
A well-executed twist will have readers flipping back to see what they missed while cheering the strides made by Libenson's no-longer-invisible heroine. Katie rises to her defense, but Emmie eventually learns to speak up for herself, realizing that embarrassment isn't the end of the world and being social isn't as impossible as she thought.


In the diary portion of the book, there are doodles and drawings, much like Diary of a Wimpy Kid,but there’s a dual narrator and Katie’s experience are told in sequential art form, with panels, thought bubbles, and so on. Emmie and Katie share a crush on classmate Tyler, and when a sappy love note Emmie writes to Tyler as a joke is made public, Emmie is humiliated. It’s one of those hybrid books that combine the prose and comics formats.
#INVISIBLE EMMIE KATIE MOVIE#
Katie's chapters, by contrast, are big, splashy panels that reflect her outgoing personality ("I'm just your average teenage girl," she says after being offered movie roles and the crown of homecoming queen). This is the story of two totally different girls-quiet, shy, artistic Emmie, popular, outgoing, athletic Katie-and how their lives unexpectedly intersect one. With frizzy hair and hunched shoulders, Emmie shows up in tiny vignettes, sandwiched between blocks of text, that make her look as small and insignificant as she feels. What happens when a note that Emmie wrote falls into the. Katie is a made-up person Emmie invented to stand up for herself. Invisible Emmie A Mighty Girl Dork Diaries Books, Strong Feelings, Seventh Grade. School is stressful for shy, quiet Emmie Katie, meanwhile, is breezily popular, confident, and beautiful. Invisible Emmie Emmie is a shy and artistic student while Katie is popular, outgoing and athletic. Katie, on the other hand, is outgoing, athletic, and confident.

Holm, Invisible Emmie is a humorous and surprising debut graphic novel by Terri Libenson, creator of the internationally syndicated, Reuben Award-winning comic strip The Pajama Diaries. In her first children's book, cartoonist Libenson (The Pajama Diaries) offers strikingly different visions of seventh grade through two very dissimilar narrators. Perfect for fans of Raina Telgemeier and Jennifer L.
