Honourable mentions: Not actually non-fiction
Craig Thompson's Blankets is classified as a novel, but it is clearly at least semi-autobiographical. In this book Thompson displays great talent weaving together themes, symbols, and images. He is an excellent writer. But it is as an artist that he is simply outstanding, and this book is worth buying just so you can take your time looking at it.
Hark! A Vagrant - Kate Beaton
Okay here are the really-non-fiction books
10. Book of Genesis - Illustrated by R. Crumb
I've written about this book before. It's a cartoon-a-day travel journal by a young Mo Willems, written before he began a career as a writer for sesame street and then as a popular and successful children's book author. This book is a great read, and provides the reader with a glimpse of life around the globe, as it was in the early 90s.
8.
Will Eisner was a major innovator in the comics world. His Contract With God is usually credited as the first graphic novel, and was certainly the first book to be marketed as such. In The Plot, Eisner recounts the history of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Part history, part polemic, The Plot is a powerful piece of anti-anti-semite writing.
7. Logicomix - Apostolos Doxiadis
Logicomix is essentially a biography of Bertrand Russell. As it tells his life story, however, it also explains Russell's life's work, and the importance of logic to Russell and to 20th century mathematics and philosophy. Well worth reading.
6. Palestine - Joe Sacco
5. American Splendor: From off the Streets Of Cleveland - Harvey Pekar
American Splendor is a series, not a single comic. There are any number of non-fiction books by Harvey Pekar that are worth your time. In addition to this book, I'd especially recommend Our Cancer Year, which is a single-narrative comic about a year relating the story of the year Pekar discovered he had testicular cancer, or American Splendor: The Life and Times of Harvey Pekar, Pekar's first anthology (which I couldn't find on amazon). Pekar's writing is often typified as "slice of life", and if you don't understand what that means, check out these two pages for a taste of American Splendor.
4. Louis Riel: A Comic-Strip Biography - Chester Brown
Chester Brown has gotten a fair bit of press lately for his memoir Paying for It, in which he recounts his experiences as a John. I haven't read that, so I can't say whether it's worth your time. Louis Riel, however, definitely is. Riel is one of the most colourful characters of Canadian history, and Brown writes an energetic and gripping account of Riel's conflicts with the Canadian government. Both his writing and his art are deceptively simple, which increases a kind of unconscious sense that he is presenting you with the simple facts. One of the simple but great things about this book is the endnotes, in which Brown comments on panels which may give a false impression of the history, and corrects that false impression; things like "McDougall arrived in Pembina by ox-cart, not stage-coach. I'm not sure why I drew stage-coaches -- there is a note in my script specifying ox-cart" (246).
3. Persepolis - Marjane Satrapi
Marjane Satrapi's memoir Persepolis and its sequel Persepolis 2 are gripping accounts of life in Iran before, during, and after Islamic Revolution. One of the things that makes this book so engaging is how unfamiliar the story is to most Westerners. This, in addition to the compelling specificity of Satrapi's life, the details of a person that we seem to really get to know, make for a great read. Unlike Maus, which is written by Art Spiegelman about his father and therefore has the benefit of hindsight, Persepolis ends with very little resolution, which is both a weakness and a strength--the lack of a narrativized ending only makes the narrative seem more real.
2. Understanding Comics - Scott McCloud
I've written about Understanding Comics before. It is one of the most popular non-fiction comics ever written, and certainly the most popular non-narrative comic ever written, and deservedly so. In Understanding Comics, McCloud dissects the medium of comics in both historical and especially in theoretical terms, and attempts to explain how comics work. He does so in an entertaining and engaging way that is well worth reading by anyone who enjoys the medium of comics.
1. Maus - Art Spiegelman
Before he wrote Maus, Art Spiegelman was known by comics fans for his experimental--sometimes radically so--art. In comparison with some of his other work, Maus is deceptively simple and straightforward. It is the story of Spiegelman's father, Vladek, a Polish Jew, during and after WWII. Spiegelman couches the story as an animal fable, drawing the Jews as mice, the Germans as cats, the Americans as dogs, etc. The only comic book ever to have won a Pulitzer Prize, this is both an outstanding comic book and an outstanding holocaust narrative.
And there you have it. This list isn't to say that there aren't plenty of other non-fiction comics which are also worth your time of course. Feel free to suggest more in the comments!
I thought I'd comment so you know someone is reading, and to add additional thoughts to yours, which I'm assuming you want since you have a comments section...anyeay, I waffle.
ReplyDeleteI read blankets from the library and was glad I did so as it just didn't impress me as much as it did you.
Persepolis however I may actually buy one day as it definatly seems worth a second read. I found it very interesting and enlightening.
Logicomics is going to be re read one day, and i would second your recommendation there.
I'm not sure I personally would put Genisis as 'non fiction' but that is a debate for another day :-)
Hmmm... do i have any personal recomendations.
Yes! Bryan Talbot's Alice in Sunderland. A fabulous history of both the English city of Sunderland and Lewis Carroll.
Smaug
Thanks for the comment, Smaug! I'll take a look at Alice in Sunderland soon.
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