Recent Researched Comics for Grown-ups

Some lovely graphic works for adult readership have come out this Spring, each based on fact to various degrees. Tillie Walden’s Charity and Sylvia came out this week from Drawn & Quarterly; last month gave us Opioids and Organs by Arizona O’Neill; and in March, the collected volume of Death to Pachuco by Henry Barajas and Rachel Miller came out from Image. All of these were great reads, and each of them also taught me stuff I hadn’t already known about the world I live in.

silhouettes of two women look at eachother in an ornate border on the cover of charity and sylvia by tillie waldenThe beautiful and engaging Charity and Sylvia by Tillie Walden makes a terrific mid-June centerpiece for Pride Month. A sepia-toned, meticulously researched graphic novel, it tells the story of two women who lived together as a couple in rural Vermont in the 19th century. Walden uses artifacts and handwritten documents from the lives of Charity Bryant and Sylvia Drake, and historical records of the larger American experience at the time, such as when railroads arrived, what undergarments looked like, how cold it was, and what was happening in national politics, to piece together a story of these women’s lives.

They really did exist, and live as a couple, and Walden’s version of their love and life story is both historically informed and beautifully depicted. In the Afterword, Walden tells us that like Charity and Sylvia, she, too, lives with her wife in rural Vermont.

I never watched The Walking Dead on television, and I only read a couple volumes of the original comics series it was based on, but I love Walden’s spin-off graphic novel trilogy Clementine. I eagerly awaited each new book in that series, and I think even though there are no zombies, Charity and Sylvia has a lot in common with Clementine because it is so atmospheric, and focused on people making humane connections with each other in the midst of extremely harsh circumstances. I recommend Charity and Sylvia if you are interested in queer history, love stories, American History, beautiful page design, or a masterclass on pacing. For a deep dive into any of these aspects, take a look at Walden’s website for the project, charityandsylvia.com

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The Reel Life Of Zara Kregg by Brad Barkley (EXCERPT)

Hello, readers! We have a treat for you today with an excerpt from a sensitive coming-of-age tale, as a young girl must come out of the shadows in order to embrace a whole life.

The closest that 16 year-old Zara Kegg has to friendships in her coastal North Carolina town is with the regulars she watches from the projection booth of the movie theater where she works. The Palace Theater shows pretty much only cult classics, and when Zara isn’t watching the movie or the regulars over whom she feels a protective sort of interest, she’s busy trying — more or less — to figure her way out of her existential crisis. Her mom died three years ago and her dad has been sliding further and further into depression and bad coping mechanisms. Zara has Real Problems, and no time for friends, much less romance.

That changes when her flaky boss asks her to organize a Valentine’s Day marathon of Godzilla movies. As she scrambles to deal with 150 inflatable Godzillas, she slowly begins to make new friends and, perhaps, more. But will she be able to emerge fully from her existence as a spectator in order to finally be the main character of her own life?

Read on for an immersive look at Zara’s perspective from the projection booth!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/16/the-reel-life-of-zara-kregg-by-brad-barkley-excerpt/

Gay Mormon Dad by Chad Anderson & Remy Burke

I have been super bad at properly commemorating celebration months this year so far, but better late than never I suppose, so Happy Pride! I tend to read a lot of books with queer characters and themes yet, oddly, feel like Chad Anderson and Remy Burke’s Gay Mormon Dad is the only one I’ve read for June so far.

But what a way to start! This is a deeply personal, achingly vulnerable memoir of what it was like to grow up gay and Mormon at the end of the 20th century, and how Mr Anderson eventually came out and began to live life on his own terms. It was not an easy journey, but his honesty and courage give readers hope that they too can overcome the obstacles in their path on the way to existing as free and honest people.

Beginning from a childhood marked by abuse, Chad sought comfort in the church his mother devoutly believed in. Since church elders told him he could pray the gay away, he tried his best to do exactly that, even getting married and having two kids before deciding that he couldn’t live like he was suffocating any more. Unsurprisingly, it was a hard road forward, but he persevered until he achieved a life he could be, well, proud of.

