


^ Raina Telgemeier (13 September 2016).^ a b c d Larson, Sarah (13 September 2016).Telgemeier responded by posting a short essay acknowledging the critical viewpoints on her website. Īs of 2017 the paperback version had spent several weeks on The New York Times Best Sellers list under the category "Paperback Graphic Books." Appropriation charges Īfter the novel was published, several readers pointed out the cultural appropriation of Dia de los Muertos as well as the problematic sanitized portrayal of the history of Spanish missions in California. In 2017, Ghosts won an Eisner Award for Best Publication for Kids (ages 9–12) and the Dwayne McDuffie Award for Kids' Comics. According to School Library Journal, it is a "can't miss-addition to middle grade graphic novel shelves". Kirkus Reviews said Telgemeier showed "superior visual storytelling" in keeping readers "emotinally engaged and unable to put down this compelling tale".


Dan Kois, reviewing for The New York Times called it "a typically empathetic and complex work from a gifted comics creator". Telgemeier waited until she had attended a Day of the Dead celebration in San Francisco to accurately express her experience in the story, which she later called "one of the most moving nights of my life." Īspects of the town of Bahía de la Luna are inspired by Half Moon Bay, Moss Beach, Monterey, Morro Bay, and Santa Cruz. The scenes from the Day of the Dead celebration were left blank in the initial manuscript submitted to Scholastic. Telgemeier stated she was inspired to write Ghosts in part by the death of her young cousin Sabina, who died from cancer at the age of 13. Instead, Telgemeier depicts the titular ghosts as real but benevolent presences to help Catrina understand death and deal with Maya's terminal illness. The magical realism of Ghosts marks a sharp change from Telgemeier's earlier works, which have been autobiographical ( Smile Sisters ) or realistic fiction ( Drama ). Catrina and Maya explore their Mexican heritage with the help of Carlos, culminating in a Dia de los Muertos celebration in November. The novel opens as the family is ordering at the drive-through of a fictional Double-Back Burger (the colors and logos of which are based on In-N-Out Burger) before leaving southern California for Bahía de la Luna.Īs the sisters are exploring Bahía de la Luna, they are surprised by a boy named Carlos Calaveras, who turns out to be one of their new neighbors. The move was intended to help the health of Catrina's younger sister, Maya, who has cystic fibrosis. Ghosts is a fictional graphic novel written by Raina Telgemeier which tells the story of Catrina and her family, who have recently moved to Bahía de la Luna (a fictional town incorporating aspects of Half Moon Bay, Pacifica, and Santa Cruz) in northern California.
