Little Fish
People change. The person you were is not who you are and who you are is not who you are going to be. When you leave high school for college you get the chance, if you wish, to reinvent yourself. Who can be whoever you want. If you were the social outcast in high school nobody at college needs to know that you weren’t the homecoming queen and voted most popular. The dark side of this freedom is that you will inevitably leave behind not only the life you had but those who were a part of it. Sure, you promise to keep in touch and initially you do. But as you begin to grow in one direction your friends grow in others and the calls become less frequent and more superficial.
Little Fish by Ramsey Beyer does a very good job of being written at a level for high school kids and hopefully preparing them for the upheaval that is about to come. The problem I have is with the gimmick she uses. You see, Ramsey likes to make lists. She makes lists of everything, favorite rock bands, things that scare her, whatever happens to cross her mind and the book is constantly interrupted by these lists. I counted them up and 42% of this graphic novel are pages of these lists. I’m not sure what the official text page percentage is when a graphic novel turns into a regular book but it’s got to be around 42%.
If this had been used less and less as the book went on to show Ramsey becoming more confident and needing the security and structure that these lists gave her than I would have applauded her creativity. What story is there is well-told, but I am going to spend $16.00 I don’t want to just read lists.