Tommy wants to fit in, but middle school is tough for a lizard person.
Tommy Tomkins is really Booger Lizk’t of Elberon, a community of lizard people living deep beneath the surface of the Earth. Humans’ overuse of natural resources took a toll on the Lizk’t, and Tommy’s family was forced to leave Elberon or perish. They disguise themselves and go to live among the humans. Unfortunately, moving somewhere new isn’t easy. Disgusted by human food, Tommy gets caught eating a bug at school, and the bullying begins. When Dung Tran, a new student from Vietnam, gets bullied for his name and way of speaking English, the two bond over their experiences as outsiders. Wanting to be accepted for who he is—a refugee, not an alien trying to take over the world like the lizard people demonized on a popular TV show—Tommy reveals his true identity to Dung. But friendship can be fragile; Tommy is filled with insecurities after Dung finds another friend, new student Scarlett who is socially excluded because her father is the school custodian. This funny, entertaining graphic novel centers friendship and self-discovery as it skillfully balances comedy with serious topics like identity and belonging. Informed by his Vietnamese relatives’ immigrant experiences and his own childhood, Hill writes with thoughtful insight. His dramatic, full-color illustrations use gradient backgrounds of purple, blue, and green, giving them a retro feel.
Engaging and thought-provoking.
(author’s note) (Graphic science fiction. 8-12)