Code seal

Cartoonacy Free

Comics I Follow

In Security

In Security

By Bea R.
Rudy Park

Rudy Park

By Darrin Bell and Theron Heir
The Upside Down World of Gustave Verbeek

The Upside Down World of Gustave Verbeek

By Gustave Verbeek
9 Chickweed Lane

9 Chickweed Lane

By Brooke McEldowney
Brewster Rockit

Brewster Rockit

By Tim Rickard
Cow and Boy Classics

Cow and Boy Classics

By Mark Leiknes
Frazz

Frazz

By Jef Mallett
Dick Tracy

Dick Tracy

By Mike Curtis and Charles Ettinger
Ink Pen

Ink Pen

By Phil Dunlap
Luann

Luann

By Greg Evans and Karen Evans
Mutt & Jeff

Mutt & Jeff

By Bud Fisher
Off the Mark

Off the Mark

By Mark Parisi
One Big Happy

One Big Happy

By Rick Detorie
Pearls Before Swine

Pearls Before Swine

By Stephan Pastis
Rip Haywire

Rip Haywire

By Dan Thompson
Scary Gary

Scary Gary

By Mark Buford
Speed Bump

Speed Bump

By Dave Coverly
Working Daze

Working Daze

By John Zakour and Scott Roberts
9 to 5

9 to 5

By Harley Schwadron
Adam@Home

Adam@Home

By Rob Harrell
Alley Oop

Alley Oop

By Jonathan Lemon and Joey Alison Sayers
Andy Capp

Andy Capp

By Reg Smythe
Arlo and Janis

Arlo and Janis

By Jimmy Johnson
B.C.

B.C.

By Mastroianni and Hart
Back to B.C.

Back to B.C.

