Once upon a mermaid's tail

Beatrice Blue, 1991-

Book - 2024

Theodore has a little boat and a big passion: collecting fish. He loves nothing more than discovering a new fish for his collection. But one day, he finds something he's never seen before: a tiny creature in a beautiful shell. Ignoring the voice that tells him to leave her alone, he takes her home and puts her in a tank, where she gets weaker and weaker. Can Theodore learn that the creature belongs in the ocean before it's too late?

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jE/Blue
1 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Blue Due Sep 9, 2025
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Beverly, MA : Frances Lincoln Children's Books, an imprint of the Qurato Group 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Beatrice Blue, 1991- (author)
Item Description
"First published in 2021 by First Editions under Frances Lincoln Children's Books."--Colophon.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
ISBN
9780711295315
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Find out why mermaids have tails. A dark-skinned boy named Theodore rows his boat around a pastel-colored world filled with anthropomorphic sea creatures. He brings a hefty selection of fish back to his skylit home so he can watch "the way their scales shimmer…in the sunlight like jewels." Bright flecks in the illustrations provide a dreamy, enchanted quality--the book's biggest strength. When Theodore captures a mermaid--a tiny humanoid creatures with legs, surrounded by a clear shell--a booming voice tells him that "she belongs to the ocean," but he ignores it. Calling the mermaid Oceanne, he drops her into a suffocating, filterless fishbowl. As the mermaid sickens and her shell breaks, scenes darken and lose saturation. If an omnipotent voice hadn't already broadcast the story's moral, Theodore and readers might now put it together themselves in a satisfying exercise of agency and meaning-making. Instead, the loud voice repeatedly insists that Oceanne "belongs to the ocean" until Theodore finally brings her back. The sea is subdued and empty, but eventually fish after fish reappears, each giving Oceanne a sparkly scale until she revives and grows a tail. "All mermaids have tails," the narrative declares, "to remind us of something very important": that animals belong in the wild. While it's an important lesson, the preachy narrative talks down to readers rather than engaging them. Too didactic to be much fun but certainly pretty. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.