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The Tale of Capri
Posted by Literary Titan

Kathleen Solis’s The Tale of Capri is a tender fantasy romance built around an inviting premise: a wounded mermaid washes into a tide pool, and the young lifeguard who finds her changes both their lives. The book began as a MerMay-inspired story, and that origin shows in the way it thinks visually, with scenes that feel sketched in light, water, scales, gardens, and moonlit coastlines.
At its center are Capri and Eden, and the story works because their connection grows through care before it grows into romance. Eden doesn’t just rescue Capri once. He feeds her, tends her wound, gives her space, listens to her, and slowly becomes someone she can trust. Capri, in turn, brings him closer to the ocean he already loves but doesn’t fully understand. Their bond has a soft, earnest quality that fits the fairy-tale setup without making the emotions feel empty.
The strongest parts of the book are the moments when Capri experiences the human world with fresh eyes. Her wonder gives everyday things, like sand, food, swimming pools, seat belts, and sunsets, a new texture. One of the loveliest lines comes when she says, “Being human sounds…beautifully and tragically wonderful.” That sentence captures the book’s whole mood: curious, romantic, a little sorrowful, and deeply attached to the natural world.
The environmental thread gives the romance more weight. Capri’s pain isn’t only personal. It’s tied to polluted coastlines, ghost nets, and the way human carelessness reaches creatures humans never see. Eden’s guilt and Capri’s anger make the second half more emotionally complicated, especially once wishes, transformation, and the wider mer world come into play. When Capri tells Eden, “I forgive you,” the moment really works because the story has spent so much time building both the wound and the tenderness around it.
The Tale of Capri is a sincere, ocean-soaked fantasy about rescue, trust, and learning to love across a divide that seems impossible at first. It’s romantic in an open-hearted way, but it’s also about stewardship, grief, wonder, and the strange beauty of being seen by someone from another world. Readers who enjoy mermaid stories with gentle intimacy, environmental feeling, and a dreamy coastal atmosphere will find a lot to enjoy here.
Pages: 225 | ASIN : B0GYQF91BP
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Kathleen Solis, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, paranormal romance, read, reader, reading, romance, story, Teen & Young Adult Mermaid, Teen & Young Adult Mermaid Fiction, Teen & Young Adult Nature & the Natural World Fiction, Teen and YA, The Tale of Capri, writer, writing




