livia were likable enough and I found myself liking the octopus despite being seriously creeped out by them in real life. The concept that Mira’s fins transform into legs when outside the water was an interesting one, though I would have liked to know more about why that happens. I was left with many questions at the end, which I won’t raise here because I suppose they’d spoil the story. I’d really love to see this in novel format because I think it would give the characters and the plot more depth.

This is a fun book for mermaid lovers and would make a good tale for younger readers to try out on their own because the dialogue is fairly simple and using sparingly.

I received this book for free from HMH Books in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Katt Hansen.
3,851 reviews108 followers
April 22, 2018
I opened this book and immediately felt a sense of wonder that I haven't felt in a long time regarding a book. I hope that you feel that too as you look at the first pages and discover what this story is all about.

Here author and artist have created a world where a house (what a clever amazing idea) as an aquarium, with one particular resident who is very shy and unsure. What I love is how Fish Girl finds herself in the course of the book, becoming more confident, more herself. This is a coming of age story with depth and clarity and imagination that left me breathless and wanting to read more long after I finished the last page of the book.

The artwork is outstanding and needs to be savored. But it's the story that captured my heart. Sad, even poignant at times, we have the child who is so incredibly isolated, who is fighting so hard to be seen - there is a story here on so many levels that I can't begin to describe the wonder and joy with which I read it.

Perhaps my review seems a little over the top, but this is the kind of story that stays with you long after you finish reading it. I've been carrying Fish Girl in my heart four days now after finishing the book. I think that authors must love when their creations haunt their readers. I certainly hope they do!

So while this is a strange and unusual story, it's worth picking up. I'd love to sit down and read it again. As a side note, my daughter loved it too, making it a book that I could enjoy sharing with her.
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