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Comic Strips Starting with the Letter P
This page gives a full description of all comic strips starting with the letter P.
Full descriptions for other letters: A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H-I-J-K-L-M-N-O-P-QR-S-T-UV-W-XYZ
- Pacific Comics Club
- Pacific Comics Club, founded in the early 1960's, is dedicated to the research,
publishing and distribution of classic American newspaper strips. .
- Paranoid Joe by Michael
Ewing and Laura Piper.
- Political correctness has reached such a level that
just saying ‘hello’ has a pitfall of dangerous meanings and
connotations. Paranoid Joe gives us a rough guide to living in today’s
tough world. MWF.
- Parking Lot is Full, The by Jack
McLaren and Pat Spacek.
- Single-panel alternative comic strip for people tired of the
obvious, the ordinary, and the safe. Pretentious, but cheerfully so. Weekly.
- PartiallyClips
by Robert Balder.
- 3-panel
comic using commercially-available clip art, with the author’s own
balloons for speech, thoughts and narrative.
Somewhat dark and twisted.
- Passfield! by John
Passfield.
- Single panel cartoon with a sometime warped look at
life. Thursdays.
- Payne, Henry
- Editorial cartoonist for Scripps Howard News Service; syndicated by United Feature
Syndicate. Payne has been runner-up for both the Pulitzer and Mencken Awards. He says that
"the challenge of each day is using the tools of wit and pen to create a meaningful
image that will leave an impression on the public debate." He has included a few
hints about how to draw several famous people such as Clinton and Perot.
- PC and
Pixel by Thatch Bui. Washington Post Writers Group.
- Peanuts by Charles Schulz. United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
- The following list has both the official and tribute pages.
- Peanuts has one of the best comic strip sites, which is appropriate given that it is one
of the best strips.
- A very impressive bibliography of Peanuts publications.
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- Pearls
Before Swine by Stephan Pastis. United Feature Syndicate.
- The comic strip is a tale of two friends: a megalomaniacal Rat who
thinks he knows it all and a slow-witted Pig who doesn't know any
better.
- Penalty Box, The by Al
Kratzer.
- You won't regret a visit to this library of past Sports Illustrated SIonline cartoons,
plus a few rants and raves. This page blends both a professional look and fine
professional cartoons.
- Penman by
Gary Blehm. Creators Syndicate.
- A worldless cartoon strip, Penman is a combination of hieroglyphics, modern art, cartoon
and even dance.
- Pentasmal by
Farber.
- Off beat multi-panel cartoon with very original
character designs and clever dialouge. Mon-Fri.
- People of the Internet by Daniel Freeman.
- Odd panel about featuring a different character from Cyberspace each week.
- Perfect World by Nick
Bruel.
- Panel strip by a freelance cartoonist. Archive of 24 from 1994.
- Peters, Mike
- Editorial cartoonist for Tribune Media Services. These Political Punches come fast and
furiously (five a week).
- Pewfell Porfingles, The Weird Worlds
of by Chuck Wheels
- Daily comic strip fantasy fun with that wacky wizard, Pewfell
Porfingles and his warrior wife with the chainmail wonderbra.
- Phantom,
The by Lee Falk. King Features Syndicate.
- Phillabuster by Drew
Pocza.
- Mix of urban art with manga style strip based on a boy
and his sarcastic snowman. MWF.
- Pickles
by Brian Crane. Washington Post Writers Group.
- Pink Flamingos by Shavaun
Devlin.
- Beaufort and Petal vie for space (and opinions) in an urban apartment with Homey
DMouse and Armondo the Armadillo refugee. Single panel work.
- Pinwy by
Sergio Casas Rivera.
- In Spanish. In the history of comic strips you
have seen mice, dogs , cats , panthers, but never before a friend such
as Pinwy. Pinwy is a shy, cheek, round-faced, smart, sincere Pinwy, who is
going to wake up the child inside us. Bi-weekly.
- Pizza Bones cartoons by Chris Cassatt.
- Panel strip in color. Weekly.
- Poet Ink
by David Smith.
- Misadventures of two 8 year old brothers named Frank
and Dave Poet just trying to get through their day-to-day lives
without tripping over their own feet in the process.
- Pooch Cafe by Paul
Gilligan. Copley News Service.
- Daily syndicated strip that follows the life of Poncho
and his canine pals as they try to understand their place in the world.
At Pooch Cafe they can gather to discuss such issues as toilet-breath,
projectile barking and their secret plan to catapult all cats into the
sun.
- Poochy
Says by Jake Russell.
- A smart-aleck
mutt and he loves sharing his views on life with anyone who will listen.
- Pop Culture by
Steve McGarry.
- This popular British cartoonist uses cartoons as a way to give facts about popular
culture, as well as to test your knowledge of it.
- Popeye
by Hy Eisman. King Features Syndicate.
- Porterfield by Joe Martin.
- Business-related strip by the creative mastermind behind Mr. Boffo and Willy 'n Ethel.
- PowerChord Man.com
by Monte Brown and Cameron Schmitz.
- The Online Comic Book: Join Powerchord Man in Tri-Ton
city in the battle against Locrian and the super criminal element!
Monthly.
- Prince
Valiant by John Cullen Murphy and Cullen Murphy. King Features
Syndicate.
- Pritchett, John
- Professional cartoons direct from Hawaii, where we all wish we came from.
- Protooner by Oliver Gaspirtz
- Award-winning single-panel gag cartoons. Black humor.
- Pseudo Heroes Online
Comics by Greg Martens and Scott Bentley.
- 6-panel off-beat strip featuring Pseudo Heroes like ‘Family
Man’, ‘Wonder Bra Woman’, and ‘Alcoholic Man’, all
extraordinary crime fighters with ordinary powers. Weekly.
-
Public
Eyes by Ron Marshall.
- A
humorous look at the lives of big-city police detectives. Features
Detectives Dave O’Conner (slightly naive), Al Mazzoli (slightly jaded),
and Sid Feldman (slightly goofy).
- Puffy Cloud by Rob
McClurkan.
- Super Heros on their days off. Weekly.
- Pure Baloney by Ron Hill.
- Color comic with: a dinosaur, an ancient space alien, a four-foot
Earthworm, scientists,
superheroes, time-travel...the usual. Weekly.
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