It's summer in the countryside. The wildlife, down to the tiniest creature, is thriving. It's the New York City of the insect world; a melting pot of bugs, birds, and beasts of all kinds.
Millie the pillbug feels like a bug apart. Unlike her friends, Millie needs to stay moist all the time, she doesn't pee, and she's the only vegetarian. How will she ever fit in and find meaning in her short life?
The bug world is harsh. One minute you're snacking on a scrumptious aphid, the next you're being eaten alive by your spouse! Plus you've got social drama and your family questioning your 'alternative' lifestyle to deal with. Ugh.
With humor, delight, and a touch of terror, NYC-based author Allison Conway brings us a collection of slice-of-life comics about being a young, female isopod in a modern, ever-changing world.
A series of vignettes about the daily life of Millie the Pillbug and her other insect friends. Conway must've done a lot of research, because the stories are frequently a bizarre mix of daily human life and specific insect facts. There's a strange atmosphere hanging over the whole book, it forces you to re-evaluate "normal" human life.
Did I mention that the art is really, really cute and sometimes disgusting? It's great!
A quiet summer following Millie the pillbug as she goes on dates, attends baby showers, hangs out with friends and tries to stay wet in the countryside.
This book was totally unexpected and hilarious, I could have read eight more volumes. Conway takes the daily struggles of a twenty-something human and overlays them on the daily struggles of your average bug. You get situations like Millie's friends forgetting she's vegetarian, species faux pas, and her mantis neighbor murdering her date. The bugs are accurately drawn while having the simplest dot eye faces, which renders any situation immediately hilarious.
3.5 stars Downright adorable. The cute animation style is vibrant, inviting, and unlocks a sense of childlike wonder and joy. I didn't rate higher because the format threw me off guard a bit: the novel consists of lots of short stories with minimal transitions from one to another, and there is no overall story or takeaway. But I absolutely loved the integration of facts about each character throughout the stories. So clever, cute, and plentiful! This would be a great book for inspiring kids to learn more about these fascinating creatures.
If I could separate this book into the art vs the story, the art would get a 5 and the story would get a 2. The art was fun and adorable with just the right amount of creepiness. The story however, was a little all over the place and did not come to any sort of conclusion or closure. I understand that slice of life comics don't need to have a strong plot line, but this book actually threw quite a few major plot points at us without resolving any of them. The main character's life honestly seems pretty miserable and it does not improve even a little bit by the end of the novel. Her friends have not taken any steps to understand her better, her family does not understand her desire to grow beyond her circumstances, her neighbor has gone from being creepy to being outright hostile, and every man she encounters ranges from vaguely to fully threatening.
This is a gentle slice of life book which mainly serves as a self portrait of the author and her life with her New York friends. Do not come in expecting much a plot; do take delight in the little details that make up a life. A good comparison book would be Frog and Toad, but for twenty somethings.
Humor comes out in the overlay of fantasy on top of reality and of reality on top of fantasy (depends on the scene). Conway plays a little going both directions, clearly enjoying the blurring of the lines. She delves briefly into family life but does not stay long there, preferring the levity of friends and tea. Some serious subjects are tackled (death, nightmares, social anxiety), but overall, the story stays light.
The artwork is intricate, and you can enjoy the book just for that alone. It must have taken an extremely long time to put together.
In sum, if you're a stop-and-smell-the-roses kind of person, this book is for you.
2025 Eisner Award finalist - Best Humor Publication
This book is simultaneously charming and gross. The artwork is bright and cheery, but it's about bugs (pillbug, spider, ladybug, dragonfly, ant, and more) doing bug things. Yes, they are cutely anthropomorphized, but they are still doing some rather disgusting activities in places. The book is divided into vignettes that don't necessarily flow directly from one to another, and there is often no clear indication that a new chapter is starting. Nevertheless, it's probably a good book for younger readers, especially if they already like animals of this diminutive stature. There are many wordless panels and thus the book reads quickly. There is some nice general philosophizing about life included.
Millie is a pillbug, yet not a bug at all (she's actually a crustacean). She has a great group of friends but that doesn't mean there aren't misunderstandings between the five of them. Throughout A Pillbug Story, Millie and her friends navigate their world, which is in turn, bizarre, intriguing, warm, humorous, and sinister, and their own problems while learning to live, and eventually die, together.
Although an admittedly quirky form of storytelling, author and illustrator Allison Conway paints a comforting, fantastical, and curious in the best way tale. Filled with heart, A Pillbug Story is a delightful read.
Aka "A Woodlouse Diet", as a heck of a lot of this concerns what the creature of the title feels able to eat or not to – and if it's not that it's the dietary habits of the other bugs in its social circle, and if it's not that it's the mating/eating habits of the creature next door. Alright, there are a selection of the main character's nightmarish dreams, and the powers of a moisturising bottle, but there really is nothing here to take away from this, unless you somehow get the feels in alignment with the vegetarianism of the bug concerned. It looks great, for what it is, but it's empty.
Whimsical and colorful, A Pillbug Story is a humorous journey following Milly as she adjusts to life in the bug-- I mean big-- city. It explores disability, life, accessibilty, death, and cultural differences through the lense of a tiny crustacean living her best life with other tiny insects and arachnids. The simplistic art style and humor is deceptive, because there is surprising depth to the story and emotions within. Much like Adventure Time, A Pillbug Story is a bright and deep story with dark undertones but a hopeful and loving end.
A lovely story with wonderful illustrations. Mostly simple and mundane vignettes, but I really enjoyed the way Conway recognized the inherent issues with anthropomorphizing animals, specifically addressing their short life spans and conflicts of the food chain. It shatters the illusion of peace often maintained in talking animal tales without ever being dark or brutal. There's a great melancholy as a result but it doesn't take away from the simple beauty of friendship and quiet, mindful living exemplified by these terrific characters. If only our lives could be like this.
3.75!! read this in half an hour at 10pm. this was everything to me 🥲 i learned lots about bugs, and that being a girl is a lot like being a bug. also, ellie the dragonfly and millie the pillbug belong together!!! i ship it!!! two stars off because i wanted more. and i didn’t like that sad things happened bc i rlly did empathize with this rag tag group of girl bugs
This was a fun book. From spiders having tea with their prey to lantern flies pooping honeydew to a praying mantis neighbor eating her guests, this book just took all the quirks of the insect/arachnid/crustacean/creepy crawlies world and had fun with it. A little violent, but that's nature. I laughed all the way through.
A weird and delightful slice-of-life kind of graphic, with snippets of bug facts and lots of feeling a little out of place. A lot of feelings in general, but in the context of bug's lives? It's just great.
"A Pillbug Story" is a cozy graphic novel following Millie, a pillbug (which is a crustacean), and her life living in a bug village. It's very cute, but the author also included undertones of problems with othering people. The book has a good message with really sweet moments. The art is adorable.
This book is an absolutely unhinged combination of cozy, slice-of-life story and brutal biological facts about arthropods which is probably going to appeal to very few people, but which hit the nail right on the head for me. Every page was an absurd delight.
This was a quirky and fun graphic novel about a pillbug who hangs out with other insects. The book can be sad at times, but also was funny as well. I really liked the author's art style as well as her unique take on letting us getting into the world of insects.
This was so good! I really hope that the author makes more in this world. I love the characters and the world-building. The roach milk farm was hilarious. I would love to see more of the bug's world explored.
Too much focus on dietary habits of the arthropods. Lots of shocking imagery for a “slice of life.” Not much to take away from this. For a cute, bug themed slice of life, I’d recommend sticking with Bug Boys.