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Genre Kryptonite: Graphic Memoirs

This post originally appeared on Book Riot

I love to read memoirs, but the one subgenre, if you will, that I tend to avoid is the dysfunctional family memoir. However, if you package a dysfunctional family story in a comic book? I can’t stay away.

(Aside: I HATE the phrase “graphic memoir” because it makes me think I’m talking about extremely violent or memoirs with a lot of explicit sex, which I am not. But you can’t call them “comic books” or “graphic novels” and the phase “memoirs in comic book form” is so clumsy… I just don’t know. Does someone have a better description?)

blanketsThe first graphic memoir I remember reading is Blankets by Craig Thompson, a coming-of-age story about Thompson’s childhood, first love, and struggle with his faith. Thompson does an exquisite job capturing the feeling of disconnect loners can feel even while in a crowd, the feeling of both loving and hating your family, the feeling of being in love for the first time, and the feeling of losing love for the first time. And the illustrations are just stunning, with the sweeping curves and full pages spreads full of details you want to just slide into.

Another more humorous graphic memoir that I enjoyed is The Impostor’s Daughter by Laurie Sandell, the story of Sandell’s relationship with her enigmatic and temperamental father. Sandell grew up hearing stories about her father’s fantastical childhood, war heroism, academic accolades and famous friends. But early in her adulthood, Sandell discovers that much of what her father told her is untrue, leaving her struggling with her relationships, drugs, and herself. The version of the book I read was full color, which made the drawings just pop. It’s a fun read.

calling dr lauraMy most recent dive into a graphic memoir was Nicole Georges’ Calling Dr. Laura, another story about a girl with a mysterious father. In this memoir, Georges’ discovers — via a visit to a palm reader — that the father she has been lead to believe is dead is actually alive. Georges’ also has a complicated relationship with her mother, particularly when it comes to sharing details about her sexuality or, eventually, coming out. While I think the title is a little misleading (the detail about Georges’ enjoyment listening to Dr. Laura Schlessinger is pretty minor), I liked this one a lot. Georges’ has a lot of fun with the illustrations, picking very different styles for stories from her childhood versus adult memories.

Despite this being a kryptonite for me, I still haven’t read many of the most famous graphic memoirs. I haven’t picked up Fun Home by Alison Bechdel or her most recent book Are You My Mother? I also haven’t read Stiches by David Small or Maus by Art Spiegelman. And I’ve read the first volume of Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi, but not the second. And I’m sure there are more. So I ask you, dear readers, what are some of your favorite graphic memoirs?

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Review: ‘Friendfluence’ by Carlin Flora

Review: ‘Friendfluence’ by Carlin Flora post image

Title: Friendfluence: The Surprising Ways Friends Make Us Who We Are
Author: Carlin Flora
Genre: Nonfiction
Year: 2013
Publisher: Doubleday
Acquired: From the publisher via NetGalley
Rating: ★★★½☆

Review: “Friendfluence,” writes journalist Carlin Flora, “is the powerful and often underappreciated role that friends — past and present — play in determining the shape and direction of our lives.” Studies have shown that our friends help mold our identities and, as adults, subtly influence our beliefs, values and physical and emotional health. Our friends are both the most stable and the most flexible relationships we have, yet friendships are not nearly as well-studied or well-recognized as our relationships with our families and our spouses.

In Friendfluence, Flora takes a broad look at the research that is available about friendship, starting with our childhood pals, the benefits and dark sides of friendship, and how technology is changing the way we make friends and maintain friendships. In the book, Flora makes a convincing argument that our friends are more than just extras — they are vital relationships in our lives.

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Review: ‘Good Prose’ by Tracy Kidder and Richard Todd post image

Title: Good Prose: The Art of Nonfiction
Author: Tracy Kidder and Richard Todd
Genre: Nonfiction
Year: 2013
Publisher: Random House
Acquired: From the publisher through LibraryThing Early Reviewers
Rating: ★★★★½

Review: In 1973, Tracy Kidder was a young freelancer, looking for his first assignment at the prestigious Atlantic Monthly in Boston. Fortuitously, Kidder was paired with editor Richard Todd to guide his story about a murder trial — a story Kidder naively thought of as the next In Cold Blood but other editors were ready to dismiss — from early drafts to publication.

