
4 Graphic Novels Ranked by Degrees of Surrealism
This is a completely subjective and unscientific countdown list of four graphic novels I found on the new book shelf at my branch library last week, ranked by their degrees of relative strangeness.
As noted elsewhere, I don’t read a ton of superhero comics, so I’m not entirely sure why Dinah is blowing off the Justice League to front a girl band, even after the book attempts to explain this choice with some thrilling exposition, but there it is: Black Canary, who isn’t terribly interested in music, is on a tour bus with a bunch of musicians. Every gig ends with a huge fight scene that destroys the venue. There’s a mute child prodigy and a bunch of invisible sonic aliens. Amanda Waller is conducting metahuman experiments. Naturally, the entire story leads up to Battle of the Bands, on which the fate of the world depends. In my mind, I can’t help but refer to this story as “Jam and the Sonograms.” I would also like to insert a Josie and the Pussycats reference here but I can’t think of one as funny as Jam and the Sonograms. The main thesis you should take away from this is that girl bands save the world. Always have, always will.
Level of surrealism: two pairs of torn fishnets and an ex-husband twice risen from the dead.
- Black Canary Volume 1 “Kicking and Screaming”

Black Canary Volume 1: Kicking and Screaming,
Brenden Fletcher, Pia Guerra, Sandy Jarrell, Lee Loughridge, Steve Wands, Annie Wu
- Groot
- A Glance Backward
I don’t even want to tell you anything about this book, because it’s one of those stories that starts out in mundane reality, and then slips, like Alice down the rabbit hole, into some completely foreign universe, charting a long meandering path through utter confusion before making perfect sense of the entire narrative with a mere four words of explanation. But the path through utter confusion is lush and lovingly illustrated and fraught with peril and tension and beauty. It’s gorgeous and terrifying and weird and weirdly relatable, a tale that dangles enticing ideas before your eyes and then, when you’re distracted, punches you in the stomach. In a good way.
Level of surrealism: Permeable brick walls. A train depot. A human sized hamster wheel. A thousand piece puzzle with a couple pieces missing.
- Nod Away