Please Kate Beaton, please write more. I don't understand how but you've made a graphic novel and an essay two of my favourite books of this year.
I fully don't understand how it seems anything "serious" Kate Beaton produces seems to resonate with me so much - but this 50 page essay somehow unpacks a whole heap of complex topics. Beaton seems to be able to explore and touch on class, capitalism, art, history, family, culture, and more in this tiny book without any of the points feeling shallow: perhaps it's only with the backing of having read Ducks recently that I find the depth of these topics, but the nuance with which she steps through them and brings forth her own experiences that makes the essay interesting and powerful.
Wrestling with ideas like how capitalism can both bring incredible opportunties and ability to share ideas and culture, but also how it can reduce culture and history to what is possible to sell to tourists; how working class culture can be both poor monetarily yet rich in so many other ways, and how it's so easy to deride or just ignore that culture; how dying industries and lack of jobs in home towns can leave young adults without a place anywhere.
I still implore you to read Ducks, if you haven't, and then read this.