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  • Guillermo del Toro
  • The Shape of Water

The Shape of Water

by Guillermo del Toro, Daniel Kraus
The Shape of Water by Guillermo del Toro, Daniel Kraus
Unrated

The Academy Award's Best Picture of the year is now the New York Times-bestselling, must-read novel of 2018.

"[A] phenomenally enrapturing and reverberating work of art in its own right...[that] vividly illuminates the minds of the characters, greatly enhancing our understanding of their temperaments and predicaments and providing more expansive and involving story lines." ― Booklist

Visionary storyteller Guillermo del Toro and celebrated author Daniel Kraus combine their estimable talent in this haunting, heartbreaking love story.

It is 1962, and Elisa Esposito ― mute her whole life, orphaned as a child ― is struggling with her humdrum existence as a janitor working the graveyard shift at Baltimore’s Occam Aerospace Research Center. Were it not for Zelda, a protective coworker, and Giles, her loving neighbor, she doesn’t know how she’d make it through the day.

Then, one fateful night, she sees something she was never meant to see, the Center’s most sensitive asset ever: an amphibious man, captured in the Amazon, to be studied for Cold War advancements. The creature is terrifying but also magnificent, capable of language and of understanding emotions... and Elisa can’t keep away. Using sign language, the two learn to communicate. Soon, affection turns into love, and the creature becomes Elisa’s sole reason to live.

But outside forces are pressing in. Richard Strickland, the obsessed soldier who tracked the asset through the Amazon, wants nothing more than to dissect it before the Russians get a chance to steal it. Elisa has no choice but to risk everything to save her beloved. With the help of Zelda and Giles, Elisa hatches a plan to break out the creature. But Strickland is on to them. And the Russians are, indeed, coming.

Developed from the ground up as a bold two-tiered release ― one story interpreted by two artists in the independent mediums of literature and film ― The Shape of Water is unlike anything you’ve ever read or seen.

“Most movie novelizations do little more than write down what audiences see on the screen. But the novel that’s accompanying Guillermo del Toro’s new movie The Shape of Water is no mere adaptation. Co-author Daniel Kraus’ book and the film tell the same story, of a mute woman who falls in love with an imprisoned and equally mute creature, in two very different ways.” ― io9

Praise for The Shape of Water directed by Guillermo del Toro

Winner of the 2018 Academy Award for Best Picture

Winner of the 2018 Academy Award for Best Director

Winner of the 2018 Academy Award for Music (Original Score)

Winner of the 2018 Academy Award for Production Design

Winner of the 2018 Golden Globe Award for Best Director of a Motion Picture

"With encouragement from critics and awards voters, discerning viewers should make Fox Searchlight’s December release the season’s classiest date movie ― for perhaps the greatest of The Shape of Water’s many surprises is how extravagantly romantic it is.” ― Variety

"It is never less than magnificent.” ― TheDaily Beast

"A visually and emotionally ravishing fantasy that should find a welcome embrace from audiences starved for imaginative escape.” ― The Hollywood Reporter

Awarded the Golden Lion for Best Film at the74th Annual Venice International Film Festival

Amazon: Check Best Offer

FantasyRomance
Release date: March 2018

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Guillermo del Toro

Guillermo del Toro

Few storytellers move as fluidly between the grotesque and the beautiful as Guillermo del Toro. His work—whether on screen or on the page—feels like it was drawn from a shadowed corner of a dream, where monsters are more than just beasts and innocence is always on the edge of ruin. His stories aren’t escapism. They’re mythologies for the haunted, crafted with the tenderness of someone who’s always understood that the world’s darkest places can still be filled with wonder.

Read more ...

Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, del Toro grew up surrounded by Catholic imagery, fairy tales, and the looming presence of death—an upbringing that shaped his distinct creative vision. From an early age, he was drawn to the macabre, but not for shock value. To him, monsters weren’t to be feared; they were misunderstood, exiled, symbolic. That empathy threads through his writing just as deeply as it does his filmmaking.

His novels, like The Strain trilogy co-authored with Chuck Hogan, carry the same eerie elegance as his films—steeped in myth and folklore, yet grounded in visceral human fear. While The Strain takes a science-driven approach to the vampire legend, it never loses the poetic tension that defines del Toro’s work. There’s always a heartbeat beneath the horror, and a question lingering in the dark: What would you sacrifice to survive?

Themes of transformation, innocence lost, and the blurred line between beauty and terror recur across his written work. His prose is as visual as his directing—lean, charged, and precise—often mirroring the structure of a fairy tale turned inside out. And yet, even at his most harrowing, there's a softness beneath the horror. A reverence for the outcasts. A celebration of the strange.

Over the years, del Toro has won Oscars, published illustrated notebooks, and collaborated across media, but fame has never dulled his curiosity. He’s still the kid sketching monsters in the margins—just now with the world watching.

As he once said, “The world is beautiful and terrible, and that’s why it’s worth telling stories about.” In that sentence, you’ll find the soul of everything he writes.

More books by Guillermo del Toro

The Blackwood Tapes Book 2 (The Blackwood Tapes #2)
⧗ 9.76 / 8
The Hollow Ones (The Blackwood Tapes #1)
★ 6.00 / 3
Pan's Labyrinth: The Labyrinth of the Faun
★ 7.00 / 1
At Home with Monsters: Inside His Films, Notebooks and Collections
Unrated
Trollhunters (Trollhunters)
Unrated
The Night Eternal (The Strain Trilogy #3)
★ 6.62 / 13
The Fall (The Strain Trilogy #2)
★ 6.76 / 16
The Strain (The Strain Trilogy #1)
★ 6.76 / 24


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