Read graphic novels from Black authors this Black History Month

The book covers for WaterShed, The Tigers Tongue and Big Jim and the White Boy above comic book pages.

It’s time to add some excellent reads to your list! For Black History Month, our Black Resources Collection selector Alicia T. curated a list of graphic novels by Black authors. This list has a special focus on authors from the Pacific Northwest. 

Celebrate these local authors

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Rupert Kinnard wearing a hat and sitting in a wheelchair while speaking at Rose City Comic Con.

Photo credit: Joe Peacock

Rupert Kinnard

This Portland-based cartoonist is celebrated for creating the first gay Black superhero in comic history, the Brown Bomber (plus his lesbian sidekick, Diva Touché Flambé). He’s featured in the Never Look Away mural at NW Couch & NW Broadway celebrating local LGBTQIA+ community leaders. Kinnard told Portland Mercury last summer, “Arriving in Portland in the late ’70s, there was just something about the energy of the communities here — the African American community, the queer movement, the formation of the first Pride Parade — that just attracted me. I wanted to be a part of as much as I could.”

Book rec from Alicia: Ooops...I Just Catharted

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A mural in downtown Portland depicting influential queer Portlanders.

Photo credit: Portland Street Art Alliance.

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Olivia Stephens stands outside in front of a tree wearing glasses and a knit cardigan.

Olivia Stephens

Active in the PNW zine community, illustrator and graphic novelist Olivia Stephens is known for the middle grade novel  Artie and the Wolf Moon and the Ignatz Award-winning comic Darlin’ and Her Other Names, among others. She’s illustrated for publications like The New York Times and The Guardian, and has attended residencies through MacDowell, Tin House and more. 

Book rec from Alicia: The Tiger’s Tongue

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Melanie Stevens wears glasses and a headband and stands in front of her artwork.

Photo credit: Mario Gallucci

Melanie Stevens

On top of her work making graphic novels like the WaterShed series, Melanie Stevens is an artist, illustrator, and writer. She teaches at PNCA in their Visual Studies department. 

Thrillingly, you can find her art in the Black Cultural Center in the updated North Portland Library. She created wooden sculpted portraits of four Afrofuturist authors: Octavia E. Butler, W.E.B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Sun Ra.

Book rec from Alicia: WaterShed

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David F Walker standing outside in front of a sculpture.

Photo credit: Elijah Hasan

David F. Walker

David F. Walker is an award-winning author and graphic novelist based in the Pacific Northwest. A longtime Portland resident, Walker is known for many award-winning creations, including the series Bitter Root as well as The Black Panther Party: A Graphic Novel History, both of which have received Eisner Awards. In addition to his comics work, he has taught at Portland State University, PNCA, and the NW Film Center. 

Book rec from Alicia: Big Jim and the White Boy 


Make sure to check out Alicia’s full list for more incredible graphic novels by Black authors and illustrators. And we hope you’ll join us for a full month of events honoring Black History Month!

Reading list

Celebrating Black Graphic Novel Authors

It’s about time to add some excellent reads to your list! For Black History Month, our Black Resources Collection selector Alicia T. curated a list of graphic novels by Black authors. There is a little bit of everything for readers of all ages. This list has a special focus on authors from the Pacific Northwest.

Watershed book cover
Graphic Novel
The Tiger's Tongue book cover
Graphic Novel