Comics/Graphic Novels

Give These Comics to Dads for Father’s Day

María Cristina García lives in New York with her favorite spouse, her favorite toddler, her favorite cat, and her second-favorite cat. When not ranking members of her household, she's catching up on Supergirl, strumming her mandolin, or trying to beat the clock on her library loans. Twitter: @MeowyCristina Blog: MeowyCristina.com

This post was originally published at Panels, our sister site about all things comics! Check out more from them here.

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Last Father’s Day, our kid was less than a week old, so gift-wise I was able to get away with the classic “Here’s a human being I incubated and expelled from my body.” This year’s gift, while less physically demanding, has actually required some serious thought. Should you find yourself without a present for the father figure(s) in your life, you’re welcome to piggyback off my brainstorm.

If you want to make him nostalgic:

new frontierDC: The New Frontier Deluxe Edition

Darwyn Cooke
DC Comics, 2015

This one’s coming out in paperback soon, but c’mon, it’s for Dad! Get the hardcover.

With The New Frontierthe much-missed Darwyn Cooke spins a yarn that takes the reader from the Golden Age of comics to the Silver Age. He features more heroes than you would think possible, and does so without those appearances feeling forced nor superfluous. If the Silver Age was before your dad’s time, this would be an excellent introduction to the classic characters. If the father on your list was reading comics way back when, then he’ll enjoy recognizing the history Cooke literally draws on. And if he doesn’t catch every allusion, there’s a great appendix wherein Cooke reveals his inspirations for both particular beats and even individual panels. Go on, flip through the book. Breathtaking artwork, right? Dad may not have loved comics before, but he’s got to now. And in the unlikely event that he can resist the vibrant colors, take back borrow your gift.

If you want him to share with the kids:

Giants Beware coverGiants Beware!

Jorge Aguirre and Rafael Rosado
First Second, 2012

Anne Shirley may have had the market cornered on impetuous redheads, but she’s got some pint-sized competition. In this charming graphic novel, Claudette—along with her brother Gaston and their friend Marie—sets her sights on slaying the infamous baby-feet-eating giant. The consummate world-building offers something for all ages, and before you know it, Pops will be so invested in the characters and their town that you’ve already got his birthday present in the sequel, Dragons Beware! Hours of read-out-loud fun await, and he’ll have a good time playing against type and voicing Claudette’s and Gaston’s emotionally unavailable blacksmith father.Giants Beware page

If you want to give him a break from sharing with the kids:

Fairyland_Vol1_CoverI Hate Fairyland, Vol 1: Madly Ever After
Skottie Young and Jean-François Beaulieu
Image Comics, 2016

Just in case the bloody battle axe didn’t give it away, I’m here to tell you that this series is not one with which to create fond read-aloud memories (unless Dad is reading aloud to a 17+ crowd). Skottie Young takes his Little Marvel talents and applies them to the gruesome exploits of Gert, a 37-year-old who’s been wandering around in the body of the seven-year-old she was upon being transported to Fairyland. After thirty years of trying to return home, she is understandably hot-tempered, and unrestrainedly violent. For a father who wearies of tea parties, the wanton killing of candy-colored creatures (courtesy of Jean-François Beaulieu) will be a welcome release.

If he makes up answers for those “How does that work?” questions:

The-Complete-Calvin-and-Hobbes-Paperback-L9781449433253The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
Bill Watterson
Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2012 (Paperback)

Yeah, I know what I said up top about hardcover vs. paperback. But this is going to be a splurge, so do yourself a favor and go with the less expensive option (anyway, the paperback volumes are cozier to curl up with).

You’ve got a dad who gently trolls the kids out of ignorance or for amusement. He’s got a kindred spirit in Calvin’s dad, who offers up plausible but fantastical explanations for ordinary phenomena. Buy a father this essential collection and he’ll be able to crib off Calvin’s father…or see what kind of (delightfully) sarcastic rascal that sort of parenting results in.
Calvin_Hobbes_Father

If you want him to learn real answers for those “How does that work?” questions:

thing-explainerThing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words
Randall Munroe
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015

Chances are, the father you’re shopping for is already a fan of webcomic xkcd because both of them are awesome. If not, remedy that by gifting the repository of human knowledge that is Thing Explainer. But if I’m right, indulge that by gifting the repository of human knowledge that is Thing Explainer. I guess what I’m saying is, you must get Thing Explainer. Randall Munroe limits his vocabulary to the thousand most common words in the English language and explains everything from the Mars Rover (“space car for the red world”) to your internal organs (“bags of stuff inside you”). The exercise might elicit earned laughs, but the diagrams in Munroe’s now-classic line-drawing style are straight up beautiful. Combined with the text, the illustrations are so awe-inspiring that Dad might never look at a “shape checker” the same way again.

If you want him to have the feels:

Underwater Welder coverThe Underwater Welder
Jeff Lemire
Top Shelf Productions, 2012

The dad in your life may be interested in reading something from the guy who writes Old Man Logan. But he is not prepared for the emotional journey that is The Underwater Welder. It’s the eerie tale of an expectant father who is thrown for a loop by the resurgence of unresolved issues with his own father. Hauntingly beautiful black and white sketches convey a sense of place, from a seaside town to the depths of the ocean to the recesses of the protagonist’s mind. The dad you give this to will finish it and know that the kind of parent he is is up to him, and not his childhood, and that the birth of a baby is a scary but wondrous new beginning for more than just one creature.

What are your Father’s Day picks?