In the bustling corridors of a Dewsbury secondary school library, where the scent of aged paper mingles with the faint tang of teenage rebellion, a stack of advance copies sits like contraband treasures. It’s November 5, 2025, and the air hums with the kind of quiet excitement reserved for discoveries that feel both ancient and urgently new. “The History of Everything,” the latest graphic novel from Epic Reads—an imprint under HarperCollins known for turbocharging YA tales into visual feasts—has just landed in select hands. Penned by debut author-illustrator Zara Quill, a 28-year-old former astrophysicist turned storyteller from Manchester’s rainy suburbs, this 320-page opus isn’t your standard superhero slugfest or dystopian slog. Instead, it weaves the grand tapestry of cosmic origins, human folly, and personal reinvention into a narrative that’s as sprawling as the universe itself, yet intimate enough to fit in a backpack. For young adult readers navigating the chaos of identity and infinity, it’s a beacon: adventure not as escape, but as excavation of the self amid the stars.
Quill’s journey to this debut mirrors the book’s own themes of unlikely convergence. Raised in a council flat overlooking the Pennines, she spent her teens sketching nebulae in the margins of physics textbooks, dreaming of black holes while dodging the monotony of A-level mocks. A scholarship to Cambridge birthed her PhD on dark matter simulations, but burnout struck like a supernova—endless grant proposals, imposter syndrome gnawing at her edges. “I was charting the universe’s secrets,” Quill recalls in a recent interview from her Salford studio, surrounded by half-eaten Hobnobs and dog-eared copies of Neil Gaiman’s “Sandman.” “But what about my own? Science explained the how, not the why we ache for meaning.” A pivot to illustration classes at the Manchester School of Art became her wormhole: commissions for indie zines on climate myths led to Epic Reads’ radar in 2023. Editor Lena Hargrove, scouting at a comics con in Birmingham, spotted Quill’s pitch—a girl unraveling the Big Bang to mend her fractured family—and knew it was gold. “Zara doesn’t just draw history; she humanizes it,” Hargrove says. “In a feed-saturated world, kids crave stories that make the cosmos feel like home.”
The graphic novel opens not with a bang, but a whisper: 13.8 billion years ago, in the quantum foam of nothingness, a singularity stirs. Rendered in Quill’s signature style—ethereal watercolors bleeding into sharp ink lines—the birth of the universe unfolds across double-page spreads that pulse with iridescent energy. Stars ignite like fireflies in a jar, galaxies spiral in hypnotic blues and golds, each panel a love letter to Hubble’s deep-field gaze. But this isn’t dry cosmology; it’s a portal for our protagonist, 16-year-old Mira Voss, a sharp-tongued misfit from a crumbling seaside town in Essex. Mira’s mum has vanished into the ether of a new boyfriend’s van, her dad drowns in pint glasses at the local, and school is a battlefield of cliques and cutting remarks. One stormy night, scavenging the attic for sellable junk, Mira unearths her grandfather’s antique astrolabe—a brass relic etched with forgotten constellations. Pricking her finger on its edge, she doesn’t just bleed; she tumbles through time, her blood a key unlocking the History of Everything: a sentient archive where epochs collide like tectonic plates.
What follows is a whirlwind odyssey that fuses pulse-pounding escapades with soul-stirring introspection. Mira first lands in the Cambrian Explosion, 541 million years ago, knee-deep in primordial ooze as trilobites skitter like living jewels. Here, she allies with a plucky anomalocaris—a shrimp-like predator with grasping claws—who teaches her the art of adaptation: “Survive by becoming, not by hiding.” Quill’s panels burst with bioluminescent frenzy, the page vibrating with the raw thrill of life’s debut. But beneath the spectacle lurks Mira’s mirror: just as ancient creatures evolve or perish, she confronts her fear of abandonment, whispering bargains to the fossilized waves. Leaping forward, she crashes into the Permian-Triassic extinction, dodging volcanic ash clouds and hypercanes that make today’s climate woes seem like drizzle. Teaming with a band of proto-mammals—furry proto-rats with eyes like polished onyx—Mira orchestrates a desperate ark, smuggling genetic sparks across continents. The sequence, inked in fiery crimsons and choking grays, doubles as allegory for Mira’s home life: her dad’s slow self-destruction, the “extinction event” of her family’s bonds. “Why save what’s already lost?” Mira scrawls in a thought bubble, her ink smudged like tears.