By Johnny Hart
Baldo

Baldo

By Hector D. Cantú and Carlos Castellanos
Ben

Ben

By Daniel Shelton
Betty

Betty

By Gary Delainey and Gerry Rasmussen
Big Nate

Big Nate

By Lincoln Peirce
Bo Nanas

Bo Nanas

By John Kovaleski
Boomerangs

Boomerangs

By Jack Pullan
Bottom Liners

Bottom Liners

By Eric and Bill Teitelbaum
Bound and Gagged

Bound and Gagged

By Dana Summers
Brevity

Brevity

By Dan Thompson
Broom Hilda

Broom Hilda

By Russell Myers
The Buckets

The Buckets

By Greg Cravens
Calvin and Hobbes

Calvin and Hobbes

By Bill Watterson
C'est la Vie

C'est la Vie

By Jennifer Babcock
Close to Home

Close to Home

By John McPherson
Cornered

Cornered

By Mike Baldwin
Cul de Sac

Cul de Sac

By Richard Thompson
Dog Eat Doug

Dog Eat Doug

By Brian Anderson
Drabble

Drabble

By Kevin Fagan
The Elderberries

The Elderberries

By Corey Pandolph and Phil Frank and Joe Troise
F Minus

F Minus

By Tony Carrillo
Family Tree

Family Tree

By Signe Wilkinson
Flo and Friends

Flo and Friends

By Jenny Campbell
For Better or For Worse

For Better or For Worse

By Lynn Johnston
FoxTrot

FoxTrot

By Bill Amend
FoxTrot Classics

FoxTrot Classics

By Bill Amend
Frank and Ernest

Frank and Ernest

By Thaves
Fred Basset

Fred Basset

By Alex Graham
Free Range

Free Range

By Bill Whitehead
The Fusco Brothers

The Fusco Brothers

By J.C. Duffy
Garfield

Garfield

By Jim Davis
Gasoline Alley

Gasoline Alley

By Jim Scancarelli
Geech

Geech

By Jerry Bittle
Get Fuzzy

Get Fuzzy

By Darby Conley
Ginger Meggs

Ginger Meggs

By Jason Chatfield
Grand Avenue

Grand Avenue

By Mike Thompson
The Grizzwells

The Grizzwells

By Bill Schorr
Heart of the City

Heart of the City

By Steenz
Herb and Jamaal

Herb and Jamaal

By Stephen Bentley
Herman

Herman

By Jim Unger
In the Bleachers

In the Bleachers

By Ben Zaehringer
JumpStart

JumpStart

By Robb Armstrong
Last Kiss

Last Kiss

By John Lustig
Luann Againn

Luann Againn

By Greg Evans
The Meaning of Lila

The Meaning of Lila

By John Forgetta and L.A. Rose
Moderately Confused

Moderately Confused

By Jeff Stahler
Momma

Momma

By Mell Lazarus
Monty

Monty

By Jim Meddick
Nancy

Nancy

By Olivia Jaimes
Nancy Classics

Nancy Classics

By Ernie Bushmiller
Non Sequitur

Non Sequitur

By Wiley Miller
The Norm Classics

The Norm Classics

By Michael Jantze
On A Claire Day

On A Claire Day

By Carla Ventresca and Henry Beckett
The Other Coast

The Other Coast

By Adrian Raeside
Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

By T Lewis and Michael Fry
Overboard

Overboard

By Chip Dunham
Peanuts

Peanuts

By Charles Schulz
Pickles

Pickles

By Brian Crane
PreTeena

PreTeena

By Allison Barrows
Peanuts Begins

Peanuts Begins

By Charles Schulz
Prickly City

Prickly City

By Scott Stantis
Reality Check

Reality Check

By Dave Whamond
Red and Rover

Red and Rover

By Brian Basset
Ripley's Believe It or Not

Ripley's Believe It or Not

By Ripley’s Believe It or Not!
Rose is Rose

Rose is Rose

By Don Wimmer and Pat Brady
Rubes

Rubes

By Leigh Rubin
Savage Chickens

Savage Chickens

By Doug Savage
Shirley and Son Classics

Shirley and Son Classics

By Jerry Bittle
Shoe

Shoe

By Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly
Skippy

Skippy

By Percy Crosby
Strange Brew

Strange Brew

By John Deering
Stone Soup

Stone Soup

By Jan Eliot
Watch Your Head

Watch Your Head

By Cory Thomas
Wizard of Id

Wizard of Id

By Parker and Hart
Wee Pals

Wee Pals

By Morrie Turner
Working It Out

Working It Out

By Charlos Gary
Zack Hill

Zack Hill

By John Deering and John Newcombe
Wizard of Id Classics

Wizard of Id Classics

By Parker and Hart
Ziggy

Ziggy

By Tom Wilson & Tom II
Origins of the Sunday Comics

Origins of the Sunday Comics

By Peter Maresca
Kitchen Capers

Kitchen Capers

By David Banks

Recent Comments

  1. over 10 years ago on Dick Tracy

    “The strip was discontinued in 1975 I believe, possibly because George Wunder, who took over a while after Caniff moved on, drew every character to look the same.”

    I don’t disagree with you about George Wunder’s art, but considering he drew the strip for 27 years, I doubt that it was the reason for the strip’s cancellation. I think it had more to do with the public’s unfortunate loss of interest in action strips in the late 1970s, particularly those with military themes.

  2. over 10 years ago on [Deleted]

    Maybe someday we’ll find out Terry’s fate (maybe he married the Dragon Lady, and they have a bunch of little dragonettes)."

    Dragonettes? Is Joe Friday getting involved in this story, too?

  3. about 11 years ago on FoxTrot

    “I though Paige was dressed up as Lady Gaga!?!”

    No, Miley Cyrus.

  4. about 11 years ago on Alley Oop

    " It was explained that a time traveler simply cannot die outside of their own time frame."

    Interesting notion. So if I step into Doc’s time machine and go five minutes into the future, I’ll be invulnerable for the rest of my li… um, forever?

  5. about 11 years ago on Nancy

    About ten years ago, when I was running a comics Q&A website, I got the following Q, and gave the following A:

    Q:This question has needled my brain for a few years. Hope you can help! In the old “Little Lulu” comic books – or a comic series much like “Lulu,” perhaps “Audrey” or “Dot” – was an occasional supporting character with the odd name of “Oona Goosebumps” (Una Goosebumps? Uma?). I recall her as a Goth-looking little girl living with her eerie, Addams-like family in a haunted mansion on the outskirts of Lulu’s neighborhood. It was always Halloween around that mansion; Oona’s giant uncle lived in the cellar, lengthwise in a sort of longhall because of his height (if you wanted to talk to him, you had to run from door to door until you could find his head). Now the most eerie thing about Oona’s digs haunted my childhood nightmares: the alternate dimension behind the fireplace. If a visitor pushed or fell against the bricks just so, a door swung open and he tumbled into a sort of gray, cloud-filled world. The dwellers here were irascible gray little men; when annoyed, they exhaled an opaque cloud of smoke around your head which would hung there permanently, blinding you, so you could never find the portal back to the normal reality. It was a sort of whimsical horror, and fairly sophisticated for that genre of comics. Am I remembering it correctly? Can you fill in details? And where on the Web can I revisit Oona’s haunted mansion?

    A:It was not in “Little Lulu,” but in the “Nancy” comic books by John Stanley that Oona Goosepimple appeared (see http://www.toonopedia.com/nancy.htm). There was an article about Oona in issue #7 of Hogan’s Alley magazine (http://www.hoganmag.com) a couple of years ago. There may be back issues of the magazine available from their website, or on E-bay, or at your local comic book shop.

    Response:Thank you, Bob! This was like a revelation. Oona Goosepimple, of course. In Nancy. Hmmm, and so Ernie Bushmiller wasn’t the only artist behind that strip. I remember the dimensional gateway quite well, easily the most nightmarish aspect of the Oona plot-thread. I’d be glad to get more information about Nancy’s little goth-girl friend when you find it. But now I can do some research of my own.

  6. about 11 years ago on [Deleted]

    Never saw The Wizard of Oz, I take it?

  7. about 11 years ago on Brewster Rockit

    Maybe it’s from the Mirror Universe.

  8. over 11 years ago on Nothing is Not Something

    That Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup commercial hasn’t been shown since about 30 years ago, has it?

  9. over 11 years ago on PreTeena

    Usually, I get annoyed at people who feel the need to remind everyone “It’s a comic strip.” But in this case, I think Darsan54 was justified in criticizing the comments calling Gordo stupid. They remind me of the type of person who listens to a joke, and after the punchline says “And then what happened?”

  10. over 11 years ago on Over the Hedge

    No mystery at all. Meat does look, smell, and taste delicious. If you can get all that (or at least a facsimile) without inflicting pain and death on a living creature, why not? (BTW, no, I’m neither vegan nor vegetarian. I don’t eat mammals, though, and I love tofu. We each draw our own line somewhere.)