Guts

Book Cover
Average Rating
Series
Publisher
Scholastic Inc
Publication Date
2019
Language
English

Description

A true story from Raina Telgemeier, the #1 New York Times bestselling, multiple Eisner Award-winning author of Smile, Sisters, Drama, and Ghosts!

Raina wakes up one night with a terrible upset stomach. Her mom has one, too, so it's probably just a bug. Raina eventually returns to school, where she's dealing with the usual highs and lows: friends, not-friends, and classmates who think the school year is just one long gross-out session. It soon becomes clear that Raina's tummy trouble isn't going away... and it coincides with her worries about food, school, and changing friendships. What's going on?

Raina Telgemeier once again brings us a thoughtful, charming, and funny true story about growing up and gathering the courage to face -- and conquer -- her fears.

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These full-color graphic novel memoirs feature girls coping with anxiety as they deal with the highs and lows of middle school life. Young readers experiencing anxiety and using or looking for coping mechanisms will relate. -- NoveList Contributor
Clean-lined artwork lends approachability to both graphic novels memoirs about kids living with invisible disabilities. Family life and school are just as important as diagnoses in both. -- Autumn Winters
Although the illustration styles are quite different in each, these attention-grabbing and moving graphic novels both feature relatable children dealing with extreme anxiety and show ways to cope (a support animal in Adrian; therapy in Guts). -- Lindsey Dunn
These books have the appeal factors moving, hopeful, and candid, and they have the genres "autobiographies and memoirs" and "autobiographical comics"; and the subject "anxiety in children."
These books have the appeal factors thoughtful and own voices, and they have the genres "autobiographical comics" and "comics and graphic novels"; and illustrations that are "cartoony illustrations" and "colorful illustrations."
Artistic, comics-loving kids find ways of coping with anxiety (among other things) in each of these authentic, relatable reads. Stanley's story is fiction, while Guts is a graphic memoir. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Health problems figure in the lives of young artists in both angst-filled, moving autobiographical comics. Chunky has a fantasy element that is not present in Guts. -- Autumn Winters
These books have the appeal factors angst-filled and own voices, and they have the genres "autobiographical comics" and "comics and graphic novels"; the subject "cartoonists"; illustrations that are "cartoony illustrations"; and characters that are "authentic characters."
Although Swim is focused on sports and Guts is not, readers of warm-hearted realistic comics will enjoy these relatable stories about tween girls facing anxiety as they navigate school life. -- NoveList Contributor
Although Small Things has a cartoony, colorful illustration style and text in cartoon bubbles and Small Things has black-and-white surreal illustrations and is wordless, each graphic novel centers on a child experiencing debilitating anxiety and the support they receive. -- Lindsey Dunn
These books have the appeal factors moving, thoughtful, and own voices, and they have the genres "autobiographies and memoirs" and "comics and graphic novels."
Both of these heartfelt and realistic graphic novels portray the struggles of anxiety and the journey to find oneself. -- Ashley Leffel

