The Dragon Slayer: Folktales from Latin America is the first book for young readers from Jaime (Love and Rockets) Hernandez, who seems to be using a slightly more simplified, cartoony version of his usual clean-line style here. It retells three tales in comics form, with an introduction by a folklorist and some backmatter (sources, explanations, further reading) that might also be written by someone else. This is also available, for obvious reasons, in a Spanish edition as La Matadragones.
Castle Waiting is the 2006 first collection of Linda Medley's gentle take on folktales; before my flood, I had all of the comics and I think this book. There's been one more volume of the series since then, but I think it went on hiatus and hasn't come back yet -- though it was on and off hiatus a lot during it's first decade, too.
The Fun Family is the first graphic novel by Benjamin Frisch, pretty clearly a fictional take on "the Family Circus." It's from Top Shelf, which reminds me I used to buy a lot directly from them before they were bought by IDW: they'd have a big sale about twice a year and I'd grab things by cartoonists I'd never heard of, just because they were on sale. (It might not have been sustainable; all I'm saying is that as a gimmick, it worked well on me.)
And Sick is a book by Gabby Schulz (sometimes known as Ken Dahl, though I still don't know what the difference is between the two) about one time he was really, really sick. I think this is about a specific immediate illness, rather than his ongoing battle with herpes, the subject of his earlier Monsters. It looks really visuaully inventive, like that previous book, and probably just as icky.

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