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Fantagraphics.com online comics are free for everyone! Choose from our selection of ongoing series and one-shot strips. For regular reminders of new strips, check the "webcomics" tag on Flog! The Fantagraphics Blog; you can also subscribe to the "webcomics" tag with RSS. |
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Angelman by Nicolas Mahler
( 19 items )
We are proud and pleased to be publishing our first Nicolas Mahler book (a full-color hardcover, no less) in April 2012: Angelman. We are serializing the first quarter of the book with the rest of our weekly digital comics... at the end of which, you will be so absorbed in Angelman's travails that you will have no choice but to pick up the book. Enjoy!
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Barack Hussein Obama and other strips by Steven Weissman
( 5 items )
This weekly strip by Steven Weissman has ceased serialization on our website and has been collected in a 2012 hardcover volume. Follow the President's second term with all-new strips at What Things Do.
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Up All Night by Michael Kupperman
( 49 items )
This weekly strip by Snake 'n' Bacon and Tales Designed to Thrizzle creator Michael Kupperman runs weekly in the Washington City Paper and here on the Fantagraphics website.
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Monday's Strip by Stephen DeStefano
( 11 items )
Originally run as an experiment on Stephen's blog starting in 2008, Monday's Strip is re-presented here, with several strips seen here in color for the first time.
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Rarities and Miscellany by various artists
( 11 items )
This section contains an assortment of rare, unpublished, previously unseen, and/or out of print stories and strips by various artists.
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Blecky Yuckerella by Johnny Ryan
( 1 items )
Sure, she's smelly and gross, but she's got a heart of gold! Blecky Yuckerella and her disgusting pals star in this weekly four-panel gag strip, as seen in the pages of the Portland Mercury and Vice magazine (and her very own collections from Fantagraphics Books, of course).
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The House of No by Derek Van Gieson
( 28 items )
Rejected New Yorker cartoons by Mome contributor Derek Van Gieson, added weekly. Visit Derek's website for more of his work, and look for his accepted strips and illustrations in the pages of the New Yorker.
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