Publish Date: May 19th 2010
Publisher: HarperCollins
Format: Audiobook,
Unabridged
Author: Tera Lynn
Childs
Narrated By: Emily
Bauer
Website: Author’s Website
Quick Review
Introduction
Lily is not an ordinary teenager. She’s the Thalassinian
princess. The thing about Thalassinia, is that it is a kingdom of mermaids,
making Lily a mermaid princess. A few years ago, she discovered she is half
human, and has since been living on land and going to high school. As the
princess, she has to find her mate to ascend the throne, and Lily has picked
Brody, a boy she has had a crush on since she walked on land. But her next door
neighbour, bad boy Quince, is getting in her way.
Story
Mermaid stories are difficult to pull off. Especially
when the characters are in high school, and you have to believe that a mermaid
is in high school, navigating a crush and homework and school dances. Then she
goes home, and it's like The Little Mermaid show from the 90s. There's
underwater furniture and buildings and court proceedings...put in a human
without a tail and it's hard to take seriously, but, it's a mermaid story. Yes,
it will come off as a bit silly, and you have to take it for what it is. Some
people, especially teens, are ok with that.
However, the story was really predictable. There were
no twists or turns. It was very
light. I listened to it during a full day trip and it was good while I was
walking around and waiting. There are some audio books that need 100% of your
attention. This is not one.
Lily
For
a girl that keeps saying that mermaids are peaceful, she gets angry enough that
she wants to get physically violent with people. She does, on a few occasions,
though she is just pushing. She’s not a perfect protagonist, which I like…and a
lot of people hate. Yes, she’s selfish, narrow-minded, and judgemental. And at
the end, she overcomes at least a few of her faults. What’s wrong with that?
Still, I will say that along with the narrator of the audiobook, she is so
spoiled and angry at everything.
Also, she likes a boy who is a human, and doesn’t know that she’s a
mermaid princess. She thinks together they are like this:
But she is actually like this:
Sea Puns
The cursing are
sea puns. Childs can get around having to censor her work, but it also means
that she actually has a mermaid princess swearing frequently. If you put what
she actually means instead of the substitute, she’d be swearing constantly, in
her head or aloud. If you need some laughs, substitute a “higher level” four
letter word in your head, every time
she uses a sea pun. It makes for good times, though people on the street will
look at you if you’re walking and listening.
I don't know why, but I like the “damselfish” one.
Like you’d turn away from the situation and whisper to yourself as though no
one could hear you.
Narrator
The narrator can't do male voices, or secondary female
voices. She has one voice, and that belongs to Lily. It gets annoying to listen
to the narrator try to drop her voice and be gravelly for the men. Actually,
it’s annoying. Also, the girls you hate in high school don't actually have
those nasally high voices - we just pretend they do when we talk about them. I
would much prefer a natural, though pretentious, voice of the mean girls.
Besmirching of my Name
The bully is named Courtney. She is financially
demanding and selfish, slaps her boyfriend, gossips, judges people…all the
stupid “girl bully” stuff. Of course, her name is Courtney. That's the go-to
name for terrible people. Can we think of a better name? And where did this trend
start? I’d like to know.
Final Verdict
Read or listen to this because you like mermaids, not
for the story. I don’t recommend this for people who dislike characters that
are not completely perfect or extremely likeable. Will I listen to the next
installment, Fins Are Forever? Maybe.
It would make an ok summer pre-teen movie, though there’s way too much
underwater mermaid stuff happening for this to ever happen.
Also, I'll just leave this here...and no, I didn't make this.