
Blankets
by Craig Thompson (2003)
Like Ginseng Roots, this graphic memoir explores childhood and family with introspective depth.

by Craig Thompson (2024)
From the celebrated author of Blankets and Habibi comes a new graphic memoir exploring the class divide, childhood labor, family, and our globalized world—all centered on Wisconsin's ginseng farming industry “A sweeping story, gorgeously drawn and beautifully told — this is Craig Thompson’s masterpiece.” —Joe Sacco, author of Palestine and Paying the Land When Blankets first published in 2003, Craig Thompson's seminal memoir about first love and faith lost in rural Wisconsin debuted to rapturous acclaim. The winner of two Eisner and three Harvey Awards, it is to this day considered one of the all-time great works of graphic storytelling. Now, in Craig's long-awaited return to the autobiographical form, comes the story that Blankets left out. Ginseng Roots follows Craig and his siblings, who spent the summers of their youth weeding and harvesting rows of coveted American ginseng on rural Wisconsin farms for one dollar an hour. In his trademark breathtaking pen-and-ink work, Craig interweaves this lost youth with the 300-year-old history of the global ginseng trade and the many lives it has tied together—from ginseng hunters in ancient China, to industrial farmers and migrant harvesters in the American Midwest, to his own family still grappling with the aftershocks of the bitter past. Stretching from Marathon, Wisconsin, to Northeast China, Ginseng Roots charts the rise of industrial agriculture, the decline of American labor, and the search for a sense of home in a rapidly changing world.
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by Craig Thompson (2003)
Like Ginseng Roots, this graphic memoir explores childhood and family with introspective depth.

by Craig Thompson (2011)
Similar to Ginseng Roots, this graphic novel by Craig Thompson delves into complex themes with breathtaking art.

by Marjane Satrapi (2003)
Like Ginseng Roots, this graphic memoir offers a powerful personal history intertwined with cultural and political events.

by Alison Bechdel (2006)
This graphic memoir, like Ginseng Roots, uses personal history to explore complex family dynamics and identity.

by Joe Sacco (1994)
Similar to Ginseng Roots, this graphic work blends personal narrative with deep historical and cultural exploration.
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