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Save It for Later

Promises, Parenthood, and the Urgency of Protest

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Pub Date 6 Apr 2021 | Archive Date 6 Apr 2021

ABRAMS | Abrams ComicArts


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Description

From Nate Powell, the National Book Award–winning artist of March, comes Save It for Later: Promises, Parenthood, and the Urgency of Protest, a deeply resonant collection of graphic nonfiction essays that examines how ordinary people navigate extraordinary political times.

Blending personal narrative, cultural critique, and visual storytelling, Powell chronicles what it has meant to raise young children, create meaningful art, and remain civically engaged during a period defined by polarization, protest movements, and a rapidly shifting public conscience.

Across seven interwoven comics essays, Powell traces the arc from the 2016 presidential election through the social upheavals of the early 2020s. As he witnesses the breakdown of civil discourse while working on the landmark March trilogy, he interrogates the rise of extremist and paramilitary symbolism in everyday American culture and reflects on the responsibility each of us holds within our families, communities, and public spaces.

Powell’s storytelling moves fluidly between the intimate and the societal—from the promises he makes to his young daughter on election night, to the lived realities of an increasingly authoritarian political climate, to the challenge of teaching children how to recognize injustice and raise their own voices safely and effectively.

His widely circulated essay “About Face” appears here alongside new and expanded work, culminating in a final piece that contextualizes the defining events of 2020—including the COVID‑19 pandemic, the national and global response to the murder of George Floyd, and the presidential election—within the larger continuum of American protest culture.

Rendered with Powell’s signature emotional acuity, the book portrays his daughters as imaginative anthropomorphic characters, illuminating the hope, fear, and resilience that coexist in times of collective uncertainty. As he documents protests, conversations with neighbors, and moments of cross‑community solidarity, Powell reveals both the fragility and the power of social trust—and what it takes to nurture it.

Save It for Later stands as an essential reflection on how families, artists, and engaged citizens continue to confront disinformation, extremism, and cultural fragmentation. It is a vital call to equip the next generation with the tools, context, and courage they need to shape a more just and compassionate future.

From Nate Powell, the National Book Award–winning artist of March, comes Save It for Later: Promises, Parenthood, and the Urgency of Protest, a deeply resonant collection of graphic nonfiction essays...


A Note From the Publisher

Nate Powell is a National Book Award–winning cartoonist whose work includes civil rights icon John Lewis’s historic March trilogy, Come Again, Two Dead, Any Empire, Swallow Me Whole, and The Silence of Our Friends. Powell has also received the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, three Eisner Awards, the Michael L. Printz Award, the Comic-Con International Inkpot Award, two Ignatz Awards, and the Walter Dean Myers Award. He has discussed his work at the United Nations, on MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show, PBS, CNN, and Free Speech TV. He lives in Bloomington, Indiana. You can visit him online at seemybrotherdance.org.

Nate Powell is a National Book Award–winning cartoonist whose work includes civil rights icon John Lewis’s historic March trilogy, Come Again, Two Dead, Any Empire, Swallow Me Whole, and The Silence...



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