The narrative’s genius lies in its rhythmic leaps, each era a chapter in Mira’s growth arc. Ancient Egypt’s Nile floods become a metaphor for emotional overflow, where Mira scribes hieroglyphs with a sphinx-headed scribe who challenges her to “write your scars into stars.” The Renaissance cathedrals of Florence thrum with Da Vinci-esque inventiveness, but Mira’s stint as an apprentice alchemist forces her to brew elixirs not of gold, but of forgiveness—distilling grudges into vapor. Quill’s art evolves with the ages: prehistoric spreads employ rough, earthy charcoals that give way to the gilded filigree of medieval folios, then explode into cyberpunk neons for a futuristic detour to a Dyson sphere megastructure. In this far-future coda, humanity’s descendants—post-human cyborgs fused with AI—wage philosophical wars over the universe’s end. Mira, now a spectral guide, brokers peace, realizing that history isn’t linear; it’s a loop where endings birth beginnings. “We’re all singularities,” she concludes, “waiting to expand.”
Epic Reads’ gamble on this blend pays dividends in its YA resonance. At 320 pages, it’s a chunky read, but the graphic format—dialogue balloons zipping like comets, silent panels aching with subtext—propels readers through the density. Themes of growth hit hard: Mira’s arc from sullen loner to cosmic empath echoes the quarter-life crises of Gen Z and Alpha, who face planetary peril with inherited apathy. Quill infuses diversity without tokenism—Mira’s mixed Somali-English heritage flavors her worldview, from griot storytelling in Mali’s savannas to punk riffs in 1970s London squats. Mental health threads weave subtly: anxiety manifests as gravitational pulls, dragging Mira into depressive voids that she escapes by charting personal “event horizons.” Early buzz from ARC readers on Goodreads averages 4.7 stars, with teens praising its “mind-bending therapy session disguised as a comic.” One reviewer, a 15-year-old from Liverpool, gushed: “It made me feel small and huge at once—like my breakup is just a meteor, but I can dodge it.”
Launch events amplify the magic. Epic Reads kicks off with a November 12 virtual panel from Quill’s studio, featuring astrophysicist Dr. Aisha Rahman decoding the science, and YA author Tomi Adeyemi on myth-making. In-person bashes hit London Comic Con, where attendees don astrolabe replicas and “time-jump” through themed installations: a VR Cambrian tide pool, a scent-simulated Pompeii ashfall. For Dewsbury locals, a pop-up at the town’s library on November 20 promises free zines and star-mapping workshops, Quill herself sketching cameos for fans. Merch drops include enamel pins of extinct beasts and a soundtrack album—ethereal synths by Manchester producer Elara Voss, Mira’s fictional namesake—streaming on Spotify with QR codes hidden in the book for bonus lore.
Critics forecast “The History of Everything” as a sleeper hit, potentially eclipsing “Nimona” in crossover appeal. Quill, ever the scientist, tempers hype with humility: “It’s not about knowing all; it’s about wondering together.” In an era of echo chambers and existential dread, her debut reminds YA readers that history—personal or universal—isn’t a burden to bear, but a canvas to redraw. As Mira emerges from her final plunge, astrolabe in hand, she quips: “The end? Nah, that’s just the plot twist.” For a generation scripting their own epics amid uncertainty, it’s a rallying cry wrapped in wonder. In Dewsbury’s twilight, where sodium lamps flicker like distant quasars, the library stack dwindles—one copy at a time, universes unfold.
