Search This Blog

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

American Mermaid by Julia Langbein

I found this through the Parnassus Bookstore Friday vlog "If You Haven't Read It It Is New To You"--which as an aside, I continue to love and often read books that are recommended that I both enjoy and would not have found another way. This is a story about a high school English teacher, Penelope, who writes a novel about a disabled woman, Sylvia, who discovers she is a mermaid. When Penelope’s book is optioned for a movie, she moves to LA to adapt her book with two seasoned male screenwriters. We get some of the backstory through sections of Penelope's book throughout--a book withini a book. As a baby mermaid, Sylvia, who washes up on shore and is taken in by two married billionaire scientists who can’t have children of their own. Through sketchy medical procedures they split her tail, which leaves her in near-constant pain and confined to a wheelchair. This decision comes back to haunt them when Sylvia grows up and discovers the painful truth about her origin story, and dedicates herself to taking down her father’s company. The story of Penelope is less enchanting, but her trip though some of the shallowest corners of Los Angeles’s vanity, power, and money-obsessed culture is what you would expect and some of the best moments come from her interactions with Murphy and Randy, the two screen writers. They desperately want to turn into a sexy teen romp complete with low-cut bikini tops and a waterlogged prom. Penelope’s attempts to fight back are usually fruitless, leading to the table read to end all table reads. But you know who else isn’t on board with Randy and Murphy’s writing plans? Sylvia. Or someone who seems to be Sylvia — mysterious events involving changes to the movie script, Penelope getting dragged underwater in a Malibu riptide, and luring another character into an accident with her siren song start happening. So a smidge of magical realism as well as an interesting read.

No comments:

Post a Comment