
What’s your favorite sea-dwelling mythical creature? Add to our collection in the comments!

What’s your favorite sea-dwelling mythical creature? Add to our collection in the comments!

What’s your favorite cover of The Little Mermaid? Add to our collection in the comments!
Anastasia had read about orphans in storybooks. To an almost-eleven-year-old girl with two parents, orphans had been sort of a mythical figure, like unicorns and mermaids. A creature that lived in the pages of a book. And now she was one. An orphan, that is. Not a unicorn.
The League of Beastly Dreadfuls
Holly Grant


Can you spot a mermaid on the cover of other MG titles? Add to our collection in the comments!
It was a while before they realized that a mermaid had surfaced at the shallow end of the pool. Her hair was pale and silvery and her nails were a shimmering blue. Between each finger was a thin webbing, of the sort you might find on a newborn seal or a duck.
Aquamarine
Alice Hoffman

Her fingers traced the knobby outlines of her kneecaps. She had studied her knees a million times. Mermaids did not have knees. Keeper did. Her knees were right there.
Keeper
Kathi Appelt

The first of May. It was May Day! When they were little, she and Thomas always made May baskets from construction paper and filled them with tissue-paper flowers. They’d sneak over to Mr. Pickering’s front porch, hang the baskets on his doorknob, then ring the doorbell. Before Mr. Pickering answered, they would run home. Mr. Pickering always pretended not to know who had left the surprise.
Giant Pumpkin Suite
Melanie Heuiser Hill

Middle Grade Carousel is a series of monthly challenges for lovers and readers of middle grade books. Our theme for May is…

Join us as we sink into stories and dive under the sea to seek out the mythical mermaid!