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Both author/illustrators have clean-lined cartooning styles that add to the upbeat, inviting tone of their books (which include graphic novels and memoirs). Whether they're writing about themselves or about fictional characters, both realistically capture the everyday lives and emotions of kids. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Graphic novelist Raina Telgemeier started her professional career as a cartoonist by illustrating adaptations of Ann M. Martin's Baby-sitters Club series; illustrator Gale Galligan picked up the series starting with book 5. Both use a cartoony style to depict relatable characters that are only slightly exaggerated. -- Autumn Winters
Graphic novel readers looking for relatable, contemporary stories about girls navigating the pitfalls of friendships, family, and school will enjoy graphic memoirs by both of these authors. -- NoveList Contributor
Both authors write funny, yet thoughtful graphic memoirs about their growing up years and their relationships with their families. Raina Telgemeier writes for teens and children; Pedro Martin primarily writes for children. -- CJ Connor
Though Raina Telgemeier primarily creates graphic novels and Ann M. Martin's books are written in prose, readers looking for upbeat and plot-driven realistic stories about evolving friendships between tweens should explore the works of both authors. Telgemeier adapted Martin's Baby-Sitters Club series into comics. -- Stephen Ashley
Though Larson often writes for slightly older readers than Telgemeier does, both tend to create character-driven stories with realistically complex female protagonists. Their artwork shares an expressive, dynamic quality that will keep readers hooked. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Readers looking for realistic graphic novels about relatable middle school girls coping with school, family, and growing up, will appreciate the work of both author/illustrators. -- Autumn Winters
With relatable humor and warmth, both Telgemeier and Jamieson create stories about the everyday experiences of tweens. Both are careful to balance angst with hope, and both draw their characters with a winsome, uncluttered style that's sure to grab readers' attention. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Middle schoolers looking for authentic, believable characters who reflect their own experiences in warm, funny, and accessible graphic novels find them in the works of Jerry Craft and Raina Telgemeier. -- Autumn Winters
These authors' works have the subjects "seventh-grade girls," "seventh-graders," and "sixth-grade girls."
These authors' works have the subjects "seventh-grade girls," "self-esteem," and "sixth-grade girls."
These authors' works have the subjects "seventh-grade girls," "seventh-graders," and "sixth-grade girls."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

After a particularly bad bout of the flu in fourth grade, Raina keeps having stomach aches and intense feelings about food and germs. The thought of being near a sick person sends her into a panic, and conflicts among her friends at school and embarrassment about bodily functions in general certainly don't help matters. In this third graphic memoir, Telgemeier describes her childhood anxiety in an approachable, nonjudgmental way and emphasizes how useful talk therapy can be. Her depiction of her spiraling anxious thoughts, often in noxious greens and crowded by negative self-talk in bulky fonts, nicely show both how isolating anxiety can feel and how physical it can be. Telgemeier's particular talent for rendering evocative facial expressions with only a few carefully placed marks makes the pain, worry, and panic in Raina's face and body language unmistakable. As in Smile (2009) and Sisters (2014), Telgemeier gets to the heart of middle-school experiences, from the playground jokes to the minefield of shifting friendships, and the many, many fans of her work will be enchanted by this as well.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Telgemeier is a force unto herself in kids graphic novels. Trust me, this will have a lengthy wait list.--Sarah Hunter Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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School Library Journal Review

Gr 3--6--Telgemeier presents a new story from her childhood, which takes place when she was in the fourth and fifth grades. After her little sister brought home a case of stomach flu, young Raina woke up one night with an upset stomach and had to vomit. Then a boy in her class was made fun of for throwing up at school, and Raina worried about getting sick again. Her anxiety only led to more stomach troubles, and she also dealt with a school bully and a friend moving away. Raina's parents stayed supportive throughout, and they got her into therapy; eventually, she was diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome. The subject matter is conveyed realistically but with humor--anxiety can be taken seriously, and farts can still be funny. Telgemeier's art is incredibly expressive, and the green circles that surround Raina will have readers feeling nauseous along with her as her panic intensifies. Especially important is a scene in which Raina's therapist talks her through a grounding technique and deep breathing exercise, giving readers a coping technique that they can use. VERDICT A must. Fans of Smile and Sisters will adore this new story starring Raina and her family, but newcomers to Telgemeier's work will also love Guts.--Kacy Helwick, New Orleans Public Library