As someone who spent a large part of my youth in a conservative religious society, I felt immediately familiar with so much of his struggle. What was new to me were the details of the Mormon church and practices, which I found fascinating. I didn’t expect learn so much about the faith in this book but definitely appreciate the greater sociological understanding I came away with.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/15/gay-mormon-dad-by-chad-anderson-remy-burke/

Hugo Awards 2026: Best Graphic Story or Comic

This year’s list of Hugo Award finalists in the category of Best Graphic Story of Comic is unusual in that for the first time since 2016 neither Saga nor Monstress is among them. The balance between one-offs and continuing characters/series is a little more usual, with three volumes from each. The ongoing series are a little unusual, in that one is the start of a new continuity, one is part of a long-running webcomic, and only one — the Wonder Woman book — features a familiar character from a traditional comics publisher. The three stand-alones are a children’s book that is almost entirely art, a graphic novel, and an adaptation of a beloved fantasy classic. I vastly preferred the stand-alone works, as will become clear from these notes on the finalists, in ascending order of my preference.

A Wizard of Earthsea — Graphic Novel

The Power Fantasy Volume 1: The Superpowers starts a story about superpowered beings in the post-WWII era, a story that will presumably run for a considerable number of additional issues. Doreen reviewed it here, and liked it much more than I did. I did not make it to the end of volume 1. A psionic massacre in the White House and, I think, across the US government is where I noped out. Under Trump 2.0, friends have had careers destroyed; the personal intervention of Elon Musk and his DOGE boys sparked gratuitous waste on an epic scale, and will cause many, many thousands of needless deaths. Friends who have stayed in public service have had their work made needlessly more difficult, just to stroke the overweening egos of rotten men. Others I was once close to but have not kept up with may have had their careers destroyed simply because it was their time to rotate back to the States instead of staying in the field. One friend was personally hounded out of an ambassadorial posting in a war zone because she would not tell egregious and easily disproven lies on Trump’s behalf. Though it was not a literal massacre like the one depicted in the book, it was close enough that I did not want to read more, not least because the prologue and couple dozen pages that served as an introduction did not have me invested enough in the characters to go along on a ride of cosmic destruction. The art was striking, but it did not induce me to care what happened to those people.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/13/hugo-awards-2026-best-graphic-story-or-comic/

Tantalizing Tales — June 2026 — Part Two

Happy Men’s World Cup season, dear readers! I do not, alas, have any books related to the beautiful game in this week’s tantalizing pile but I do have several that could tempt me to look away from my TV screen for a second… or more likely fill the empty time between these already wonderful and infuriating matches!

First up, we have C B Everett’s The Final Chapter, a metafictional book-within-a-book thriller that’s certain to delight fans of both puzzles and high concept mysteries like myself!

A decade ago, a bestselling, critically acclaimed author suddenly disappeared. Now, a manuscript purporting to be his final novel has unexpectedly resurfaced. Trouble is, it’s nothing like his other books. Instead of a moving work of literary genius, this new novel is an espionage thriller filled with seemingly stereotypical James-Bond-esque characters and situations.

Bewildered, his publisher calls in the author’s best friend for help contextualizing the novel in the missing writer’s larger oeuvre. C B Everett (!) is also an author, but he’s just as baffled by this strange book as everyone else is. The more he reads, however, the more he begins to recognize details from the life that he and his missing friend had actually shared. Could his friend have coded real world secrets into the manuscript before abruptly disappearing? Soon, C B will be wondering how well we can really know our friends — and even ourselves — as he’s plunged into a life-threatening web of intrigue.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/12/tantalizing-tales-june-2026-part-two/

The Mystery Of The Stolen World Cup Trophy by Angela Cervantes

Men’s World Cup season has officially begun! Ever since 1998, this has been THE most exciting global sporting event for me, and even tho this year’s promises to be the worst run and most corrupt tournament of all time, not even that can dampen my love of the sport and the community who actually care about the beautiful game.

