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Happy 5th Anniversary, Street Noise Books!

Street Noise Books is celebrating five years of take-no-prisoners dissident graphic novel publishing! Five years of queer, BIPOC, and neurodiverse authors publishing their own stories for adults and teens: disabled authors; trans authors; indigenous authors, authors grappling with climate change and social justice; authors struggling for mental health. Street Noise has been recognized this year alone with FOUR Eisner Awards – a heck of a birthday celebration!

 

I’m a Wild Seed, by Sharon Lee De La Cruz, (Apr. 2021, Street Noise Books), $12.99, ISBN: 9781951491055

Ages 16+

One of the first Street Noise books I picked up was I’m a Wild Seed: My Graphic Memoir on Queerness and Decolonizing the World by Sharon Lee De La Cruz. This full-color graphic memoir details the author’s deep-dive to learn about and unravel the effects of patriarchy and institutionalized racism on her identity, sexuality, and what freedom looks like for her.  In De La Cruz’s own words, she “never ‘came into my queerness’ – I decolonized the shit out of my gender and sexuality”. Teens and young adults will embrace De La Cruz’s unflinching and often humorous storytelling. Graphic novel Sharon talks directly to the reader, making the book more of a conversation. Resources in the back matter steer readers interested in learning more to videos, organizations, and books.

If you haven’t yet treated yourself to I’m a Wild Seed, please do – and check out more of the great graphic novels from Street Noise!

 

Posted in Graphic Novels, Teen, Young Adult/New Adult

The Murder Next Door examines trauma

The Murder Next Door: A Graphic Memoir, by Hugh D’Andrade, (Feb. 2025, Street Noise Books), $20.99, ISBN: 9781951491352

Ages 14+

In 1978, Hugh discovered his friends crying outside their home in his neighborhood. They had come home from school and discovered their mother lying on the floor, murdered. Forty years later, he’s an adult with a successful career and social life, but he’s also haunted by the murder and experiences anger, anxiety, and panic attacks. Through The Murder Next Door, he examines his trauma and its roots, moving between sessions with his therapist and his memories. Using light blue and black illustration, with red for jarring emphasis, D’Andrade’s art is at once stark and dreamlike; his recall so painful, the reporting at odds with what D’Andrade witnessed, that it all churns in his mind, feeding his anger, his anxiety, his constant feeling of dread. He becomes an adult who baits conspiracy theorists, an adult never quite secure. Writing this memoir, D’Andrade allows readers to sit in on his therapy sessions and see where young Hugh was forced to bear witness to the unthinkable; we see the scars it left, rendered in red ink for readers to witness. A moving portrait of youth lost and of resistant trauma.

Posted in Graphic Novels, Post-apocalyptic/Dystopian, Teen, Young Adult/New Adult

A Plausible Dystopia? You Must Take Part in Revolution

You Must Take Part in Revolution, by Melissa Chan & Badiucao, (March 2025, Street Noise Books), $23.99, ISBN: 9781951491291

Ages 16+

Set in 2035 during a war between the U.S. and China, with Taiwan divided between the two, You Must Take Part in Revolution is a stark dystopian graphic novel created by a nactivist artist and an international journalist, both exiled from China for their stances. In Revolution, America is a proto-fascist state, led by a President who gained power through a coup. Maggie, Olivia, and Andy are three young people meet during a protest in Hong Kong and become friends, but their differing methods of freedom fighting carry life-altering changes for each of them. The illustration is powerful, with stark blacks and greys and splashes of red and yellow, sparsely used to devastating effect. Chan’s journalistic prowess shines here; the story reads like a headline and has roots in current and past relations between the U.S., China, and Taiwan; she also captures the human side of the story, developing her characters and making them live off the page and in the reader’s head. They will stay with readers long after the book is finished. An excellent purchase for graphic novel collections.

Melissa Chan is an award-winning journalist who was expelled from China through her work as the China correspondent with Al Jazeera English. You can learn more about her via her website. Badiucao is a Chinese-Australian activist and dissident who has been referred to as “China’s Banksy”. You can learn more about him via his website.