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Horn Book Review

In this graphic memoir chronicling her fourth-grade year, Telgemeier (Smile; Sisters, rev. 11/14) shares her childhood experiences with anxiety. A bout with a stomach bug ushers in emetophobia (fear of vomiting), leaving young Raina trembling and plagued by digestion issues during moments of insecurity, as when making a class presentation. As her phobia worsens, she starts missing school, limiting what she eats, and engaging in compulsive behaviors to self-soothe and manage her loss of self-control. Her parents take her to a therapist, who guides her in coping with her phobia and panic attacks. Sensitively capturing the traumas of anxiety (Can you be sick even if youre not sick? Can you be healthy even if you hurt? Raina wonders), Telgemeier also addresses the insecurities of tween female friendships, the stigma of therapy, and the onset of puberty. She expertly uses scale and perspective to animate the terror of panic attacks; in one bile-colored spread, Raina falls through the very floor tiles, gasping and screaming. Theres a fair amount of bodily-function humorthe books last panel features a big FARRRRRT!but its never at the expense of the books serious subject matter. In a closing note, Telgemeier recommends that readers experiencing anxiety talk to a trusted adult and acknowledges that her own anxiety is ongoing but manageable, just part of who I am. julie Danielson September/October 2019 p.120(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Booklist Reviews

After a particularly bad bout of the flu in fourth grade, Raina keeps having stomach aches and intense feelings about food and germs. The thought of being near a sick person sends her into a panic, and conflicts among her friends at school and embarrassment about bodily functions in general certainly don't help matters. In this third graphic memoir, Telgemeier describes her childhood anxiety in an approachable, nonjudgmental way and emphasizes how useful talk therapy can be. Her depiction of her spiraling anxious thoughts, often in noxious greens and crowded by negative self-talk in bulky fonts, nicely show both how isolating anxiety can feel and how physical it can be. Telgemeier's particular talent for rendering evocative facial expressions with only a few carefully placed marks makes the pain, worry, and panic in Raina's face and body language unmistakable. As in Smile (2009) and Sisters (2014), Telgemeier gets to the heart of middle-school experiences, from the playground jokes to the minefield of shifting friendships, and the many, many fans of her work will be enchanted by this as well.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Telgemeier is a force unto herself in kids graphic novels. Trust me, this will have a lengthy wait list. Grades 3-6. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

With disarming candor and in her now instantly recognizable panel artwork, Eisner Award–winner Telgemeier weaves a tangle of personal preadolescent traumas into another compelling graphic memoir. A bout of stomach flu and some unpleasant encounters with food create in young Raina's mind a swirling miasma of fear that she'll throw up. This anxiety blights her school days (she freezes during a class presentation with her best friend and lashes out at a bullying schoolmate) and extends into fears about sickness and schoolwork, and frustrations with her raucous household. Telgemeier frames the girl's panic attacks accessibly as sickly circles of green crowded with big, blocky words ("pain drowning choking death bad at math"). Raina's parents take her to see therapist Lauren, who helps her to ground her fears and gain enough emotional strength to reconcile herself to changing friend dynamics, and an IBS diagnosis clarifies the way that mind and body can intertwine. Moments of middle school drama are portrayed with credibility, and the story both normalizes therapy and shows a child developing useful coping mechanisms for anxiety in a way that will reassure, even inspire, readers. Ages 8–12. (Sept.)

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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School Library Journal Reviews

Gr 3–6—Telgemeier presents a new story from her childhood, which takes place when she was in the fourth and fifth grades. After her little sister brought home a case of stomach flu, young Raina woke up one night with an upset stomach and had to vomit. Then a boy in her class was made fun of for throwing up at school, and Raina worried about getting sick again. Her anxiety only led to more stomach troubles, and she also dealt with a school bully and a friend moving away. Raina's parents stayed supportive throughout, and they got her into therapy; eventually, she was diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome. The subject matter is conveyed realistically but with humor—anxiety can be taken seriously, and farts can still be funny. Telgemeier's art is incredibly expressive, and the green circles that surround Raina will have readers feeling nauseous along with her as her panic intensifies. Especially important is a scene in which Raina's therapist talks her through a grounding technique and deep breathing exercise, giving readers a coping technique that they can use. VERDICT A must. Fans of Smile and Sisters will adore this new story starring Raina and her family, but newcomers to Telgemeier's work will also love Guts.–Kacy Helwick, New Orleans Public Library

Copyright 2019 School Library Journal.

Copyright 2019 School Library Journal.
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