ABSTRACT : Thus far, pedagogical discussions about comics in the college classroom have focused primarily on reading, with less attention paid to the complementary potential of composing comics. This essay advocates using narrative theory alongside comic studies to provide students and teachers with a flexible, transferable vocabulary compatible with literacy-focused pedagogies. For support, I draw upon the contributions of undergraduate students in an advanced composition course centered on graphic memoir, in which the combination of medium and genre provided a user-friendly but sophisticated environment for rhetorical experimentation and multimodal literacy development. Three core concepts-narrative gaps, narration, and focalization-are offered as helpful heuristics for rhetorical design; their application in two students' memoirs illustrate the insights and skills that can result from a theory-driven approach to comic composition. Ultimately, I suggest that such an approach holds significant potential for generating critical engagement, refining rhetorical consciousness, and fostering critical multiliteracies.