This important, groundbreaking work makes a strong case for manga as an effective medium for depicting the realities of living with a disability and educating the general public--not just manga fans--about it. My teaching would be enriched by the addition of manga that do a good job of representing disability, and this book gives me all the information I need to find and properly contextualize such works. Professor Okuyama's book would also be a wonderfully useful resource on queer narrative and anti-normative discourse in Japan. With a focus on manga that promote greater understanding and awareness of disability and its sociocultural dimensions in Japan, Reframing Disability in Manga shows how this popular culture medium can serve as a powerful agent of social change. Theoretically astute and informed by Yoshiko Okuyamas many interviews with activists, authors, and editors, this book is a fascinating study of representations of disability in Japanese graphic novels and a significant contribution to disability studies scholarship.