
8 Graphic Novels And Memoirs That Will Give You The Feels
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Graphic novels and graphic memoirs sometimes feel like watching someone else’s dreams, and their combination of art and story can brew up emotions in even the most stoic reader. If you’ve only ever looked to novels for your emotional kicks, gird your tear ducts and try one of these graphic reads instead.

The Best We Could Do: An Illustrated Memoir by Thi Bui
In this comfortingly heavy book Bui tells the story of her family, who fled South Vietnam in the 1970s. It’s about the complicated histories that families build, but also gives an incredible insight into the Vietnam war, one that we never see in the big blockbuster movies.Fight Like a Girl: Learning Curve by David Pinckney and Soo Lee
The whole world feels like a blazing dumpster fire right now, and so there’s something extra comforting about superhero stories. Especially when the hero is Amarosa. She’s tough, she’s occasionally crabby, and she’s making deals with gods to try and save her terminally ill brother. Gods being gods, that means tasks involving fighting, dinosaurs, and terrible consequences if she fails.Pride of Baghdad by Brian K. Vaughan and Niko Henrichon
Not since The Lion King has a story about big cats reduced me to a sniveling mess on the carpet. Four captive lions are “freed” from their cages by the 2003 bombing of Iraq, and are left to roam the ruined city. Disney this is not, and the book tackles the twisted consequences of conflict with unflinching illustrations. It’s an engrossing story on its own, but also offers readers a view of the Iraq war that they won’t have seen on CNN.Blankets by Craig Thompson
A classic for a reason. The plot points of this coming of age story might be familiar—bullying, love, family, shame—but Thompson traps them so perfectly in ink and paper that they feel new. His struggles with his faith and the way it affects his relationships is especially fascinating, whether it’s something you’ve faced or your mom just wants you to go to midnight mass at Christmas. “Something about being rejected at Church Camp felt so much more awful than being rejected at school. ”Bayou by Jeremy Love
Yes, this is a story of racism and violence in 1930s Mississippi, but it’s also a tale about a girl’s love for her father. Lee Wagstaff must face monsters and and men to save her father, who is falsely accused of kidnapping her friend, Lily Westmoreland. The pace never stops, the pages almost glow with their own light and the characters with set up home in your heart and never leave.