In
today’s article I would like to focus on a part of the Rowan Public Library
collection that most patrons do not access: the graphic novel collection. There are over 1,000 titles at all three
branches in the graphic novel collection and the NC Digital Library, including
comics, manga, and stand-alone works in a wide variety of genres and subject
matters—even non-fiction graphic novels.
Unfortunately,
graphic novels are sometimes stigmatized for not being “real books,” although a
2001 study by literacy professors Cunningham and Stanovich at California State
University discovered that reading comics led to greater literacy skills. There is also the excuse that graphic novels
are just for “lazy readers,” when they have actually been proven to be a great
resource for reluctant readers because they aid in processing information,
teach elements of storytelling, and can be a stepping stone to other
literature.
Here
are some of the different volumes in the RPL graphic novel collection that might
appeal to readers who might be hesitant to browse this area of the collection:
I
Remember Beirut by Zeina Abirached – this award-winning author portrays her
childhood in 1980s Lebanon, where fighting between Christians and Muslims
divided the city.
Prez
Volume 1: Corndog-in-Chief by Mark Russell – America’s first teenaged
president, Beth Ross, must find a way to overthrow a corporate shadow
government and saved the world.
Pyongyang:
A Journey in North Korea by Guy Delisle – in 2001, cartoonist Guy Deslisle
lived in the capital of North Korea for two months on a work visa, and records
what he was able to see of the culture and lives in the communist society
there.
Stone
Cold: The Stone Man Mysteries, Book One by Jane Yolen – After being saved
from death by Silex, a beast trapped in the form of a gargoyle, young runaway
Craig begins a new life by probing a series of murders that has menaced
Scotland.
Monster:
A Graphic Novel by Guy Sims – Adapted from the award-winning novel by
Walter Dean Myers, this book is about sixteen-year-old Steve Harmon, who is on
trial as an accomplice to murder and is trying to come to terms with the course
his life has taken.
The
Beatles: All Our Yesterdays by Jason Quinn – Follows the story of the
Beatles, from their origins in Liverpool to their journey to Hamburg and rise
to fame in the 1960s.
Girl
in Dior by Annie Goetzinger – It’s February 1947, and Clara, a newly hired
chronicler and guide to the new Dior fashion house, is hand-picked to be a
model.
March:
Books 1 – 3 by John Lewis – These first-hand accounts of the author’s
lifelong struggle for civil and human rights detail his involvement in the
Freedom Rides and March on Washington in 1963.
These are just a few of the titles
that are available to be checked out by any Rowan Public Library patron. View
the catalog online or go to any RPL branch to see what other graphic novels are
available to read.
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