Wynne Sutton, a customs officer who died in the line of duty, wakes in the body of a novel's character — the overweight wife of hero Lance Shelton, ridiculed as 'Madma Pig.' She has a five-year-old son, Henry, labeled slow-witted. Armed with a weight-loss system, Wynne vows to rebuild her life. Henry, however, is uncanny: his words come true, he can see people's nationalities and hear thoughts. When Henry blurts, "Aunt Lane has 'I am Gapanese' written on her head," Wynne senses hidden danger. She crashes a banquet on her motorcycle and confronts Lance, who refuses to acknowledge her. Humiliated yet relentless, Wynne begins a fierce climb toward vindication and change.
Comments
View All >Benjamin
Henry sees nationalities, hears thoughts, and predicts futures. Those rules create tight tension and clever reveals.
2026-03-22 01:56:13
Gavin
I laughed at Madma Pig and then cheered. This drama feels like a delicious guilty pleasure.
2026-03-20 10:21:53
Dana
Smart use of reborn trope and social satire. Weight loss system drives believable character growth.
2026-03-19 10:24:17