Books

12 graphic novels to get lost in this summer

Looking for a good summer read? Get lost in these graphic novels by Canadian authors.

Looking for a good summer read? Get lost in these graphic novels and illustrated books by Canadian authors.

Degrees of Separation by Alison McCreesh

A composite image of an illustrated book cover featuring the Northern Lights beside a portrait of a woman with black hair looking to the right of the frame.
Degrees of Separation is a graphic memoir by Alison McCreesh. (Conundrum Press)

Degrees of Separation blends stories, drawings and sketches that chronicle Alison McCreesh's decade spent living in the North. From being stranded in the High Arctic to raising a baby in a small shack with no running water, the book is a coming-of-age story that recounts the challenges and joys of life living and working north of the 60th parallel.

McCreesh is an artist who currently lives in Yellowknife. She has travelled around the Arctic and sub-Arctic and the theme of contemporary day-to-day life in the North carries through her creative work.

LISTEN | Alison McCreesh on her memoir Degrees of Separation:
After a summer job in the Yukon, Chicoutimi's Alison McCreesh returned to the north after graduation and never left. She’s written and illustrated a graphic memoir about her experiences living in the circumpolar regions of the world, from northern Canada to Greenland, Russia and Scandinavia. We talk about her book and the draw of living in the north.

A Witch's Guide to Burning by Aminder Dhaliwal

A composite image of a red and orange book cover beside a portrait of a South Asian woman looking into the camera.
A Witch’s Guide to Burning is a graphic novel by Aminder Dhaliwal. (Drawn & Quarterly, Alison Maxwell)

Life as a witch can be tough. With the town relying on her magic for success, the demands keep coming in. But when a witch outlives her usefulness she is burned at the stake, taking her memories and her magic. When she is left half-burned because of a rainstorm, it's up to a witch doctor and her toad friend to help her get her magic back before it's lost forever. Viral comic creator Aminder Dhaliwal uses prose, illustrations and comics to craft a humorous allegory for burnout in A Witch's Guide to Burning.

Dhaliwal is a comic writer and television animator originally from Brampton, Ont. Now based in Los Angeles, Dhaliwal is a director at Disney TV Animation. Her comic series Woman World, originally published on Instagram to hundreds of thousands of followers, was released as a graphic novel in 2018. CBC Books named Dhaliwal a writer to watch in 2019.

LISTEN | Aminder Dhaliwal on witches as a metaphor for burnout:
After working at some of the biggest animation studios in the world and breaking out with her own art, the Canadian cartoonist Aminder Dhaliwal is reflecting on what it means to protect your creativity (and your sanity) in a world that’s always demanding that we work harder and faster. The result is her new graphic novel, “A Witch’s Guide to Burning,” which tells a fairy tale-like story about how to find your magic again when you’re feeling burnt out. Aminder talks to Tom about the book and what burnout feels like to her.

A Guest in the House by Emily Carroll

A cartoon image of a white woman with a septum piercing. A book cover of a woman on stairs being followed by an abstract woman in blue and red.
A Guest in the House is a book by Emily Carroll. (First Second)

A Guest in the House is a haunting graphic novel about Abby, a newlywed to a recently widowed dentist. But the more she learns about her new husband's first wife, the more suspicious she becomes that she may not have died of natural causes. A Guest in the House won the 2024 Doug Wright Award for best comic book

Carroll is a Stratford, Ont.-based artist whose books include Through the Woods, a collection of horror comics, and Speak, an adaptation of Laurie Halse Anderson's YA novel, and When I Arrived at the Castle. 

Denison Avenue by Daniel Innes & Christina Wong

A black and white illustration of a street of storefronts with signs in mandarin. Red text at the bottom reads, "Denison Avenue."
Denison Avenue is a book by Daniel Innes, left, and Christina Wong. (ECW Press)

Set in Toronto's Chinatown and Kensington Market, Denison Avenue is a moving portrait of a city undergoing mass gentrification and a Chinese Canadian elder experiencing the existential challenges of getting old and being Asian in North America. Recently widowed, Wong Cho Sum takes long walks through the city, collecting bottles and cans and meeting people on her journeys in a bid to ease her grief.

