[ Passmore] offers a rollicking survey course in a history that has often been reduced to slogans or erased altogether. As a friend of Black Liberation Army activist Assata Shakur says, The whole white world doesnt want us to know we ever fought slavery. The cartoonish art has a daring quality that leavens the texts treatment of more heady topics. Passmores sharp humor and refusal to blindly parrot any prescribed narrative make for a necessary reckoning. * Publishers Weekly * Ben Passmore has entered a realm where personal creative brilliance intersects the historically profound, and in doing so he's created a masterpiece. -- David F. Walker, author of THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY: A GRAPHIC NOVEL HISTORY A mordant and highly original graphic novel that has readers reconsider Black resistance. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In the western cannon, the political cartoons that came before merely interpreted the world in various ways; it is clear that with Black Arms to Hold You Up, Ben intends to change it. -- Ronald Wimberly Black Arms to Hold You Up is an unnerving visual text. Ben Passmore's loving, instructive, and abrasive book educates about Black resistance against racist state violence and Black compradors. Its critique of Black leaders will spark debates and arguments. However, as we awkwardly hold ourselves together, we can lean into Passmore's call to armsof various typesto scrutinize history and heal our communities. -- Joy James, author of NEW BONES ABOLITION Long overdue, Black Arms to Hold You Up brings the history of Black resistance to the comics community. Part primer, part deep dive, with a bit of memoir, I learned about lesser-known revolutionaries and revisited my most revered. Bens personal storyas a lost mixed-race kid imagining a Black father who might teach him who he ishit home. Black Arms to Hold You Up is a thoughtful mix of the personal and political, humor and heartbreakjust like America itself. -- James Spooner, author of THE HIGH DESERT and founder of AFROPUNK Passmores wildly expressive visual storytelling makes every page bristle with urgency, perfectly matched to his narrative voice as he mixes careful research, biting humor, and an interrogation of generational struggle and personal responsibility. The result is as much a call to action as it is an unflinching record of individuals who refused to surrender their dignity or their lives. . . . This is an essential work of uncompromisingly political graphic nonfiction that is provocative, funny, devastating, and rich with historical insight. * Library Journal *