With that in mind, I was super happy to dive into Angela Cervantes’ The Mystery of The Stolen World Cup Trophy as part of my preparations/celebrations. I am very pro anything that spreads the joy of the tournament to as many people as possible, and am still a little bitter at all the years I missed out on of this in my youth. This middle grade mystery series definitely transmits that excitement and hopefully entices more than a few bookish kids into finding out more about the beautiful game. Conversely, I hope it also introduces some sports-mad kids to the joys of a good mystery novel, which this definitely is (tho not without certain reservations that I’ll discuss later in this review.)

The story itself revolves around sixth grader Diez Espada, who’s inherited his love of football — tho not, unfortunately, commensurate skill — from his dad and his love of detection from his recently deceased librarian mom. When he and his dad receive exclusive tickets to a party where the actual World Cup trophy will be displayed in Miami, ahead of the 2026 World Cup final, it feels like a dream come true.

Disaster strikes, however, when the trophy is stolen by the international thief known as La Lechuza. Diez is certain that he’ll be able to figure out whodunnit and get the trophy back, with the help of his crush Rio and the actual detective on the case, the world-famous Detective Enzo. But there’ll be more than one tricky conundrum in his path as he figures out how to navigate a surprisingly treacherous field.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/11/the-mystery-of-the-stolen-world-cup-trophy-by-angela-cervantes/

Murder Summer!

Here in the northern hemisphere, as temperatures get hotter and hotter, and vacations get (hopefully) more and more imminent, don’t we all just want to relax with a cold beverage and a book in which people die at the hand of another? It can’t just be me. Luckily, publishers know we want this, and there is a delightful lineup of murder books this season, to help us while away the hot days of summer.

a hotel key is dipped in blood on the cover of Body Count by Codie CrowleyIf you’re in the mood for a politically progressive teen slasher, go for Body Count, by Codie Crowley. If you want a self-referential portal fantasy (with murders), Sarah Rees Brennan’s All Hail Chaos is perfect for you. And if your summer calls for a combo classic mystery and romance that takes place in the golden era of British mystery novels, The Cloak and Dagger Club by Jackie McMahon will satisfy that craving.

All of these books are genre-savvy, commenting enjoyably on the tropes and potential pitfalls of their respective genres, which is exactly my jam.

Body Count came out from Disney Hyperion on May 5th. Don’t let the Disney publisher lead you astray. There are no princesses with animal sidekicks here. I loved Codie Crowley’s first book, Here Lies a Vengeful Bitch, so I was extremely excited for Body Count. In Body Count, Sundae is a cheerleader prom queen on the Jersey Shore for Prom Weekend, when a supernatural entity starts targeting her and everyone around her. A classic set up for a teen slasher story, but this one upends several genre expectations.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/10/murder-summer/

Hugo Awards 2026: Best Short Story Nominees

Getting a much earlier start with this year’s slate of Hugo nominees than I did last year’s, go me! And, as with last year’s short story slate, my favorite comes from Isabel J Kim, with her diabolical Wire Mother.

Perhaps diabolical isn’t the best description, but after reading the bland obviousness of most of the other nominees, it was nice to get into a story that’s messy and mean and thoroughly believable.

Our prickly young heroine Cassie has been diagnosed with Emotional Contagion Deficit, a condition where she has trouble bonding with digital people. This includes her digital mother Amy, to the chagrin of her fully biological father. As Cassie sometimes wants to tells him, while he could build Amy to love him and the things he loves, he couldn’t build Cassie to do the same, so stop trying to make them bond already.

