-2025 Winner, Best Single Author Book, Midwest Popular Culture Association
-2025 Longlist, Reading the West Book Award in Nonfiction, Mountains & Plains Independent Booksellers Association

My book Redrawing the Western: A History of American Comics and the Mythic West was released by University of Texas Press in November 2024. From the publisher’s website:

Redrawing the Western charts a history of the Western genre in American comics from the late 1800s through the 1970s and beyond. Encompassing the core years in which the genre was forged and prospered in a range of popular media, Grady engages with several key historical timeframes, from the origins of the Western in the nineteenth-century illustrated press; through fin de siècle anxieties with the closing of the frontier, and the centrality of cowboy adventure across the interwar, postwar, and high Cold War years; to the revisions of the genre in the wake of the Vietnam War and the Western’s continued vitality in contemporary comics storytelling.

In its study of stories about vengeance, conquest, and justice on the contested frontier, Redrawing the Western highlights how the “simplistic” conflicts common in Western adventure comics could disguise highly political undercurrents, providing young readers with new ways to think about the contemporaneous social and political milieu. Besides tracing the history, forms, and politics of American Western comics in and around the twentieth century, William Grady offers an original reassessment of the important role of comics in the development of the Western genre, ranking them alongside popular fiction and film in the process.”

More info can be found here: https://utpress.utexas.edu/9781477329986/


Praise for Redrawing the Western…

Grady combines sweeping analysis of how western comics reflect broader historical currents with fine-grained interpretations of individual comics… This is worth rounding up.
~Publishers Weekly

Redrawing the Western is an important addition to the burgeoning field of comic book scholarship.
~Houston Press

Grady does a very good job detailing the trajectory of the comic Western genre… The book remains readable and entertaining and educational.
~Daily Cartoonist

I would recommend Redrawing the Western to anyone interested in (Native) American history, (American Western) comic books, or popular culture in general.
~H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences

Grady presents a complex and multifaceted argument for reimagining the power and impact of Westerns in comics.
~Journal of Arizona History