In which a queer library worker searches for love, artistic validation in New York City, and the perfect book
An aspiring cartoonist and book lovin' lesbian, Louise works a dead-end day job at a shoe store, where she spends most of her time brooding over a coworker who will never quite love her back. By night, she works diligently and obsessively on her graphic novel—the true story of a carrier pigeon who rescued a battalion of soldiers in WWI.
When Louise unexpectedly lands a new job at a private library on the Upper East Side, she feels like her graphic novel will finally take off—surely the oldest library in New York has excellent holdings on pigeons and WWI. But what she finds in the stacks might be less revelatory than her discoveries between the sheets and buried in her own family history.
A graphic novel set against a perfectly cartoony NYC backdrop—complete with landmark haunts, street fashion, and quintessential characters of the city—Checked Out is at once a valentine to libraries and New York, and the story of an artist working to make her dreams come true. Drawn in a delightfully vivacious style, Checked Out buzzes with Katie Fricas’s vibrant energy, quick wit, and storytelling aplomb.
Oh look, a semi-autobiographical book about a creator having trouble finishing their current book project. That hasn't been done to death . . .
The story is all over the place, touching on creativity, research on World War I messenger pigeons, working in a private library, and various romantic relationships. Frankly, the mother's side story of a child put up for adoption was far more interesting than anything that happened to the main character in the entire book.
And I don't know if Fricas' art style is an affectation or simply the best she can manage, but I found the primitive line work unappealing and the blotchy coloring fairly atrocious.
Ahhh frikn yessss. This book reminds me why I make comics and what comics are for, why I work at the library and what the library is for, why I love NY and art and my family and my friends and my work, and what that love is for. Really really fun stupid book, five stars, sloppy wild & free.
Loved! Katie Fricas’s Checked Out is unlike anything I’ve read before—her style is dazzling, expressive, and totally her own. Every page bursts with energy, from the electric color palette to the hand-drawn lettering that scribbles its way across the panels.
The book follows a queer artist juggling work, love, and art in NYC, and yes—it seems pretty semi-autobiographical. Watching her embrace her library job is a delight: shelving books, sneaking off to read in the stacks, and occasionally committing those petty-but-beloved crimes only library workers can get away with, like hoarding the best reads or waiving your own fines. Or so I have heard. 😉
The story weaves together her chaotic dating life, creative block, family surprises, and the pressure of finishing her first graphic novel—which might just be the very one we’re reading. That’s the meta-juice I’m suspecting.
If you love graphic novels with personality, humor, libraries, and heart, this one’s a standout. A vibrant, standalone gem that’s as much about making art as it is about surviving the city.
This coming-of-age story about a twentysomething queer woman living and working in a library in NYC will charm your socks off. It's full of all the big stuff we sweat over: love, sex, work, creativity, family, finding our purpose. Basically, life itself. Katie Fricas's delightfully scribbly-scrawly drawing style captures everything perfectly. Check out my little Q&A feature with her in Publishers Weekly here:
“It’s true — books are ghosts. I feel their protection around me.”
A frenetic graphic novel set in NYC. Amid retail ennui and confusing dating experiences, the protagonist becomes a library page, a dream job for many bookish folks. This position fuels her research of WWI carrier pigeons for a graphic novel, which becomes a kind of book within this book. I enjoyed learning some obscure history and insight into a private New York library. A great book for anyone who has felt like they lost the plot and found solace in dusty books and a trusty pencil.
May I also recommend the 1995 movie, Party Girl, starring Parker Posey in a similar NYC library fever dream?
This was so hilarious and cute. Thanks to Edelweiss and Drawn & Quarterly for the DRC!
I love reading stories that incorporate libraries and the daily happenings of interacting with the public. “Checked Out” was a really cool take on an aspiring artist who gets a job at a library to geek out over WWI and ends with some interesting developments in her life. She quickly settles into her job and makes her way to the circulation desk; where all the hoopla happens. Seeing some similar library experiences I’ve had with people drawn out in such a relatable manner was nice and made me miss having a public facing job. Some people really do call the library just to chat about their day, and patrons are chatty Betty’s.
The art style and typography instantly drew me in and made the reading experience so easy going. I felt like I was reading daily updates about Louise’s life, unfiltered. The inclusion of her sexuality, family, and friends was done seamlessly where it didn’t feel forced to make her stand out as a character. Her subtle realization and growth at the end was refreshing.
This was such an engaging read and I’m really looking forward to more from this author. They also draw for The New Yorker (and others like the Guardian) so maybe I need to go read the newspaper more to keep up with their work.
I don’t really have too much to say about this book - it was very good overall, I liked the artwork and the story. I like that it’s about someone who works at a library but isn’t a librarian (same), and that it’s about New York and pigeons and stories and people. It’s just a nice little story about perspective and art and books.
Liked the story more and more as it went on, especially with the mix of history (both big and small scale) and the main character’s day to day life. Got more used to the art style by the end but unfortunately still didn’t appreciate it
Art style was so fun and had so much personality, and we love library worker representation and an acknowledgement shoutout!! Loved the narrative arc and message too. :)
Truly one of the most charming books I've ever read! So much of this book is about love - the love present within romantic relationships, a love for history, a love of libraries and reading, and even a love for NYC (warts and all). Highly recommend!
