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  • Mikayla Wobrak
  • Jun 3, 2019
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jan 5, 2022

Instead of recommending a particular book this month, I wanted to recommend a whole storytelling medium... graphic novels! I must confess—even though I'm a librarian, there have been many times when I've felt like I couldn't focus while reading or didn't have enough time to sit down with a traditional book for months at a time. But all the while, comics and graphic novels kept me reading and made sure I didn't give up. I could get through one on a long bus ride or substitute an hour of TV at night and finish a whole volume! They're visually engaging, quick to read, and the illustrations add a rich new layer of depth to the story. Comics are great for reluctant readers and visual learners, and there's so many different genres of comics—superheroes, sci-fi, school stories, historical dramas, LGBT fiction, memoirs, oh my! There's a comic out there for every reader, and I'd love to help you find the right one for you.


Kids—why not start with Kay O'Neill, Brenna Thummler, and Luke Pearson. Teens and adults—give Art Spiegelman, Brian K. Vaughan, or Michael DeForge a shot. Feel free to ask me if you'd like more specific recommendations!


Staff recommendation published in Crafton Public Library's monthly newsletter.

Updated: Jan 5, 2022

This month, I wanted to recommend one of my favorite books I’ve read recently–Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century, by Jessica Bruder. This work of non-fiction tells the stories of a small but growing subculture of Americans who live full-time nomadic lives out of vans and RVs, foregoing real estate in favor of “wheel estate.” They work grueling seasonal jobs in Amazon warehouses, national park campgrounds, and beet farms, working long hours for low wages, many times trading their labor for a free parking spot. But these travelers aren’t like the young artists and non-conformist transients of the Beat generation–the majority are older Americans, some well past retirement age, who had lost their jobs, their homes, and their savings in the Great Recession of 2008. While many would not have initially chosen this houseless lifestyle had their circumstances been different, they have built for themselves a tight-knit community, exemplified by a Burning Man-esque festival for van-dwellers which is held in the desert of Arizona each year. To me, this book really illustrated the creative ends that people sometimes have to go to just to survive in this day and age, and it highlighted the exploitation these people, already down on their luck, have faced in the seasonal labor market. At the same time though, it really got me daydreaming about how cool it could be to live that kind of free, wandering lifestyle.


Staff recommendation published in Crafton Public Library's monthly newsletter.


 © 2018-2023 Mikayla Wobrak

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