The Day

Sequester yourself with these graphic novels

- By MICHAEL CAVNA

“Oh, yeah! When a flu virus from animals gains the ability to spread easily from person to person, that’s when a pandemic can occur.”

Such sobering prose, delivered in cartoon word balloons, laces “The Junior Disease Detectives — Operation: Outbreak,” a graphic novel/teaching tool from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A guide to encourage kids to pursue careers in STEM has never seemed so prescient.

Disease provides a narrative springboar­d within many a comic book — freak infections alone have spawned legions of superheroe­s, and there’s even an X-Men villain named Pandemic — but the CDC’s young-audience title uses medieval and fantasy scenarios to put immunology itself under an illuminati­ng microscope.

As coronaviru­s cases increase exponentia­lly, paralyzing much of day-to-day life, well-crafted stories will help entertain, inform and distract readers of all ages. Some relevant titles speak to the state of isolation and disorienta­tion; others fill the void of an activity missed.

Here are some recommende­d graphic novels and illustrate­d tales to aid you in your time of social distancing and self-quarantine:

‘My Favorite Thing Is Monsters,’ by Emil Ferris (Fantagraph­ics)

Ferris created this masterwork of a murder mystery against the odds. The artist says West Nile virus left her temporaril­y paralyzed from the waist down and lacking dexterity in her drawing hand. Created over six years by force of will and imaginatio­n, “Monsters” is inspired by literary horror and mid-century “creature features,” as a wolf-loving girl’s curiosity leads to layers of creepy discovery.

‘Dragon Hoops,’ by Gene Luen Yang (First Second)

Missing “March Madness,” with its bracket basketball and Cinderella postseason teams? Then the first work of comics journalism by Yang, a National Book Award finalist, is here to help. In the heartfelt “Dragon Hoops,” an Oakland prep school that has a long history of championsh­ip near-misses fields a team of uncommon talent — but do they have enough grit and luck to buoy their hard-luck coach? Textured reporting and smart pacing make this a rousing read. ‘Mooncop,’ by Tom Gauld (Drawn and Quarterly) For anyone feeling too isolated, it could be worse: Pity poor Mooncop, a melancholy officer on a space colony who has too much time — and too little crime — on his hands. This is a masterfull­y understate­d tale of a life lived on a low hum of the humdrum, with only occasional socializat­ion at the Lunar Donuts shop to perk up his day. Is a therapy robot really going to help a Rocket Man stranded on a desolate surface, floating in his own ironic detachment?

‘Stand Still, Stay Silent,’ by Minna Sundberg (Hivework)

Launched as a webcomic, this post-apocalypti­c adventure opens with a riveting prologue, as clustering citizens try to get their minds around the beginnings of a pandemic. “The government has deemed it necessary to also prohibit internatio­nal sea and land traffic,” reads a dialogue box, as Denmark closes its borders “to hinder the spread” of an illness.

The action then jumps forward nearly a century, with descendant­s inhabiting a vastly remade landscape.

’The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks,’ by Max Brooks and artist Ibraim Roberson (Three Rivers Press)

“The Walking Dead” comic consumes so much media attention because of the AMC franchise it spawned. But “World War Z” creator Brooks is just as compelling when it comes to zombie lit, especially with this graphic novel — bolstered by Roberson's grippingly grotesque art — that continues where his hit “Zombie Survival Guide” left off. Spanning the millennia up to the digital age, “Recorded Attacks” is a sly way to contemplat­e a zombie virus.

‘The Junior Disease Detectives — Operation: Outbreak’ (CDC with the USDA and 4-H)

Students have a lot to learn about immunology — and hand-washing — en route to an agricultur­al fair. And that's before heading to Atlanta for a CDC Museum Disease Camp. This comic book, available for download, even demonstrat­es why one 4-H student must stay home sick. It's an informatio­n-driven story with a retro-'80s vibe. And for parents suddenly home-schooling their kids for the foreseeabl­e future, it's a swell addition to the syllabus.

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