Checked Out (2025) is the first graphic novel by Katie Fricas, a queer artist based in NYC. The graphic novel is about her block in writing a Big Serious Graphic Novel about a true story of a pigeon who was influential in WWI. The centennial deadline (a marketing key) approached, but relationships, family issues, artistic block generally, working in a library, all complicate finishing the book.
This is a colorful, goofy, insightful semi-autobiographical book about the creative process, as she seems to be documenting in this book how life and the creative process itself sometimes determine what you do. You don't always get to choose what you do. Different stories come up, such as her mother's revelation of giving up a son for adoption. Her story of her relationship to Gus is in here, slowing things down, more fun to do than slogging away on a pigeon story. The library work is in here. NYC is in here.
And WWI is in here, especially when a guy gifts her a book on WWI pertaining to his Dad that helps her rethink the whole project. Will the pigeon book still happen? Who knows? What we have is the book that happened, documenting in a meandering and lively and messy (the story and the art) way her life in her (I think) twenties. Maybe 3.5. There's a kind of intensity in the process of realization in the end, on the Wonder Wheel at Coney Island that begins to grabs you, as sh increasingly gets focus on what is emerging as her focus, and/or what is not.
Louise is a 20-something living in NYC with her roommate Cam. She works in a shoe store, but she’s writing a graphic novel about a pigeon that delivers messages during WWI. A thrilling opportunity drops into her lap: working in a library! Her job is to shelve books, but she spends lots of time in the 92os looking at the books on the Great War. This is an energetic, fast-paced story of her life as a single, queer artist and deep thinker. Her experience at the fictional dating app “Gandr” is hilarious and Fricas’s expressive, energetic artwork does a great job showing the types she meets: the alcoholic, the nihilist in a bad hat, the judgemental foreigner, and others. I loved the library types as well, both patrons and coworkers – they’re funny and wonderfully personified. The freeform and framed panels give a loose feel to the story, and it channels Louise herself – thoughtfully seeking new experiences and open to love. At the end, she makes a big decision – she abandons her graphic novel project. But it feels like she loved the ride, and readers will too.
the art was messy and sketchy in a way that at first i was unsure of and then quickly started to really enjoy. there were still significant details in the art, even though the messiness sometimes was hard to decipher at first.
the characters were realistic even the ones we didn’t see a lot of. i loved that lou worked at a library and was trying to write a niche subject graphic novel. and her being queer was dope, idk i love reading about a queer person and their struggles with relationships and you definitely saw that!
the ending was so inspiring - sometimes you have to let go of projects even if its painful. but Lou’s journey to realizing that though!! sometimes you have to take your journey alone. sometimes you have to wait to be ready to arrive at your destination. sometimes you have to reassess
Is it too early to call my favorite graphic novel of 2025? Because it’s Checked Out by Katie Fricas! In this funny, endearing, and surprising tale, Louise ditches her dead-end job in a shoe store to take a position as a library page at a private library on the Upper East Side. By day she shelves and processes books; by night she obsessively works on her own graphic novel, a true story about a WWI carrier pigeon that rescued a battalion of soldiers. Along the way she searches for love in NYC, processes a big family secret, and generally charms the reader with her misadventures in dating and pigeon research. Checked Out is a joyful shout-out to embracing your dreams and your day job, one colorful subway commute at a time. And don’t forget to bring a good library book along for the ride!
Thanks to Edelweiss & the publisher (Drawn & Quarterly) for this digital advance review copy. Publication date: May 20, 2025
As a Librarian, I was interested in the author's experience working in a private NYC library. Those parts were relatable, but I also enjoyed the other aspects of the author's life. Her roommate, dates, and various friends were good side characters. Her experience writing a graphic novel based on heroic carrier pigeons during WWI was a good plot line.
Could be improved: Overall, I liked the art style, but liked it more when it was done neatly. Sometimes the rushed style was distracting.
Fun wonderful weird little graphic novel about a queer artist obsessed with the WWI carrier pigeon Cher Ami of the Lost Brigade….
Follows her love life, her odd job at a private fee-based library in NYC, and her learning about how stories are embellished to obscure tragedy(re the carrier pigeon granted the Medal of Honor at the Battle of Argonne, a story more of myth than reality it seems).
I enjoyed her whimsical artistic style, more “rudimentary” or rough than many graphic art, but distinct and marked by both joy and pathos.
A young artist named Louise is struggling to write a rather bizarre book about a carrier pigeon in WWI while also struggling to find love in the Big Apple. Fortunately, she does find that she fits in well at the library. The unique, blobby scribbly illustrations fit the derpy way Louise approaches life. It all felt so specific I am surprised that this is fiction and not a memoir.
Incredible! Such beautiful art that looks at once easily tossed off and thoughtfully composed, a funny and touching narrative touching on juggling hopes and dreams, careers, art and expression, friendship, dating, family, and more in your twenties. Renders NYC beautifully and perfectly captures the joys and quirks of the library as workplace.
Fun, very easy to read graphic novel (Another 2025 Drawn and Quarterly release) about a queer library worker just getting by in New York City. Loved how weird this got by going off the deep end in WW1 history.
A graphic novel about libraries? Of course I was going to read this. The story ended up being mostly about WWI and was all over the place, and the artwork seemed sloppy and disjointed. Not a favorite, but it took about half an hour to read, so no big loss here.
I was very fortunate to meet Kate Fricas at SPX this year! Not to brag, but I happen to have an Emergency Pencil of my very own :) I love the writing and energy in Checked Out. There are a lot of graphic memoirs out there, but this is definitely one of my faves.