Denison Avenue was championed by Naheed Nenshi on Canada Reads 2024

Daniel Innes is a multidisciplinary artist from Toronto. He works in painting, installation, graphic and textile design, illustration, sign painting and tattooing.

Christina Wong is a Toronto writer, playwright and multidisciplinary artist who also works in sound installation, audio documentaries and photography.

LISTEN | Naheed Nenshi and Christina Wong on The Next Chapter: 
Former three-term mayor of Calgary and community builder Naheed Nenshi explains why he chose to champion Christina Wong and Daniel Innes’s Denison Avenue. Wong talks about her deep personal connection to the Kensington Market area of Toronto, and why it was the perfect setting for her novel.

The Wendy Award by Walter Scott

Headshot of Walter Scott sitting in front of a studio microphone; book cover for The Wendy Award.
The Wendy Award is a graphic novel by Walter Scott. (Vivian Rashotte/CBC, Drawn and Quarterly)

In the Wendy series, Mohawk artist Walter Scott follows the character's journey as a comic book artist who must contend with both the art world and her personal life. Scott's latest installment in the series, The Wendy Award, follows Wendy struggling with imposter syndrome after receiving a nomination for the prestigious National FoodHut Contemporary Art Prize. 

The previous books in the series are WendyWendy's Revenge and Wendy, Master of Art.

Walter Scott is a Mohawk artist based in Toronto. Scott has published three other Wendy books, including Wendy's Revenge, and has appeared in The New Yorker and the Best American Comics anthology. 

LISTEN | Walter Scott on ending the beloved Wendy series:
How do you step away from your most famous creation? Mohawk artist Walter Scott is about to find out. More than a decade after creating his beloved “Wendy” series of graphic novels, Walter is taking a long hiatus from his cartoon alter-ego. He joins Tom to tell us how he came up with Wendy — a neurotic young party girl who’s trying to make it as an artist — and why his latest book, “The Wendy Award,” is going to be her final adventure for now.

Portrait of a Body by Julie Delporte, translated by Helge Dascher and Karen Houle

A composite image of an illustrated book cover beside a black and white portrait of a white woman with brown hair looking into the camera.
Portrait of a Body is a graphic novel by Julie Delporte, pictured, and translated by Helge Dascher and Karen Houle. (Drawn & Quarterly, Plum Paycha)

In Portrait of a Body, Julie Delporte examines her life experiences and trauma in an attempt to answer the haunting questions she has about her gender and sexuality. The book focuses on the journey inward to heal oneself and live more authentically.

Julie Delporte is a comic creator and poet based in Montreal. Her other books include This Woman's WorkEverywhere Antennas and Journal.

Helge Dascher is a frequent translator of comic books. She's also translated many of Guy Delisle's titles, Aya by Marguerite Abouet and Clément Oubrerie, White Rapids by Pascal Blanchet and Paul at Home by Michel Rabagliati.

Karen Houle used to be a Professor of Philosophy but now she is a full-time Earth worker-activist and a sometimes translator.

I'm So Glad We Got This Time Together by Maurice Vellekoop

I'm So Glad We Had This Time Together by Maurice Vellekoop. Illustrated book cover shows a young white boy and his white mom in bathing suits in front of some trees and a blue sky. Headshot of the author illustror.
I'm So Glad We Had This Time Together is a graphic memoir by Maurice Vellekoop. (Random House Canada)

I'm So Glad We Had This Time Together depicts Vellekoop's intense childhood and difficult young adulthood as a gay person in a strict Christian household. Set in Toronto in the 1970s, he begins to see his relationships with his mother and father fracture. As he ventures out on his own, he explores his passion for art. He's set on finding romance and is met with violent attacks and the anxiety surrounding the AIDS era. I'm So Glad We Had This Time Together shows an artist's personal journey to self-love and acceptance.

Vellekoop is a Toronto-born writer and artist. He has been an illustrator for the past three decades, for companies including Air Canada and Bush Irish Whiskey. He is also the author of A Nut at the Opera.

LISTEN | Maurice Vellekoop on The Next Chapter:
In Maurice Vellekoop’s vividly drawn graphic memoir I’m So Glad We Had This Time Together, we see how faith, family, fraught sexuality and a deep love of art shaped the course of his life.

