Reviews

Shark Summer by Ira Marcks

kirstiereads's review against another edition

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4.5

There’s a lot going on in this 290 pages graphic novel. I really enjoyed it and especially loved the mystery and Maddie! ❤️ The friendships are sweet and the tales of the island had me hooked. Sort of felt the beginning was a bit of a drag, but a minor issue. 

mreadsbooksnfics's review against another edition

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3.0

Top 5 Reasons to Read Shark Summer:

It is set on Martha’s Vineyard and has that fun summer feel just brimming from the pages!
There is an awesome mystery about a phantom shark, and you must read to find out the truth!
There are new friendships made, and it is so sweet to see them!
There is a shark, and how cool is that?!
It is a quick, fun read you will not be able to put down.

noveladdiction's review against another edition

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4.0

Another book I don't remember requesting, but it ended up being a really good read.

emilymyhren's review against another edition

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mysterious fast-paced

3.75

idreaminbooks's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced

4.0

destdest's review against another edition

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adventurous dark lighthearted medium-paced

3.5

 This was fun. The art style fits perfectly for this story. 

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novelbloglover's review against another edition

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adventurous dark funny lighthearted mysterious fast-paced

4.0

 
Book Review 

Title: Shark Summer by Ira Marcks 

Genre: Graphic Novel 

Rating: 4 Stars 

As many of my readers will know I don’t read comics and graphic novels that often but Shark Summer caught my eye with its beautiful cover and interesting premise. On thing I noticed straight away about this graphic novel was that the art style was super cute and really appealed to my tastes. The way the graphic novel is designed and the story itself really reminded me of later 2000’s kids movies that were slightly edgier, moving towards the teen genre like Monster House. We are introduced to Gayle who after breaking her arm gets to spend the summer at Martha’s Vineyard. Her mother is working extra hard in order to cover her medical expenses (America!) which means the dream of opening an ice cream store are put on hold for the time being. I really liked how the family dynamic was established early on and that some of the internal conflict came from things that ordinary people reading this novel can relate to like medical expenses. 

While Gayle mopes around as kids do she makes some new friends in the form of Elijah and Maddie. Both Elijah and Maddie are outcasts like Gayle which means they instantly bond and end up working together on a youth film project in order to win the prize money. Any horror movie fans like myself will be able to tell that the movie in this graphic novel is clearly inspired by Jaws if it wasn’t obviously from the cover then it soon becomes very easy to see in the story. The rest of the graphic novel is just following Gayle, Elijah and Maddie on this wild adventure that to me reminded me a little of Scooby-Doo mixed with some major gothic vibes, strange history about cults and the sharks themselves. 

Overall, I wasn’t expecting Shark Summer to be as dark as it turned out to be and I think depending on the reader this might be too dark for some younger readers. If you were fan of scary books like Goosebumps as a kid or enjoyed movies like Monster House then I would definitely recommend Shark Summer as it brought back all those creepy, nostalgic feelings for me and I really enjoyed it, however, I would recommend getting a physical copy rather than a digital one as the layout was strange to read on my kindle and I did have to go back once or twice as I felt that something was missing but it was probably a formatting issue. 

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