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The mermaid and the shoe  Cover Image Book Book

The mermaid and the shoe

Campbell, K. G. (Author). Campbell, K. G. (Illustrator).

Summary: Each of King Neptune's 50 mermaid daughters boasts a special talent, except for little Minnow, who seems to be good only at asking questions. When she finds a strange object, Minnow follows her questions to a wondrous place and finds answers, including the answer to the most important question of all: Who am I? A gorgeously illustrated story about finding one's purpose.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781554537716 (hardcover) :
  • Physical Description: print
    1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 29 cm.
  • Publisher: Toronto : Kids Can Press, 2014.
Subject: Mermaids -- Fiction
Shoes -- Fiction
Ocean -- Fiction
Identity -- Fiction
Neptune (Roman deity) -- Fiction

Available copies

  • 0 of 0 copies available at Bowen Island Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
100 Mile House Branch E CAM (Text) 33923005452770 Easy Volume hold Available -
Anahim Lake Branch E CAM (Text) 33923005558675 Easy Volume hold Available -
Dawson Creek Municipal Public Library E CAM (Text) DCL148033 Children's easy books Volume hold Available -
Grand Forks E CAM (Text) 35142002539137 Easy Books Volume hold Available -
Invermere Public Library E CAM (Text) IPL048942 Picture Books Volume hold Available -
Kimberley Public Library CHP CAM (Text) 35137000102821 Children's Picture Books Volume hold Available -
Mayne Island Reading Centre CH CAM (Text) 33128000093799 Children Volume hold Available -
Pemberton and District Public Library E CAM (Text) 31894000389212 Picture Books Volume hold Available -
Prince Rupert Library JP Camp (Text) 33294001885672 Juvenile Picture Books Volume hold Available -
Quesnel Branch E CAM (Text) 33923005416817 Easy Volume hold Available -

  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2014 Fall
    When a shoe drops into the sea, little mermaid Minnow (least exceptional of King Neptune's fifty daughters) investigates. What she discovers is "an odd creature...a landmaid." Minnow tells her family, and the kingdom's newfound storyteller-adventurer is born. Campbell's tale shows that a little imagination and a lot of inquisitiveness go a long way. The watercolor and pencil-crayon illustrations have a sense of motion and playfulness.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2014 #4
    Little mermaid Minnow is one of King Neptune's fifty daughters. Each princess is exceptionally talented, except for Minnow, whose only skill -- and a dubious one at that, according to her brattiest sister, Calypso -- is asking questions. When a kicky red pump drops into the sea, Minnow is naturally curious. She makes her way to the ocean's surface to investigate what the thing could be. What she discovers on land is "an odd creature...half mermaid, but with two octopus legs... a landmaid" (i.e., little girl) who takes off her shoes (aha! That's what they are) to reveal "another set of...hands. 'But so ugly,' [Minnow] gasped. 'So knobby and gnarled. And smelly!'" Minnow swims home, excited to tell her family about her discovery. Though Calypso is unimpressed, everyone else -- King Neptune included -- is riveted by what the kingdom's newfound storyteller-adventurer has to say. Campbell's tale is nicely contained; though Minnow never actually leaves the ocean, we can see that a little imagination and a lot of inquisitiveness allow her to journey beyond her natural realm (and without having to give up either her fins or her voice; take that, Ariel!). The watercolor and pencil-crayon illustrations, though very different in style from Campbell's black-and-white pictures for DiCamillo's Flora & Ulysses (rev. 9/13), have a similar sense of motion and playfulness. And the visual differences between the flow-y haired, teeny-weeny-seashell-bikini-clad mermaids and the Raggedy Ann-esque landmaid point to the subjectivity of storytelling (and also of beauty). elissa gershowit Copyright 2014 Horn Book Magazine.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2014 March #2
    Unlike her talented older sisters, a little mermaid feels disappointingly ordinary until her curiosity unveils her special skills. Each of King Neptune's 50 mermaid daughters has a remarkable talent—except Minnow, who asks lots of questions, like why crabs don't have fins, where bubbles go and what lies beyond their underwater kingdom. Her sister Calypso dismissively chides her to "stop asking useless questions…and be remarkable." When Minnow discovers a mysterious object no one can identify, she's determined to find out what it is. Her relentless curiosity carries her above water, where Minnow sees a girl wearing a pair of shoes similar to the mysterious object. With her questions answered, Minnow triumphantly returns to her underwater family, heralded as a "daring explorer." Delicate, ethereal watercolor-and–colored-pencil illustrations rely on muted blue-gray washes accented with splashes of color to convey Neptune's underwater kingdom, with its flora and fauna. Kelp-enclosed cameo close-ups of Minnow and her sisters with white, gossamer hair and golden-scaled tails alternate with luminous double-page spreads featuring diminutive Minnow, carrying a scarlet shoe and fearlessly ascending from the dark underwater world into the brilliant sun and sky, where she watches a "landmaid" reveal the secret of shoes. Although this luminous tale of self-discovery has echoes of "The Little Mermaid," like Minnow, it sings its own strong song. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2014 February #2

    Campbell, the illustrator of Kate DiCamillo's Newbery Medal–winning Flora and Ulysses, crafts a mermaid story that shares a few superficial similarities with that of a certain redheaded Disney character from under the sea. Minnow doesn't quite fit in with her sisters, and she's full of questions, especially about a mysterious object (a red shoe) that drifts down from the world above. Minnow's search for answers eventually takes her to the surface, where she spies a gangly, gap-toothed human girl, and all becomes clear: "Minnow finally knew exactly what the lovely things were for. Concealed within was another set of... hands." Using watercolor and pencil crayon, Campbell paints Minnow and her 50 sisters as identical waifs, with delicate yellow-green tails, pale skin, paler hair, and a pair of tiny clamshells on their otherwise bare torsos. The result is an eerie emphasis on their inhumanity. Luckily, the artwork is also full of subtle humor—Campbell definitively answers the question of what a shrugging octopus looks like—and the story solidly delivers its message about the value of inquisitiveness, adventurousness, and storytelling. Ages 3–7. Agent: Lori Nowicki, Painted Words. (Apr.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2014 April

    Gr 1–4—Created with watercolor and pencil crayon, this tale is unique in its style. One of Neptune's 50 daughters, Minnow doesn't think she is remarkable. In fact, she thinks she's truly useless, with no talent of her own. Her only companion is a little orange sea horse. Minnow is a curious mermaid, always asking questions that no one seems to understand. One day she finds a dainty little red shoe. It is only when she sets out on an adventure to learn about the purpose of shoes that she truly realizes that she is an explorer. The mermaid finds answers to her questions and rushes home to tell everyone of all that she has learned. While there is no sea witch to be found in this work that is reminiscent of Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid, Minnow's narcissistic sister Calypso is quite mean. Campbell's illustrations employ ample blues and grays to portray deep waters of the sea. The mermaids are all identical, with fair skin, white hair, and thin bodies. It is only when Minnow catches a glimpse of the human world that the pages become vibrant with hues of red, yellow, and orange. This book is suitable for independent reading as well as a read-aloud. Minnow's tale will remind readers that it is okay to ask questions and seek answers, to stand out and be unique.—H. Islam, Brooklyn Public Library

    [Page 114]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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