Seattle writer Tessa Hulls wins Pulitzer Prize for best memoir
‘Feeding Ghosts,’ a graphic memoir, traces three generations of Chinese women across time and continents, trauma and resilience.

A spread from ‘Feeding Ghosts,’ the Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic memoir by Seattle writer/comics illustrator Tessa Hulls. (Macmillan Publishers)
Seattle author and artist Tessa Hulls has won a 2025 Pulitzer Prize for her first book, Feeding Ghosts. Earning the award for best memoir or autobiography, the book blends historical research, personal revelations and comics-style storytelling to paint an emotionally fierce family portrait.
The Pulitzer Prize committee announced this year’s winners May 5, calling Feeding Ghosts “an affecting work of literary art and discovery whose illustrations bring to life three generations of Chinese women — the author, her mother and grandmother, and the experience of trauma handed down with family histories.”
In the book, Hulls explains how her grandmother, Sun Yi, a Shanghai journalist and single mother, was forced by government persecution to flee to Hong Kong in 1949. She brought her daughter Rose (Hulls’ mother) along with her — both hidden in the false bottom of a fishing boat.
Once arrived, Sun Yi penned a bestselling memoir, Eight Years in Red Shanghai: Love, Starvation, Persecution, and used the income to send Rose off to boarding school. Soon after, Sun Yi had a mental breakdown and was never the same.
With drawings that swim between realistic and surreal, Hulls reveals that in her own childhood, she knew Sun Yi only as the “broken ghost” of a grandmother who lived with her and her mother. In Feeding Ghosts — which took Hulls nearly 10 years to complete — the author/illustrator fleshes out her own intergenerational stories of immigration, creative escape and mother/daughter relationships.
While this is Hulls’ first book, she has been an active member of the Seattle art community for decades, as an artist, writer, illustrator, performer and interviewer, including the time she literally camped out at the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP) to capture and illustrate the stories of the various parties involved.
In addition to winning the Pulitzer Prize, Feeding Ghosts has received many accolades since its publication, including both the Libby Award for Best Graphic Novel and the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Prize, as well as being named a “Best Book of the Year” by Time magazine, NPR, Publishers Weekly and others.