Ratings6
Average rating3.3
"From writer Cecil Castellucci and artist Marley Zarcone, SHADE, THE CHANGING GIRL VOL. 1: EARTH GIRL MADE EASY--a bold new reimagining of one of comics' maddest and most memorable characters and part of the DC's Young Animal imprint led by rock-star Gerard Way. Loma Shade may be from another planet, but she's still like every other twentysomething who feels that their life is going nowhere fast. Bored out of her mind, her solution is to drop out of school, dump her boyfriend and leave her homeworld of Meta behind--courtesy of the infamous "madness coat" of renegade poet Rac Shade, which is not so much a garment as it is a multidimensional gateway. After stealing the coat and astrally projecting herself across space, Loma ends up in the body of Megan Boyer, an Earth girl who seems to have it all: youth, beauty and a conveniently damaged brain. Following her "miraculous" recovery, however, Loma finds there's just one problem with being Megan: Everyone hates her. She was a bully who terrorized her enemies and her friends alike, and now Loma's stuck with the consequences. To make matters worse, back on Meta there are dark forces that want Rac's dangerously valuable coat for their own nefarious purposes, and they're closing in on Loma's vulnerable physical body. At the same time, the primal madness that the coat channels is slowly, irresistibly eroding Loma's equally vulnerable soul. With two new lives to live, can this Changing Girl survive either one without losing her mind?"--
Series
1 primary bookShade, the Changing Girl is a 1-book series first released in 2016 with contributions by Cecil Castellucci, Asher Powell, and Tini Howard.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is a totally weird graphic novel.
We've got aliens, madness as a weapon and/or transportation device, and high school cliches and bullies. There is a lot going on, but essentially Loma transports to Earth and possesses the body of a practically dead girl and doesn't find the easy to navigate world she expects, since the body she possess was a terrible person and bully.
I was able to get into it eventually, but I still felt the underlying feeling of confusion– which might be the point? Megan is totally unlikeable, but Loma is okay she is just out of place and I never really understood why she didn't try harder to blend in on Earth. Also, the madness coat and how it is also in Earth and just falls off her... what is going on...
Really not my style, but I can see the appeal. I feel like Loma's life will be on the line and there might be a Earth v. Meta thing to come. I'd recommend this one to a more mature teen or adult audience who enjoys thinking deeply and questioning what they are reading.