Parents' Guide to

Phoebe and Her Unicorn Series

By Carrie Kingsley, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 8+

Funny, sarcastic graphic novels have layers of complexity.

Phoebe and Her Unicorn Series Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this book.

Community Reviews

age 9+

Based on 7 parent reviews

age 11+

Funny and quirky yes... but not appropriate for young children

Every family has individual rules and allowances for what is appropriate with regards to their children. However, I do feel that more parents should know what this book series is like beyond their cutesy covers and the sweet, funny and quirky write ups on the jacket of the book. This book series does indeed show / describe some difficult challenges that students can come across in school however the sarcastic tone and the use of the word "stupid". For example, here is a particularly "choice" sentence from book #2 of the series. Stupid Mom. “I’m mom! Blah blah blah! I’m a great big stupid face!” This type of language and behaviour is frequently used and displayed by the main character and her "narcissistic" Unicorn. The elements of bullying by her peers are also quite harsh. Children the age of 6-7 may understand on some level that these words are incorrect, but children this young are so incredibly impressionable and they emulate the words/actions/behaviours of their surroundings. If a book like this is allowed in schools, these younger children may think that the behaviour modelled in this book series is funny and ok to emulate especially if they think it's all just a joke. Just read the book series and ask yourself, is this how you would allow your children to speak with you? Would you want your children to behave in this manner? Ultimately it comes down to the choice of the parent on what they will allow and expose their children to. My humble opinion is that it is NOT appropriate in elementary schools for children under the age of 11.
age 8+

Not letting me kid read this

I'm not conservative by any means, but I find the first book (and in the first few pages) to be negative themed and not appropriate for building good positive characteristics in your children. On three pages I saw "I suck" written in the graphics and suck again a few paragraphs forward. Another paragraph had stupid and stupidhead before being closed out with suck. That's too much for my taste. Tell me I'm wrong but first impressions are strong and my daughter (7) borrowed 6 of these books from the library to read. Umm .. no.. Thanks for playin'!

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (7 ):
Kids say (8 ):

This series more than good; it's great. Phoebe and Her Unicorn is first and foremost a kids' series, but it's the rare graphic novel that works for adults, too. Phoebe is confident, smart, silly, and self-centered. Her unicorn, Marigold Heavenly Nostrils, is all of that -- and, like all unicorns, is also mesmerized by her own beauty. This series tackles issues of fitting in, popularity, loneliness, friendship, honesty and what it means to be yourself. One of Phoebe's best friends is a boy, Max, and sometimes Phoebe isn't sure how she feels about having a boy as a friend (a feeling that readers in this age group can likely relate to).

This series doesn't reach the emotional lows that a more adult-targeted comic strip would, but it mixes some angst and tough questions with the sparkles and giddiness of life with a unicorn.

Book Details

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