Aya: Life in Yop City by Marguerite Abouet and Clément Oubrerie
This graphic novel is loosely based on Abouet’s life and centers around 19-year old Aya, her friends, and their families in the Ivory Coast working class suburb of Abidjan in the 1970s.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education:Aya: Life in Yop City
Babymouse by Jennifer Holm and Matthew Holm
Babymouseis an award-winning graphic novel series that showcases the trials and tribulations of elementary school students and teachers, as seen through the eyes of Babymouse, as spunky, lovable mouse who wrestles with popularity, quirky lockers, competition — in the school band, school play, math Olympics, and even the best birthday party ever — and more.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education:Babymouse
Bad Girls:Sirens, Jezebels, Murderesses, Thieves and Other Female Villains by Jane Yolen, Heidi Stemple, and Rebecca Guay
In this 146-page, predominantly text-based book, the mother-daughter team of Yolen and Stemple present a 2- to 5-page (prose) biographical sketch for 26 notoriously “evil” women from biblical times to the present. Following each sketch is a one-page comic drawn by Guay in which the authors discuss the woman profiled.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Pretty in Ink and Bad Girls
Chiggers by Hope Larson
Chiggerstakes an honest look at the timeless ritual of summer camp as seen and experienced first-hand by Abby, a young teen attending her last year as a camper at sleep-away camp.It’s a story about friendship, fitting in, love, and loyalty, and it interweaves realities and fantasies of summer life.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education:Chiggers
Drama by Raina Telgemeier
Dramais a funny feel-good book about navigating the trials and tribulations of middle school. It emphasizes the importance of finding one’s voice as well as the need for teamwork and consideration, and depicts school-girl crushes and travails with humor and sensitivity, relayed through Telgemeier’s engaging text, wonderfully expressive characters, and her colorful and engaging visual montages.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Drama
- Adding Drama to Your Library or Classroom Collection
El Deafo by Cece Bell
In this graphic memoir, the first comic to receive a Newbery Honor, Bell discusses with humor and honesty the challenges she faced as young girl after losing her hearing to illness.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: El Deafo
Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel
Fun Homeisa graphic novel memoir of the author’s childhood, particularly focused on her relationship with her closeted gay father Bruce. As Alison grows older and realizes that she is a lesbian, she and Bruce are both forced to confront how his repression may have affected her own self-image and the way that she dealt with her sexuality.
- Adding Fun Home to Your Library or Classroom Collection
- CBLDF Discussion Guide:Fun Home
Lily Renée, Escape Artist by Trina Robbins, Anne Timmons, and Mo Oh
This graphic biography covers the teenage years of LilyRenée Wilheim, who later became a comic artist in the United States. At 14 years old, Wilheim fled the Nazi occupation of her native Austria and was separated from her parents, finally reuniting with them two years later in New York.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Teaching the Holocaust with Comics
Lumberjanes by Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis, Shannon Watters, and Brooke Allen
Lumberjanesis an ongoing coming-of-age series about friendship and girl-power in the great outdoors. It is filled with humor and adventure as a lovably quirky diverse group of friends tackle wild, mystical mysteries using anagrams, astronomy, and Fibonacci series strategies, mixed in with brain power and pure brawn.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Lumberjanes
Ms. Marvel: No Normal by G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona
In this Marvel reboot, Kamala Khan, a 16-year-old Muslim girl from Jersey City, New Jersey becomes the new Ms. Marvel. Wilson, Alphona, and the Marvel team create a modern twist offering fun and diversity for tween readers and beyond.
- Using Graphic Novels In Education: Ms. Marvel
Nimona by Noelle Stevenson
Nimonais about a confident, occasionally snarky, and often inspiring shapeshifter named Nimona who ostensibly serves as supervillain Lord Ballister’s sidekick.Readers, however, soon find out that nothing is as it seems–not even our heroine.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Nimona
Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong by Prudence Shen and Faith Erin Hicks
This graphic novel was adapted and drawn by Faith Erin Hicks from the young adult novelVoted Most Likelyby Prudence Shen. It’s full of unlikely friendships and nicely nuanced characters who bend and shatter stereotypes and expectations.The book is all about friendships, cooperation, heartbreak, and the myopic pursuit of goals versus creative thinking. Along the way, there are break-ups, disappointments, and lots of fun.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong
Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood by Marjane Satrapi
Persepolisis the story of Marjane Satrapi’s childhood and coming of age within a loving, educated family that lived in Tehran during the Islamic Revolution and Iran-Iraq War. It is drawn in simple, stark, black and white ink with style, poignancy, and elegant detail as well as occasional flourishes (usually in the dream sequences) traditionally found in Middle Eastern art.
- Adding Persepolis to Your Library or Classroom Collection
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Persepolis
- CBLDF Discussion Guide: Persepolis
Pretty in Ink: North American Women Cartoonists 1896-2013 by Trina Robbins
Cartoonist and comic historian Robbins presentsa history of women cartoonists and of the cartoon and comics industry as a whole. Robbins has researched and relayed the stories behind the women in comics and cartoons, along with some outstanding samples of their work.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Pretty in Ink and Bad Girls
Saga by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples
This sci-fi epichas quickly become one of the most critically acclaimed and celebrated comic series published in recent history. Applauded for its narrative complexity, world building, and characterization,Sagais a pure example of a great sci-fi/fantasy adventure, an instant classic and staple for all comic book collections.
- Adding Saga to Your Library or Classroom Collection
Smile by Raina Telgemeier
In this autobiographical coming-of-age graphic novel memoir, Raina Telgemeier ruminates with humor and honesty on the tumultuous challenges and perils of her teen years: from the trauma of falling one night on her way home from a Girl Scout meeting severely injuring her front teeth, to dealing with boys, earthquakes and the true meaning of friendship.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Smile
Stuck in the Middle: Seventeen Comics from an UNPLEASANT Age edited by Ariel Schrag
Stuck in the Middleis an anthology of comics by critically acclaimed cartoonists who take a bitingly honest look back at their “awkward” middle-school years, reflecting upon them with sensitivity and some humor.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Stuck in the Middle: Seventeen Comics from an UNPLEASANT Age
Squish by Jennifer Holm and Matthew Holm
Squish is a comic book-loving, Twinkie-eating, blubbery, super-swell amoeba “kid” who wrestles with good and evil in life around him and learns about life’s responsibilities. He faces all sorts of challenges with his friends Pod, a nerdy, mooching amoeba who’s always working on some lay-brained science scheme to help him tame his world, and Peggy, a clueless, huge-hearted, super-sweet, happy-go-lucky loving paramecium.
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: Squish
This One Summer by Jillian Tamaki and Mariko Tamaki
This One Summeris a touching coming-of age story that focuses on Rose and Windy, two long-time friends just entering adolescence. The story focuses on Rose in particular as she navigates her changing relationship with Windy, observes the relationships among local teens, and begins to recognize the strife in her parents’ own relationship.
- Adding This One Summer to Your Library or Classroom Collection
- Using Graphic Novels in Education: This One Summer
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