A studious girl’s regimented life is turned upside down when she learns she isn’t human.
Fifteen-year-old Tara Smith has always carefully followed her parents’ strictures—dutifully completing chores and assignments, routinely taking medications, and always wearing her mandated bracelet—even though kids at school call her weird. When she spontaneously combusts during class one day, she learns that she is a reptilian alien prone to impromptu self-immolation. She is assigned to the School for Extraterrestrial Girls, an all-girls establishment for aliens seeking to prove loyalty to Earth in order to remain there. Tara meets roommates Summer and Misako, who wear bracelets like Tara’s: This hides their true forms, showing only their human defaults. When Tara reacts badly to seeing Summer’s true tentacled form, she feels too ashamed to apologize. Tara then uncovers an uncomfortable truth about Misako: that her own race slaughtered nearly all of Misako’s lineage. She tries to hide this but is outed; how can she make things right with her roommates? Exploring racism, bias, and belonging, Whitley and Noguchi’s delightful, full-color graphic novel is almost exclusively female, and their characterizations, both main and secondary, encompass a varied spectrum of body types, skin colors, and cultural representations: Main character Tara has brown skin; Summer has light-brown skin and a tall, muscled physique; Misako has Asian features; and one professor is curvy and wears a headscarf while another dons a sari.
Engaging science fiction that is fiercely female-forward.
(Graphic science fiction. 9-12)