Daily Breeze (Torrance)

GRAPHIC, BUT NOT NOVELS

Nonfiction releases draw power from the form, on subjects from Quebec separatism to Miles Davis

- By Erik Pedersen epedersen@scng.com

Comparing something to a comic book isn't usually meant as praise, but comics, animation and graphic novels can do things other art forms can't.

I remember watching a roundtable discussion with some former writers for “The Simpsons,” and one of them commented that since it cost the same to draw 50 helicopter­s as it does to draw Homer on the couch, the writing staff could let their imaginatio­ns go wild in a way they couldn't in other types of TV or film.

That kind of creative freedom is also evident in the nonfiction graphic novels we're focusing on here. Not only will you find a range of visual styles — some books explode with color and imagery, others stick with clean black & white lines — the stories unfold in distinctiv­e ways as well.

Maybe you need gift ideas for older comics fans, or just want to read something different. (A bonus: The nonfiction titles generally have excellent bibliograp­hies, so there are plenty of recommenda­tions for further reading.)

Whatever the case, you're covered. Read on for some recent books that tell complex, compelling and, yes, even comic book stories.

“ARE YOU WILLING TO DIE FOR THE CAUSE? REVOLUTION IN 1960S QUEBEC,” BY CHRIS OLIVEROS (DRAWN & QUARTERLY)

I didn't know anything about the radical, 1960s-era Quebec separatist movement known as FLQ, but this book lured me in from the first page. Oliveros, the founder of the Montreal publishing company Drawn &

Quarterly, tells the story of passionate, often inept, revolution­aries with intelligen­ce, humor and a focus on the human cost of the conflict. With a compelling narrative and clever, deadpan art — masterfull­y adjusting perspectiv­es to create a sense of movement even in seemingly static conversati­ons — Oliveros can deliver an emotional gut punch, too. There's another volume in the works; I'm looking forward to it.

“ARTIFICIAL: A LOVE STORY,” BY AMY KURZWEIL (CATAPULT)

In this mix of memory, family, art and informatio­n, New Yorker cartoonist Kurzweil explores connection­s between herself and her father, futurist and inventor Ray Kurzweil, whom she calls “the most interestin­g person I've ever met, the most determined and also the most generous” in the book's acknowledg­ments. Then there's her late grandfathe­r, Fred, a Jewish musician who escaped Nazi Germany and came to America, and Ray's desire to create a chatbot based on him. Memory, both human and digital, plays a major part in the book. The illustrati­ons draw you in; the words are pretty great, too.

“THE GOLDEN VOICE: THE BALLAD OF CAMBODIAN ROCK'S LOST QUEEN,” BY GREGORY CAHILL AND KAT BAUMANN (HUMANOIDS)

Raised on a rice farm, Cambodian singer Ros Serey Sothea found success in the 1960s after audiences heard her at a public concert. Later known as The Queen With the Golden Voice, she's said to have recorded something like 500 songs during her brief career; many recordings were lost or deliberate­ly destroyed, but the book has a curated playlist of her music. Following Cambodia's bloody civil war — in which she trained as a paratroope­r — it's believed she was sent to a labor camp and died in the killing fields, one of nearly 2 million murdered, or nearly a quarter of the country's population, in the genocide orchestrat­ed by Pol Pot.

“I AM STAN: A GRAPHIC BIOGRAPHY OF THE LEGENDARY STAN LEE,” BY TOM SCIOLI (TEN SPEED GRAPHIC)

In Scioli's follow-up to his book about comics legend Jack Kirby, readers zip through the life of Kirby's sometime partner, sometime adversary Stanley Lieber, aka Marvel Comics icon Stan Lee. The story spans decades as the comics business booms, busts and blooms into a behemoth. You might often wish for a little more backstory if you don't already know Lee's history beyond his cameos in Marvel movies, but as an overview of this towering, sometimes controvers­ial figure, it's time well spent.

“MILES DAVIS AND THE SEARCH FOR SOUND,” BY DAVE CHISHOLM (Z2 COMICS)

This is a terrific book. Basing the text on jazz great Davis' interviews, essays and biography, Chisholm — who, like Davis, is a trumpeter — wrote, drew, colored and lettered this richly illustrate­d and researched biography of one of the 20th century's greatest musicians. Colorful and clever, Chisholm's work displays an improviser's imaginatio­n — he inserts a panel of a melting Charlie Parker in the style of Salvador Dali during an aside on surrealism — switching up the look and palette of the panels and pages to best suit the story's needs.

“THIS COUNTRY: SEARCHING FOR HOME IN (VERY) RURAL AMERICA,” BY NAVIED MAHDAVIAN (PRINCETON ARCHITECTU­RAL PRESS)

Cartoonist Mahdavian and his filmmaker wife, Emelie, left San Francisco with their dog to live in a tiny house in remote Idaho. The transition was not easy for a variety of reasons. A wonderful storytelle­r and artist — as well as a reader of Robert Macfarlane — Mahdavian deftly uses a clean, expressive style as he shares moments out in nature, running a movie theater and interactin­g with the locals. He teases out the humor and stress of this relocation, as well as a sense of what it's like to be the child of Iranian immigrants in rural America.

“TRANSITION­S: A MOTHER'S JOURNEY,” BY ELODIE DURAND (TOP SHELF)

“Transition­s” follows the journey of university biologist Anne Marbot, a mother whose child comes out as a trans man, Alex. Confused, curious and believing herself committed to her child's well-being, Anne is unwilling to accept change and alienates Alex with her continued resistance. Grappling with her feelings of loss, and more and more at odds with her child, Anne eventually finds her way to a place of understand­ing. It's a powerful story, and the book includes nonfiction interludes that explain and enlighten as it goes along.

Erik Pedersen writes The Book Pages newsletter, a free weekly email about Southern California's books, authors, bestseller­s and more.

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