Reviews

Julian ist eine Meerjungfrau by Jessica Love

imandi_gm's review against another edition

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5.0

What a cute and an adorable book.

annalisenak97's review against another edition

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5.0

I LOVED the illustrations in this one. So beautiful and soft yet vibrant and full of movement. A story of acceptance and love and warmth.

arielamandah's review against another edition

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5.0

This is such a sweet, beautiful book. My two-year-old son loved the lush pictures. Beautiful art, wonderful message.

lesbrary's review against another edition

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5.0

This may be my favourite picture book that I've ever read. The illustrations are absolutely gorgeous. The expressions say so much by themselves. And Julián's abuela's unquestioning acceptance and affirmation makes me want to cry.

rhymeswithjoey's review against another edition

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4.0

Julián is a young boy who loves mermaids. I love that already. With Machismo heavily ingrained in Latino (especially Afro-Latino) culture, having a book about a boy who likes mermaids is taboo and groundbreaking. Further, I love that Julián is Afro-Latino. Not many books I have read include this demographic of Latino culture and it's great to see it.

The message of this book is be yourself, which is essential for kids to be told. In my classroom, I'd use this book as a tolerance exposure book to break down machismo and show that it's okay for boys to like mermaids and girls to like trucks.

rkiladitis's review against another edition

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5.0


I love this gorgeously illustrated story of a little boy who embraces his inner mermaid. As Julián rides the subway home with his abuela, he spies three women, dressed and gorgeous, and pronounces them mermaids. He daydreams about his own transformation into a mermaid; shedding his tank top and shorts (he keeps his undies on); letting his hair grow wild and free, and develops a fabulous pink and yellow mermaid tail as he heads off to swim with a group of fish. When he and Abuela arrive home, he tells her that he's a mermaid, too. When she goes to take a bath, Julián transforms himself: he sheds his clothes (keeping those tidy whities on), gives himself a fierce head of hair using Abuela's fern and some flowers, gets into her makeup, and wraps a curtain tail around himself. Voila! Abuela takes one look at him, hands him a necklace, and takes her fabulous and fierce mermaid to the Mermaid Parade at Coney Island, telling him, "Like you, mijo. Let's join them." And they do, following right behind the trio of mermaids the two met earlier on the subway.

What an empowering, fantastic story. I love the New York flavor: the street scenes are pure New York, from the green subway entrances to the faces and body language of every character in this book. A group of girls plays at an open fire hydrant; a seagull hangs out on the street by an older man, sitting out on his chair, with his dog in his lap. The Mermaid Parade is full of fanfare, and the colors pulse off the page. Abuela accepts Julián and takes her grandson to be with his fellow mermaids, but most importantly, Julián accepts himself. The endpapers give us a little more of the story, too: Abuela, Julián, and four older woman enjoy themselves at the public pool; at the end, the same group are all mermaids, enjoying themselves in the sea. Put this on your Pride reading lists, and read this in your storytimes and to your kids often.

lileuw's review against another edition

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2.0

Edition read: Dutch

I do not understand the hype about these books. Don't get me wrong, the art is absolutely amazing, but the story is just ... boring? There isn't really a story. Though, this might be due to translation issues, but I just don't like them. Such a shame because I really love the illustrations!

whtbout2ndbrkfst's review against another edition

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5.0

This book is BEAUTIFUL and I mean that in terms of both the story and the illustrations. Everyone deserves to be raised by someone as accepting and loving as Julián's abuela. Mostly told through pictures, this is a story of exploring and playing and accepting yourself and those you love.

Open to a bit of interpretation (is Julián trans, genderqueer, gender nonconforming? just likes wearing dresses? really wants to be a mermaid?) but regardless of how you read it, the message of love comes through and the illustrations really are some of the most beautiful I've ever seen in a children's book.

thenextgenlibrarian's review against another edition

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5.0

Julian is adorable, full of love and joy!

elizabethkg's review against another edition

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5.0

This is the best book. My daughter read it all day after we opened up the package today. The illustrations and message are love and never ending beauty.