Twelve months and another eight new titles on from our last Christmas roundup, the most wonderful time of the year is here again! It almost goes without saying: thank you all for being here with us to celebrate another year of exciting, independent graphic novels. As it turns out, a year with SelfMadeHero often involves a good deal of travelling through time…
2025 started with a look to the future: in January submissions opened for the 2025 First Graphic Novel Award with a special launch event at Waterstones Piccadilly, helmed by James Spackman of The Bks Agency, giving budding graphic novelists a chance to meet our illustrious judges: Shazleen Khan, Oscar Zarate, Jannette Parris, Karrie Fransman, and Emma Hayley.
Going from up-and-comers to a legend of the visual arts, our first graphic novel of the new year was Kusama: Polka Dot Queen by Simon Elliott. This dreamlike biography of the “creator of infinity” got its own celebration at The Cartoon Museum in London.
Echoing our return to the Eisner-winning Ruinsin 2024, in May Peter Kuper brought us Monarch’s Journey (released exclusively in North America). Through the interactive means of a colouring book, Monarch’s Journey immerses its readers (and colourists!) in the plight of the monarch butterfly as it traverses our ever-changing world.
It’s quite a jump from the 70s to the 17th century, but that’s where Gareth Brookes took us next. The Compleat Angler revives a literary classic in similar mixed media spectacle to The Dancing Plague, visually combining and contrasting the poetic and the practical elements of Izaak Walton’s work. The Compleat Angler went on to be named as one of the best graphic novels of 2025 in The Guardian!
Summer brought a brief interlude with some graphic novel award judging going on behind the scenes… Then it was back to the 20th century for the return of another oft-forgotten classic: Ethel Carnie Holdsworth’s This Slavery, resurrected by the Rickard Sisters. Bringing this trailblazing Marxist-feminist epic back to life also demanded a fitting to-do: TROUBLE AT MILL, held at the Queen Street Mill Textile Museum in Burnley.
The rest of our 2025 list brought us mostly back to the present – but not always as we know it. My Dad Fights Demons!, an original middle-grade graphic novel by UK Comics Laureate Bobby Joseph and breakout talent Abbigayle Bircham. A launch party at Gosh! Comics was shortly followed by the Lakes International Comic Art Festival where…
The FGNA 2025 longlist was announced! Our judges had managed to whittle over 200 entries (compared to 170 in 2023) down to just 30. No mean feat, and with the shortlist still to come!
Fitting that our next graphic novel to hit bookshop shelves was Bone Broth by Alex Taylor, the winner of the 2023 First Graphic Novel Award. Just right for Halloween with its back-and-forth between a more whimsical past and a more gruesome present, Bone Broth also got a hearty reception at Gosh! Comics.
Reaching November meant it was time for Thought Bubble Festival, and to reveal the First Graphic Novel Award Shortlist! At the Quick Strips panel helmed by Hannah Berry, Emma Hayley, Karrie Fransman, Zara Slattery and James Spackman announced the shortlist to a lively crowd of TB Festival attendees: Falling in Love on the Family Computer by Lois de Silva, Kittish Banter by Neo N.M., Forget-Me-Not by Lizz Lunney, A Sleigh No-One Knows by Yu-Ching Chiu, The Frozens by Lauren O’Farrell, and St Brigid and Me by Hannah McCann.
With the winner set to be announced at Waterstones Piccadilly on January 19th 2026, that left us with our very last book of the year: The Most Amazing Saturday Morning Rubbish Club by Francisco de la Mora and Bill Tuckey. This all-ages graphic novel, created by two parents of neurodivergent children, spotlights the experiences of those children to present an inspiring story about creativity and community. The heaving launch event at the Arcola theatre in Dalston included a humorous and heartfelt talk by the authors about the making of the book.
Meanwhile, the legendary graphic novelist and artist Andrzej Klimowski (whose many works include SelfMadeHero titles such as Behind the Curtain, The Master and Margarita, and last year’s Edifice) received the very special honour that he’d foreshadowed himself in an earlier newsletter. As part of the 14th Polish Culture Festival at China’s G Art Museum, Between Consciousness and Dream: A Retrospective of Andrzej Klimowski brings the artist’s 76-year artistic odyssey to life. The exhibition, which runs until March 9th 2026, even brings the cover of Edifice to life in a stunning 3D installation.
And that brings our year to a close! As always, thank you to everyone for sticking with us through another exciting year, and here’s to the next one!
– The SelfMadeHero team
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