- Quarantine comix, a memoir of life in lockdown, by Rachael Smith
- My begging chart, Keiler Roberts
- Voces sin fronteras, our stories, our truth = nuestras historias, nuestra verdad, Alejandro, Nataly, April, Brenda, Lisa, M.C., Erminia, Rosa, S.R.P., Selena, Sebastian, Yeca, J.J., Tania, Tato, Yesi
- Mexikid en español, Pedro Martín ; traducción de Hugo Lopez Araiza Bravo
- Sisters, Raina Telgemeier ; with color by Braden Lamb
- Dancing after TEN, a graphic memoir, by Vivian Chong and Georgia Webber
- Colin Kaepernick, change the game : a graphic novel, Colin Kaepernick, Eve L. Ewing, Orlando Caicedo
- Advocate, a graphic memoir of family, community, and the fight for environmental justice, Eddie Ahn
- Kimiko does cancer, a graphic memoir, Kimiko Tobimatsu ; illustrated by Keet Geniza
- Catalogue baby, a memoir of infertility, Myriam Steinberg ; illustrations by Christache
- One in a million, Claire Lordon
- Secret passages, 1985-1986, Axelle Lenoir
- The way she feels, my life on the borderline in pictures and pieces, Courtney Cook
- Wired up wrong, Rachael Smith
- Sunshine, how one camp taught me about life, death, and hope, by Jarrett J. Krosoczka
- Alterations, a graphic novel by Ray Xu
- Real friends, Shannon Hale ; artwork by LeUyen Pham ; color by Jane Poole
- ¡Ay, Mija!, my bilingual summer in Mexico, Christine Suggs
- Taking turns, stories from HIV/AIDS care Unit 371, MK Czerwiec
- Numb to this, memoir of a mass shooting, Kindra Neely
- And now I spill the family secrets, an illustrated memoir, Margaret Kimball
- Friends forever, Shannon Hale ; artwork by LeUyen Pham ; color by Hilary Sycamore and LeUyen Pham
- Cancer vixen, a true story, Marisa Acocella Marchetto
- I know you rider, a memoir, Leslie Stein
- Factory summers, Guy Delisle ; translated by Helge Dascher and Rob Aspinall
- Smile, Raina Telgemeier ; with color by Stephanie Yue
- Dragon hoops, Gene Luen Yang ; color by Lark Pien ; art assists by Rianne Meyers and Kolbe Yang
- Blackbird days, Manuele Fior ; translated by Jamie Richards
- Save it for later, promises, parenthood, and the urgency of protest, Nate Powell