by Roberto Saviano ; illustrated by Asaf Hanuka ; translated by Jamie Richards ; pictorial interpreter: Andworld Design ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 18, 2022
A sometimes-affecting remembrance about the wages of opposing evil hampered by uneven execution.
In this graphic memoir, Saviano chronicles how a book he wrote about organized crime forced him into hiding.
In 2006, author Saviano published Gomorrah, an account of the violent war between Camorra Mafia clans in Casal di Principe, Italy. He intended his illumination of organized crime, “a dictatorship within a democracy,” as a “journalistic novel” inspired by writers like Albert Camus and Truman Capote. The book achieved great success and its author, considerable notoriety, but it also transformed his life in much darker ways. He faced intimidation and death threats by criminal elements who were offended by his exposé, and he was forced into police protection. Stringent security protocols were put into place; they were meant to only last weeks but instead went on for an interminable 15 years. Eventually, the author left his homeland for the United States to teach at New York University and was assigned a new identity for his protection. In harrowing detail, Saviano details the various plots to assassinate him that were uncovered and the increasing psychological effects of his forced isolation. In place of literary celebrity, he was saddled with “absolute solitude and plaguing bureaucratic complexity.” Every aspect of his quotidian existence became a challenge, from taking walks and dating to seeking medical assistance. It was a torturous predicament poignantly captured in these pages: “It’s like living in an aquarium: everyone is looking at me. And I look back, but from behind glass. I hold my breath and I keep thinking that as long as the things I want to do outnumber the things I’m not allowed to, I can handle it. Who knows if it’s true.” However, the tone of Saviano’s book can be cloyingly theatrical at times (“You bastards, I’m still alive!”). One sees a similar heavy-handedness in Hanuka’s overwrought illustrations—mostly grayscale with pops of color—that accompany the story. Still, this is a powerful tale of moral corruption and the cost of one’s resistance to it.
A sometimes-affecting remembrance about the wages of opposing evil hampered by uneven execution.Pub Date: Oct. 18, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-68415-442-5
Page Count: 144
Publisher: Archaia
Review Posted Online: Oct. 26, 2022
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Gemma Correll ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 28, 2026
A memoir for those who want to laugh through the free fall of their own emotional roller coaster.
A humorous take on dread.
In her amusing graphic memoir, cartoonist Correll turns her emotional roller coaster into a literal, visual experience with her own amusement park of worries that she calls Anxietyland. Within this playful framework, she guides readers through her lifelong struggle with severe anxiety—there are attractions like the “worry-go-round,” “booze cruise,” “downward spiral,” and more, all culminating in finding the help that not only helps her manage the anxiety, but pushes her to do the work in confronting and living with it. To her credit, Correll uses the amusement park concept to dissect points in her life where her anxiety was holding her hostage from leading a fulfilling life. One panel shows Correll’s whimsical approach, as when her cat, Oliver, goes missing. “Why hasn’t he come home?” she thinks, her eyes full of worry, her mouth downturned. “What if he’s dead?” The subsequent image shows her pet peeking into the panel; the accompanying text reads, “Oliver (very much alive).” It’s one thing to read a memoir that breaks down episodes with the benefit of time and knowledge; it’s a completely different experience to see someone living through their depression while hanging on for dear life in “anxie-tea” cups. Readers who hold season passes to Anxietyland will be able to laugh along with the author, but this book will also benefit those coming to terms with a new or future anxiety diagnosis. These readers may, for the first time, be able to put their swirling emotions into a tangible context that makes more sense to them and others. That’s the beauty of Correll’s memoir: The book provides a comical medium lens that can open doors to understanding—rather than a door to the house of horrors.
A memoir for those who want to laugh through the free fall of their own emotional roller coaster.Pub Date: April 28, 2026
ISBN: 9781668004159
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2026
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2026
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by Jake Halpern ; illustrated by Michael Sloan ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 8, 2020
An accessible, informative journey through complex issues during turbulent times.
Immersion journalism in the form of a graphic narrative following a Syrian family on their immigration to America.
Originally published as a 22-part series in the New York Times that garnered a Pulitzer for editorial cartooning, the story of the Aldabaan family—first in exile in Jordan and then in New Haven, Connecticut—holds together well as a full-length book. Halpern and Sloan, who spent more than three years with the Aldabaans, movingly explore the family’s significant obstacles, paying special attention to teenage son Naji, whose desire for the ideal of the American dream was the strongest. While not minimizing the harshness of the repression that led them to journey to the U.S.—or the challenges they encountered after they arrived—the focus on the day-by-day adjustment of a typical teenager makes the narrative refreshingly tangible and free of political polemic. Still, the family arrived at New York’s JFK airport during extraordinarily political times: Nov. 8, 2016, the day that Donald Trump was elected. The plan had been for the entire extended family to move, but some had traveled while others awaited approval, a process that was hampered by Trump’s travel ban. The Aldabaans encountered the daunting odds that many immigrants face: find shelter and employment, become self-sustaining quickly, learn English, and adjust to a new culture and climate (Naji learned to shovel snow, which he had never seen). They also received anonymous death threats, and Naji wanted to buy a gun for protection. He asked himself, “Was this the great future you were talking about back in Jordan?” Yet with the assistance of selfless volunteers and a community of fellow immigrants, the Aldabaans persevered. The epilogue provides explanatory context and where-are-they-now accounts, and Sloan’s streamlined, uncluttered illustrations nicely complement the text, consistently emphasizing the humanity of each person.
An accessible, informative journey through complex issues during turbulent times.Pub Date: Sept. 8, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-30559-6
Page Count: 192
Publisher: Metropolitan/Henry Holt
Review Posted Online: Aug. 17, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2020
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