Showing posts sorted by relevance for query feeding ghosts. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query feeding ghosts. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Feeding Ghosts

Feeding Ghosts is a graphic memoir of three generations of Chinese women. It was published last year and has won many awards. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Memoir and was a winner of the National Books Critics Circle. Also, the book won the Libby Award For Best Graphic Novel and was a Kirkus Nonfiction Prize finalist. This awesome memoir was also named a Best Book Of the Year by Time, Forbes, NPR, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and my library, the Chicago Public Library. It is a chunkster as it is over 400 pages long.

The publisher's summary:

In her acclaimed graphic memoir debut, Tessa Hulls traces the reverberations of Chinese history across three generations of women in her family. Tessa’s grandmother, Sun Yi, was a Shanghai journalist swept up by the turmoil of the 1949 Communist victory. After fleeing to Hong Kong, she wrote a bestselling memoir about her persecution and survival—then promptly had a mental breakdown from which she never recovered.

Growing up with Sun Yi, Tessa watches both her mother and grandmother struggle beneath the weight of unexamined trauma and mental illness, and bolts to the most remote corners of the globe. But once she turns thirty, roaming begins to feel less like freedom and more like running away. Feeding Ghosts is Tessa’s homecoming, a vivid, heartbreaking journey into history that exposes the fear and trauma that haunt generations, andthe love that holds them together.

The story is told in black and white comic strip panels. The dialogue is densely packed into the strips so it is a slow read. However, it's well worth reading. With over 400 pages the book is definitely a chunkster. 

I was fascinated by Tessa's retelling of her mother and grandmother escaping from China and heading to the United States. She explains that there was inter-generational trauma that affected her. How she was raised and her relationships with her family was based upon her mother and grandmother's stunted emotions. Tessa inherited this. When she traveled to China with her mother, her mother was freed from her trauma and acted like she was at home. Mom was at peace from seeing the family she left behind. I wondered whether it would have been better to have stayed behind in Maoist China.

This is a memoir to cherish. I loved the story and learned alot about the immigrant experience. 5 out of 5 stars.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Wrap Up of the Graphic Novel and Manga Reading Challenge

The Graphic Novel/ Manga Challenge is another favorite challenge of mine. When I signed up I could not pick a level of participation, wavering between reading 24 or 52 books.  In the end I read 30 novels. There isn't an annual sign up for the challenge anymore. Participants  just continue to post our reviews every year in the Facebook group site. 

The following are links to my reviews for 2025. 

Two Tribes by Emily Bowen Cohen

Sliced by Rafael Scavone

Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall

White Widow by Sarah Gailey

War on Gaza by Joe Sacco

Sacred Heart by Liz Suburbia

Budding Crisis #1 by MK Reed 

Dumb by Georgia Webber

Sugar Shack by Lucy Kindly

Black is the Color by Julia Gfrorer

Delver, Season One by Spike Trotman

40 Seconds by Jeremy Haun

Adora and the Distance by Marc Bernardin

Bad Mother by Christa Faust

Ms. Tree #1 by Max Allan Collins

Ms. Tree #2 by Max Allan Collins

Ms. Tree #3 by Max Allan Collins

The Dark by Mark Sable

Endless by Curt Pires

Alienated #1 by Taki Soma

Shang Chi by Gene Luen Yang

Spent by Alison Bechdel

Feral Volume 1 by Fleecs

Brownstone by Samual Teer

Feeding Ghosts by Tessa Hulls

Muybridge by Guy DeLisle

We Called Them Giants by Kieron Gillen

The Holy Roller by Andy Samburg

Ginseng Roots by Craig Thompson

Profane by Peter Mulligan

The Strange Tale of Oscar Zahn by Tai Vuong

Zodiac by Ai Weiwei


Favorite Book:  Ginseng Roots: A Memoir

Second Favorite Book:  Dumb

Least Favorite Book: Zodiac

Saturday, December 27, 2025

My Life in 2025 Meme

Karen from the Booker Talk blog publishes a similar post every year. I first learned about it three years ago and I am going to answer her questions from last year today.

In high school I was: The Secret Keeper (Renita D'Silva)

People might be surprised by: The Intruder (Freida McFadden)

I will never be: The Celestial Guardian (Gary McAvoy)

My life post-lockdown was: The Wife Upstairs (Freida McFadden)

My fantasy job is: The Chaiwallah (Tim Van Es) 

At the end of a long day I need: The Lotus Shoes (Jane Yang)

I hate being: Feral (Fleecs)

I wish I had: Knife Skills for Beginners (Orlando Murrin)

My family reunions are: The Way of the Wicked (Mel Starr)

At a party you’d find me: Feeding Ghosts (Tessa Hulls)

I’ve never been to: Bad Lands (Preston and Child)

A happy day includes: A Death at a Scottish Wedding (Lucy Connelly)

Motto I live by: First Lie Wins (J M Cannon)

On my bucket list is: Six Days in Bombay (Alka Joshi)

In my next life, I want to be:  Dumb (Georgia Webber)