Missing large

foreignangel Premium

Comics I Follow

Dog Eat Doug

Dog Eat Doug

By Brian Anderson
Heathcliff

Heathcliff

By Peter Gallagher
Marmaduke

Marmaduke

By Brad Anderson
Ripley's Believe It or Not

Ripley's Believe It or Not

By Ripley’s Believe It or Not!
Spot the Frog

Spot the Frog

By Mark Heath
Stone Soup

Stone Soup

By Jan Eliot
Sunshine State

Sunshine State

By Graham Nolan
Thin Lines

Thin Lines

By Randy Glasbergen
Ziggy

Ziggy

By Tom Wilson & Tom II
Adam@Home

Adam@Home

By Rob Harrell
Arlo and Janis

Arlo and Janis

By Jimmy Johnson
Baby Blues

Baby Blues

By Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott
Baldo

Baldo

By Hector D. Cantú and Carlos Castellanos
Flo and Friends

Flo and Friends

By Jenny Campbell
For Better or For Worse

For Better or For Worse

By Lynn Johnston
Garfield

Garfield

By Jim Davis
JumpStart

JumpStart

By Robb Armstrong
Luann

Luann

By Greg Evans and Karen Evans
Phoebe and Her Unicorn

Phoebe and Her Unicorn

By Dana Simpson
Pickles

Pickles

By Brian Crane
Red and Rover

Red and Rover

By Brian Basset
Rose is Rose

Rose is Rose

By Don Wimmer and Pat Brady
B.C.

B.C.

By Mastroianni and Hart
Back to B.C.

Back to B.C.

By Johnny Hart
Bear with Me

Bear with Me

By Bob Scott
Betty

Betty

By Gary Delainey and Gerry Rasmussen
Big Nate

Big Nate

By Lincoln Peirce
The Born Loser

The Born Loser

By Art and Chip Sansom
The Buckets

The Buckets

By Greg Cravens
Calvin and Hobbes

Calvin and Hobbes

By Bill Watterson
Drabble

Drabble

By Kevin Fagan
Frazz

Frazz

By Jef Mallett
Fred Basset

Fred Basset

By Alex Graham
Ginger Meggs

Ginger Meggs

By Jason Chatfield
Grand Avenue

Grand Avenue

By Mike Thompson
Heart of the City

Heart of the City

By Steenz
Jane's World

Jane's World

By Paige Braddock
Little Dog Lost

Little Dog Lost

By Steve Boreman
Luann Againn

Luann Againn

By Greg Evans
The Middletons

The Middletons

By Dana Summers
Ollie and Quentin

Ollie and Quentin

By Piers Baker
On A Claire Day

On A Claire Day

By Carla Ventresca and Henry Beckett
Ozy and Millie

Ozy and Millie

By Dana Simpson
Peanuts

Peanuts

By Charles Schulz
Peanuts Begins

Peanuts Begins

By Charles Schulz
Raising Duncan

Raising Duncan

By Chris Browne
Wizard of Id

Wizard of Id

By Parker and Hart
Wizard of Id Classics

Wizard of Id Classics

By Parker and Hart

Recent Comments

  1. over 3 years ago on Speechless

    I hope they don’t take them down. I’ve followed since the very beginning. Your dad brought so much joy to me and all his other readers. I hope the strips stay here and continue to bring joy to many others. I loved his testimony, and that he wasn’t afraid to share Jesus with the world. He will be very missed here on earth.

  2. almost 4 years ago on Heart of the City

    So far, I’m still following this strip… but we are seeing less and less of Heart and more and more of Charlotte. I love that she added an African American character… but it is called “Heart of the city” it should still primarily be about Heart.

  3. almost 4 years ago on Stone Soup

    I loved Heart too.. and I really wanted to hate the new version but I gave it a chance and so far… I don’t hate it.

  4. almost 4 years ago on Ollie and Quentin

    This strip was already in reruns. This was the final comic the first time around. Looks like we’ve reached the end for a second time.

  5. over 4 years ago on Grand Avenue

    As a music teacher, I appreciate that he’s teaching them. I usually have to give a crash course in roman numerals in lessons because we use them in music notation.

  6. over 4 years ago on Dog Eat Doug

    I always love a foster fail! That’s how I got my hound mix!

  7. over 5 years ago on Peanuts Begins

    There’s over 50 years of Peanuts. Why are we only getting Sundays and why did it stop? I thought that this was supposed to be an every strip ever created rerun.

  8. over 5 years ago on Catana Comics

    I’ve been following you for about a year now on FB and have your book! I’m so excited to see Catana getting a bigger audience!

  9. over 5 years ago on Pickles

    I feel like whenever comics characters become aware they’re in a comic strip that it is hinting that the strip will be ending. I really hope that’s not the case here. This is a great comic!

  10. almost 6 years ago on Heart of the City

    This is very well stated and I agree completely. I’m still giving the new one a chance, but it’s simply not my style. I liked being able to connect with the characters and, though I’m a xennial, I really appreciated the nostalgia and respect Gilchrist included in his strip.