Comic books •
Lloyd Llewellyn #1–6 (1986–1987) and a special (1988). •
Eightball #1–23 (1989–2004).
Graphic novels •
Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron (Fantagraphics, 1993). Clowes's first graphic novel, this volume collects ten chapters serialized in
Eightball #1–10. A surreal narrative partially based on Clowes's dreams, it tells the story of Clay Loudermilk, an alienated young man who searches for his ex-wife after seeing her in a fetish film. •
Pussey!: The Complete Saga of Young Dan Pussey (Fantagraphics, 1995). This collection features Dan Pussey stories that first appeared in
Eightball. A satire of the superhero comics industry, it chronicles the life of the title character from his boyhood dreams of being a famous comic-book artist, to success drawing superhero stories, and finally to a rapid fall into obscurity. •
Ghost World (Fantagraphics, 1997). This graphic novel collects the
Ghost World chapters from
Eightball #11–18. On the first paperback edition's back cover, Clowes includes a brief synopsis: "
Ghost World is the story of Enid and Rebecca, teenage friends facing the unwelcome prospect of adulthood and the uncertain future of their complicated relationship." The cartoonist's breakthrough and best-selling work, it has been translated into seventeen languages. •
David Boring (Pantheon Books, 2000). This volume collects
David Boring Acts 1–3 from
Eightball #19–21. The comic's elaborately plotted narrative explores the title character's search for the perfect woman and his effort to learn about his missing father. •
Ice Haven (Pantheon, 2005). First appearing in
Eightball #22,
Ice Haven was revised and reformatted for the 2005 collection, with new chapters and redrawn art. Featuring a fictional Midwestern town and a large cast of main characters, the story centers on David Goldberg's kidnapping and the strained interactions of the town's inhabitants. •
Wilson (Drawn and Quarterly, 2010).
Wilson is Clowes's first non-serialized graphic novel. Set in
Oakland, California, it tells the story of Wilson, a confrontational misanthrope who desires a deep connection with other people, but whose aggressive interpersonal style thwarts such relationships. •
Mister Wonderful (Pantheon Books, 2011). Called "a midlife romance" by Clowes, this volume is an expanded and reformatted collection of a story first serialized in
The New York Times Magazine in 2007 and 2008. It won a 2008
Eisner Award for Best Short Story for the serialized version. •
The Death-Ray (Drawn and Quarterly, 2011). Clowes's long-form superhero story,
The Death-Ray first appeared in
Eightball #23. A formally complex narrative, it recounts the story of Andy, who acquires super-powers and a death ray that he uses, according to the back cover, "in defense of the righteous". •
Patience (Fantagraphics, 2016). Clowes's longest graphic novel, the book is described by the publisher as "a psychedelic science-fiction love story, veering with uncanny precision from violent destruction to deeply personal tenderness in a way that is both quintessentially 'Clowesian' and utterly unique in the author's body of work." •
Monica (Fantagraphics, 2023), a multi-genre exploration of a woman's life and cults, conspiracy theories, and the mid-20th century
Anthologies •
#$@&!: The Official Lloyd Llewellyn Collection (Fantagraphics, 1989). Clowes's first anthology, this paperback volume collects thirteen stories from the seven
Lloyd Llewellyn comics. •
Lout Rampage! (Fantagraphics, 1991). This paperback includes stories from
Eightball #1–6, along with strips Clowes created for alternative comics anthologies
Blab!,
Young Lust, and
Weirdo. •
The Manly World of Lloyd Llewellyn: A Golden Treasury of His Complete Works (Fantagraphics, 1994). Clowes's only hardcover anthology, this volume collects all of the Llewellyn stories from the seven
Lloyd Llewellyn comics, early
Eightball issues,
Love & Rockets #13, and elsewhere. •
Orgy Bound (Fantagraphics, 1996). This anthology collects stories from
Eightball #7–16, along with one-page strips from
Details magazine and
National Lampoon. •
Caricature (Fantagraphics, 1998). Subtitled "Nine Stories",
Caricature collects comics from
Eightball #13–18, along with "Green Eyeliner", the first comic to appear in
Esquires annual fiction issue, commissioned by editor
Dave Eggers. •
Twentieth Century Eightball (Fantagraphics, 2002). Focusing on short humor comics, this collection reprints some of the cartoonist's most well-known work, such as "Art School Confidential" and "Ugly Girls". It won a Harvey Award for Best Graphic Album of Previously Published Work in 2003. •
Ghost World: Special Edition (Fantagraphics, 2008). This hardcover collects the
Ghost World graphic novel and screenplay, along with other related material. •
The Complete Eightball, #1–#18 (Fantagraphics, 2015). This two-volume hardcover set reprints the first eighteen issues of Clowes's comic-book series.
Other appearances • "Justin M. Damiano" in
The Book of Other People (2008)
Movies •
Ghost World (2001) •
Art School Confidential (2006) •
Wilson (2017)
Miscellaneous •
Cracked – recurring strip "The Uggly Family" (1986–1989) •
Thee Headcoats – ''Heavens To Murgatroyd, Even! It's Thee Headcoats! (Already)'' cover (1990) • Santa Cruz Skateboards – Corey O'Brien full-color deck (1991 – reissued in 2006 in black and white) •
National Lampoon – series of one-page strips (1991) •
Urge Overkill –
The Supersonic Storybook cover (1991) •
The Supersuckers –
The Smoke of Hell cover (1992) •
Eightball postcard set (1993) • "Boredom" – a mock board game (1994) •
The John Peel Sub Pop Sessions cover (1994) •
Ghost World: A Screenplay (2001) • Little Enid Doll (2001–2002) – five versions • Enid & Rebecca Cloth Dolls (2002) •
Yo La Tengo –
Merry Christmas from Yo La Tengo cover (2002) • Enid Hi-Fashion Glamour Doll (2004) • Pogeybait Doll (2006) •
Art School Confidential: A Screenplay (2006) •
The New Yorker cover (May 24, 2010) • ''
Dan DeBono's Indy'' – created original cover and interviewed
Commercial work •
OK Soda == References ==