This early partnership led to one of the most productive editorial couples working today and a deep friendship between the two men. In Good Prose, Kidder and Todd share the lessons on writing they’ve learned through 40 years of collaboration and offer their thoughts on three major forms of nonfiction — narratives, essays, and memoirs — as well as narrative strategies, the challenges of objectivity and subjectivity, and the ethics of writing nonfiction.

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The Sunday Salon.com Over the last three weeks, I’ve been reminded of the problem with trying to read everything: more often than not, it results me reading absolutely nothing.

I’ve never been a totally monogamous reader. I generally have a couple of books going at a time, either fiction and nonfiction or a physical book and an audio book, for example. And during my various essay a day attempts, I’ve had a book of essays lying around too.

But for the first part of January, I seemed to have five or six or seven books in progress (or, started and then abandoned). As a result, after finishing up two books rather quickly — Arcadia by Lauren Groff and Mastermind by Maria Konnikova — and then had a dry spell where I couldn’t seem to finish anything because I was trying to finish everything. It’s not a good way for me to read.

special topicsThis week I finally had an “enough is enough” moment and decided to focus on finishing at least one book, Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marsha Pessel. There’s sort of an interesting back story to this book. When it came out in 2006 first came out I was really interested, bought a used hard cover at Half Price Books, bought it, and proceeded not to read it.

Somewhere in the last three years, I managed to lose the dust jacket (with the book description); When I decided to read it for my 2013 TBR challenge, I decided not to look up a plot summary before I started and just read the book without knowing anything about the plot. And that was a lot of fun!

Special Topics in Calamity Physics is the story of high school senior Blue van Meer, a well-read but isolated young woman who has traveled the country with her academic superstar father, Gareth. When Gareth agrees to settle down and stay in one place for the duration of her senior year, Blue is ecstatic. She’s quickly drawn into a clique of oddballs known as the Bluebloods who worship their mysterious teacher, Hannah Schneider. But Hannah’s eventually death-by-hanging, set up in the first pages of the book, causes Blue to investigate and question everything she knows.

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An Unexpected Book Binge

Because I live in a town without a dedicated bookstore, I can never buy just one book when I get the chance to go book shopping. I always bulk up my online orders to get free shipping, and I can’t walk out of bookstore (new or used) without bringing a pile of books home with me. And this weekend was a perfect storm of book magic: an online order arrived at home just before I took a trip to the Twin Cities that involved a wonderful book binge at a new-to-me Barnes & Noble with a fabulous used books section.

My books in/books out goal took a hit, but it was well worth it to bring these beauties home with me (apologies for no pictures, the lighting in my office is terrible!).

The book that started the binge was In Other Worlds by Margaret Atwood. I blame Rebecca (The Book Lady) for this one, after she piqued my interest in this book again after posting a bunch of great quotes on the Bookrageous Tumblr.

Then, to bump up my online order, I added two more books I’ve been waiting to read, Cinderella Ate My Daughter by Peggy Orenstein and Safe from the Sea by Peter Geye (based on a recommendation from Fizzy Jill). I can’t quite bring myself to start Safe from the Sea yet, since it’s freezing here in Minnesota, but I’m imagining settling in with that one on a cold winter weekend.

Although I don’t really need an excuse to head to a bookstore, my trip to Barnes & Noble was, ostensibly, to purchase Sally Bedell Smith’s Elizabeth the Queen, a biography of Queen Elizabeth II. I saw a special about Queen Elizabeth after Downton Abbey on Sunday, and decided I wanted to learn more about her (like I need another epic biography to add to my stacks — Team of Rivals, I’m looking at you!).

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