Ghosted in L.A

Sina Grace

Book - 2020

Daphne Walters moves to Los Angeles for her boyfriend Ronnie, ready to live her happily ever after. But when happily ever after turns into happily for a month, she's stuck in a strange city with no friends, family, or prospects for fun. Desperate to escape the lingering ghost of Ronnie's presence everywhere, Daphne sets out to explore the city--and ends up encountering ghosts of a more literal kind!

Saved in:

2nd Floor Comics Show me where

COMIC/Ghosted v. 1
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics COMIC/Ghosted v. 1 v. 1 Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Paranormal comics
Ghost stories
Graphic novels
Published
Los Angeles : BOOM! Box [2020]-
Language
English
Main Author
Sina Grace (author)
Other Authors
Siobhan (Illustrator) Keenan (artist), Cathy Le (colorist), David C. Hopkins, 1989- (letterer)
Item Description
Collects: Ghosted in L.A. #1-4 [v. 1] ;
Physical Description
volumes (unpaged) : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781684155057
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A new girl finds friendship with old souls in this graphic novel. After following her boyfriend, Ronnie, from Montana to Los Angeles for college, Daphne Walters finds herself ghosted, then dumped. Tan, dark-haired, Jewish Daphne can't find companionship with her roommate, Michelle, a moody white girl who locks her out of the room when her Bible group meets. Adding to her isolation, she is fighting with Kristi, her BFF, who is studying in Santa Cruz. Stumbling upon Rycroft Manor, with its old Hollywood elegance (and swimming pool), Daphne finally feels at home…even though all the other residents are ghosts. While a slew of ghosts are introduced, only a few get flashback sequences in this installment, leaving the manor residents' histories and mysteries mostly unexplored. Free of flourishes and trippy sequences, the clean lines, limited palette, and crisp, realistic artwork focus on Daphne's emotional journey, the loneliness of life in Los Angeles, the fear of being friendless as a college freshman, and the larger existential dread of dying without fully living first. The ghosts died in different decades and include a black woman and a gay white man; all are haunted by their pasts, and not all are friendly. Some living characters bring racial diversity to the cast, and sexual orientation is explored in depth. A short and somewhat wistful coming-of-age with a paranormal twist. (Graphic novel. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.