Skittles’ Cozy Corner

THIS is the stuff I LOVE, the stuff I’d recommend to practically anyone for any occasion. It’s the stuff I buy and keep re-buying because I gift my copies to friends. It’s mostly graphic novels, but there may be exceptions.

Skittles, my cuddly tabby boy, hosts Sunday’s Cozy Corner, because all he wants to do is curl up next to you while you read ALL DAY. (All day reading is mandatory in Skittles’s world, and you’d best stay still like a good human-pillow should. Any movement will result in head-butts and love bites.)


  • Beetle and the Hollowbones by Aliza Layne
    I’m not sure there’s anything cuter than this story of a young goblin-witch Beetle, her new best friend Blob Ghost (an agender Blob Ghost who’s mysteriously bound to the about-to-be-demolished local mall), and her old best friend (and necromancer sorceress) Kat Hollowbone, who just might become her girlfriend by the story’s end.
  • Xeni by Rebekah Weatherspoon
    This is an absolutely beautiful book. I could gush about it all day, but the core fact is that Rebekah Weatherspoon has written a glorious ode to kindness, unrealistically inclusive small towns, snarky humor (this book is fucking funny!!), and assertively finding joy and happiness in the midst of life’s hardships.
  • Tidesong by Wendy Xu
    This is a massively cute and visually lush work–if you like Kay O’Neill’s Tea Dragon world, definitely check this out!
  • The Deep & Dark Blue by Niki Smith
    Between the eye-catching art and the heartwarming message of trans affirmation, Niki Smith has created a lovely ode to the importance of community and being open to change. It’s really good.
  • Garlic and the Vampire by Bree Paulsen
    This absolute delight of a graphic novel is so sweet and cozy, featuring a cast of sentient vegetables, their witch creator, and a not-so-scary vampire who may not be so bloodthirsty after all.
  • My Beijing: Four Stories of Everyday Wonder by Nie Jun, trans. Edward Gauvin
    If you’re not into whimsy of any sort, steer clear, but if you like the whimsical tempered with more than a dash of the everyday, try to find this asap.
  • Forever Home by Jenna Ayoub
    This graphic novel is so sweet and fun, sort of like if the old film Arsenic and Old Lace met the spunky, won’t-take-no-for-an-answer attitude of comics heroine Goldie Vance, with a dash of Lumberjanes or even Buffy the Vampire Slayer thrown in.
  • The Tea Dragon Festival by Kay O’Neill
    This delightful sequel to The Tea Dragon Society is actually a prequel that gives us an extra-long peek into the world of the tea dragons when Erik and Hesekiel, who are old men in book one, were just starting out as an adventuring couple. It focuses on Erik’s nibling, Rinn, and an ancient village guardian Rinn wakes up and befriends (the full-sized dragon Aedhan).
  • The Tea Dragon Society by Kay O’Neill
    Kay O’Neill’s style is absolutely gorgeous–like the platonic ideal of cottagecore. This is probably the cutest, most zero-stakes cozy read I’ve ever encountered. It’s one of my favorite books of all time, and I’d recommend it to almost anyone without hesitation.