Botanica Drama by Thom

A composite image featuring a portrait of a white man with black hair and a beard looking into the camera beside an illustrated book cover featuring a black skeleton in a red bathrobe.
Botanica Drama is a graphic novel by Thom. (Pow Pow Press)

What happens when the sun has had enough? That's the premise of Thom's latest book Botanica Drama. After taking a beating the night before, the Sun is fed up and decides not to rise. As the earth is plunged into darkness, Philomène, Death and their friends face a harsh winter and horrifying creatures from the shadows as they wonder if the sun will ever rise again. 

Thom is an illustrator and comic creator from Montreal. His other books are Casa Rodeo and VII.

Gamerville by Johnnie Christmas

Gamerville by Johnnie Christmas. Illustrated book cover shows a young Black teen in a red jacket with many patches, looking out at a body of water. Headshot of a Black male author in a red blazer.
Gamerville is a middle-grade graphic novel by Johnnie Christmas. (HarperAlley, Amanda Palmer)

In Gamerville: Game On... Or Game Over, Max Lightning is destined to compete in a video game championship when his plans are thwarted by his parents, who decide to send him to a camp where electronics are not allowed. Stuck in Camp Reset, Max is forced to spend time outside in nature with other people and longs to escape and level up once again.

Christmas is a New York Times bestselling author and illustrator, raised in Florida and currently based in Vancouver. CBC Books named Johnnie Christmas a Writer to Watch in 2022

Bad Medicine by Christopher Twin

Bad Medicine by Christopher Twin. Illustrated book cover of 5 teens around a campfire. The smoke is rising above to show a monstrous figure in the dark. Headshot of the male author.
Bad Medicine is a graphic novel by Christopher Twin. (Emanata, Christopher Twin)

Inspired by Cree folklore and modern Cree life, Bad Medicine follows five teens who share chilling horror stories around a campfire. Bad Medicine was on the longlist for Canada Reads 2024 and earned nominations for both the Nipper Award for emerging talent and the Egghead Award for best kids' book. 

Christopher Twin is from the Swan River First Nations reservation in northern Alberta. Currently based in Edmonton, he does comic work and illustrations as a freelancer.

LISTEN | Christopher Twin on Edmonton AM: 
CBC Books has released its list of best Canadian comics of 2023. Edmonton writer and cartoonist Christopher Twin made the cut with his graphic novel, Bad Medicine.

Junior High by Tegan Quin & Sara Quin, illustrated by Tillie Walden

Illustrated book cover of two white twin sisters with brown hair touching hands. Many purple objects surround them. Two white twin sisters with brown hair facing camera in fuschia shirts.
Tegan and Sara: Junior High is a middle-grade graphic novel by Tegan Quin and Sara Quin, both pictured, and illustrated by Tillie Walden. (Macmillan, Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

Tegan and Sara: Junior High is a middle-grade graphic novel by Canadian sister musician duo Tegan and Sara. The story is inspired by the authors' own experiences of finding one's identity, musicianship and family in their adolescence. Identical twins Tegan and Sara move to a new home and school, and begin to come into their own as individuals.

Tegan Quin and Sara Quin are twin sisters and a pop music duo from Calgary. They previously published a memoir called High School

Tillie Walden is an American cartoonist, illustrator and writer. She has published several graphic novels, including On a Sunbeam and Spinning.

LISTEN | Tegan & Sara on The Next Chapter:
Pop duo Tegan and Sara talk to Shelagh Rogers about their graphic novel Junior High, their lightly fictionalized account of entering Grade 7 in 1990s Calgary, illustrated by Tillie Walden.

Shout Kill Revel by Jarret Hartnell

A composite image of a black and white portrait of a white man with glasses and a moustache and a blue and pink graphic novel cover.
Shout Kill Revel is a graphic novel by Jarret Hartnell. (Renegade Arts Entertainment, www.jarrethartnell.com)

In this fantasy Western, a ruthless cult called the Undrowned Order rules the land as they enact their evil plans. They believe that Helmina is their messiah who will unleash unspeakable horror upon the earth. After a lifetime of wrestling with her cosmic affliction, Helmina decides to take her destiny into her own hands.

Jarret Hartnell is a comic writer and artist based in Calgary. Shout Kill Revel is his debut graphic novel.

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