If you think graphic novels tend to focus on people who get superpowers from spider bites or radioactive experiments gone wrong, think again.
Four of this summer's best graphic novels cover topics as wide-ranging as the sexual exploits of writer Anaïs Nin, "the talk" Black parents have with their kids in an attempt to keep them safe, the race to build an atomic bomb and, OK, super-heroic He-Man. The illustration styles are as varied as the subject matter of these four titles:

Before Darrin Bell created the comic strip "Candorville" and became a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist, he was a kid who wanted to think the best of the world but kept getting tripped up by its racism. Black and Jewish, academic and athletic, Bell did not slot into the stereotypes associated with his California upbringing in the 1980s and '90s. In his bittersweet and mordantly funny graphic memoir, Bell describes a Black student sneering at him as "Halfrican American" and a teacher insult-complimenting him as "one of the good ones."
With a brother who ignored racism and a father who preached self-reliance ("a white boy's words never made me run for my life"), Bell tried to be an optimist, seeing prejudice as "mostly ignorance, not malice." His career flourished. But Bell's spirit was buffeted by police-related tragedies that returned him to a terrifyingly rendered childhood memory of being threatened by an officer after dropping his water pistol. Counterintuitively, the need to give to his son the same survival talk about how to behave around police that his mother had given to him brings a glimmer of optimism to a hope-challenged story.
Like all great editorial cartoonists, Bell minimizes overt commentary, making satiric jabs, instead, with brevity, wit, insight and humanity.
The Talk
By: Darrin Bell.
Publisher: Henry Holt, 352 pages, $29.99.