
Write Now with Scrivener Episode 58: Tessa Hulls, Pulitzer Prize Winning Graphic Artist & Memoirist
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Jan 6, 2026 Tessa Hulls, a Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic artist, discusses her acclaimed memoir, Feeding Ghosts, which combines family history and long-form comics. She shares her surprise at winning the award while working in Alaska and the nine-year journey of creating the book. Tessa delves into the challenges of researching her family, the role of comics in conveying emotion across time, and the impact of AI tools on archival research. She also reflects on her mixed-race identity and critiques the myth of the American cowboy.
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COVID Production Was Crushing
- Tessa produced much of the book during COVID and says the production phase destroyed her mental health.
- She believes lockdown forced her to live inside the material and ultimately strengthened the book despite the personal cost.
Sell With a Detailed Roadmap
- When selling a long-form graphic memoir, Tessa wrote a 10,000-word creative-nonfiction outline to prove the roadmap even with few drawn pages.
- That detailed proposal helped publishers understand scope and secure interest early.
Mixed Identity Fuels Multidisciplinarity
- Tessa felt mixed-race identity placed her between categories and fostered a multidisciplinary approach to art.
- She uses overlapping cultural borders as a creative home and source of hybridity.