I really don’t want to say too much else about this story because it’s full of sharp surprises, but I very much appreciated the skepticism with which Ms Kim addresses the idea of AI personhood under circumstances which are essentially a realistic extrapolation from where we are as a society today, both technologically and emotionally. I also appreciated how she underscores the complexity of the matter, in the persons of both Rina and Oliver. WM is both a clever interrogation of the happy clappy idea that chatbots are actually people and a warning against the trouble inherent in conflating the two.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/09/hugo-awards-2026-best-short-story-nominees/

Mount Verity by Therese Bohman

translated from the original Swedish by Marlaine Delargy.

I’m going to be so for real here and admit that the main reason I picked up this book off my TBR pile was because it’s Swedish like my beloved Viktor Gyokeres. When you’ve come out of Etsy Witch retirement to support a guy, it’s hard not to feel emotionally invested, if not outright entangled, in his fortunes and interests and background, especially when the rewards have been so enriching (or maybe that’s just my delulu talking again, lol.)

But yes, I felt energetically obligated to read this short novel, and would like to thank the cosmos for bringing it my way. Mount Verity is the story of Hanna Hallman, from her youth in the Kolmarden, through attempts to establish herself as an artist in Gothenburg, then to her forties in Stockholm. Her relationships with two men anchor the narrative, as she’s repeatedly drawn back to the village where she grew up. One is her best friend: calm, handsome Marcus, who can’t wait to leave Krokek for a big city like Malmo, where his absent father lives. The other is her older brother Erik, who abruptly disappears in the wee hours of Easter morning, after midnight mass.

According to Erik’s friends, they had decided to bike to mass together for one of their obligatory pre-confirmation attendances. They’d had a few beers beforehand, then changed their minds about going back to one of the boy’s houses to continue drinking. Instead, they went up to Mount Verity, a nearby peak with a spooky legend attached to one of its caves. Allegedly, the cave was used during seventeenth century witch trials to “test” suspected witches. The accused were lowered into the cave and asked if they were witches. If they admitted it, they were pulled back up and punished. If they denied it, they were left to be swallowed by a cave said to devour liars.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/08/mount-verity-by-therese-bohman/

Hugo Awards 2026: Best Related Work

The 2026 Hugo Award for Best Related Work — which isn’t called the Hugo Award for Everything Else but at this stage in its evolution maybe should be — hews closer to its bookish roots this time around. Four of six finalists are books, or at least very book-like, with a podcast and a spreadsheet rounding out the list. This inverts the 2025 shares, which had two books, three reports in various formats and a Bingo Reading Challenge.

A thoroughly flagged copy of Inventing the Renaissance by Ada Palmer

I expect the back and forth to continue, as it speaks to a fundamental tension in the category: Will the non-fiction books for which the category was originally created get crowded out by more topical, more controversial and more glancingly engageable works? Hugo nominators and voters are having a multi-year conversation about what they, we, consider deserving of the field’s top honors. Inevitably, there will be proposals to split the category into book and non-book categories. Unless books somehow wind up getting crowded out year after year, I hope that the present inelegant compromise will be maintained. Category proliferation is a one-way ratchet, and as much as I have rolled my eyes at some nominations (and ranked them below No Award), establishing Best Related Non-Book Work would likely be the source of much more.

This year seems to have struck a good balance, though my views will become obvious as I make a few notes about each finalist in ascending order of preference.

“Ragnarök vs the Long Night” is an episode of the History of Westeros Podcast, released in August 2025. I presume that the whole project is close enough to a professional podcast that it was ineligible in the Fancast category. The episode concerns connections between apocalypses, especially from Nordic mythology, and “The Long Night,” the third episode of the final season of Game of Thrones, originally broadcast in May 2019, and the first episode that I didn’t watch. The production of the podcast, which I encountered as a YouTube video, is high quality, and obviously a labor of love. It’s also two and a half hours long about a show I had fallen out of love with and stopped watching at precisely the episode the hosts discuss in great detail. There’s obviously an appreciative audience for this sort of thing. I’m just not part of it.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/07/hugo-awards-2026-best-related-work/