To the uninitiated, graphic novels are picture books — immature, goofy, smutty playgrounds for weirdos who refuse to enter the real world. None of which is correct.
Sure, there are some misses. But Hollywood, pop culture and plenty of your friends have long accepted the best of the graphic novel for what it is: a great medium for incredible stories. Unlike comic books, graphic novels are easily digestible because they contain a single continuous narrative, usually collected in one edition; like any number of great storytelling venues, they’re addictive, engrossing and thought-provoking. Their underground, alternative culture is beautifully different: they’re weirder, and more comfortable with that weirdness, than pretty much any other medium. But they are often just as intense, and in fact more dark, brooding, unsettling and violent than any book or film. Not into superheroes or sci-fi? Many graphic novels, especially modern ones, deal with realistic, truthful (and sometimes non-fiction) drama.
These ten are great examples in the most digestible, single-book form (though there are some greats that span several or many issues). Give one a few pages and you might not look up until there are no more pages left.
MORE GREAT READS: 100 Best Books for Men | Best Books of 2014 | Great Hunting Literature
The Underwater Welder

Best Ghost Story: Its introduction describes it as “The most spectacular episode of The Twilight Zone that was never produced”, and that comparison goes well beyond its heavily shaded black-and-white illustrations. Jack, the titular underwater welder, is a likable, flawed character facing down the pressures of impending fatherhood deep below the sea when he comes face to face with the haunting mysteries of his father’s disappearance 20 years before.