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Nate Wright: The comic strip's main character.Nate is a C-grade student in sixth grade and 11-and-a-half years old, a talented cartoonist, drummer, and chess player. He also believes he is a natural prankster, as he attempts funny and difficult pranks on the second to last day of school (known in the series as "Prank Day").
Big Nate Stays Classy: June 2, 2020 A treasury collection containing the entirety of Big Nate: From the Top and Big Nate: Out Loud in one book. ISBN 978-1-5248-6176-6: Andrews McMeel Publishing: Big Nate: The Gerbil Ate My Homework: September 1, 2020 Covers strips from February 29, 2016 to September 4, 2016. ISBN 978-1-5248-6065-3: Andrews ...
Luke Warm, Private Eye is Nate's comic strip about a detective he made up. Luke is clumsy and inefficient. His comic first appeared in Big Nate: Flips Out. The comic was later destroyed because when Nate was hypnotized, he could not make it neat enough. Everlovin' Ellen is an early comic about Ellen's life as a comedic, exaggerated soap opera.
Abe Martin (comic strip) Abie the Agent; Achille Talon; Adam@home; The Addams Family; Addie and Hermy; Agent 212; Alec the Great; Alex (comic strip) Alphonse and Gaston; An Altar Boy Named Speck; The Ambassador (comic strip) Amy (comic strip) And Her Name Was Maud; Andy Capp; The Angriest Dog in the World; Animal Crackers (comic strip ...
Peirce is the creator of the comic strip Big Nate. The strip debuted in 1991 in 135 newspapers, and currently has a client list of over 400 newspapers worldwide. Big Nate is also available online at gocomics.com, where in 2019 it was the site's second most-viewed feature, ranking behind only Calvin & Hobbes. The popular children's website ...
Nate Fakes is back with a delicious collection of comics, this time focusing on food. Known for his funny one-panel strips, Nate captures everyday moments with clever humor. His food-related ...
Image credits: nate_fakes. We asked Nate if there’s a particular comic strip he feels a personal connection to. The artist shared that most of his gag comics resonate with him in one way or another.
Image credits: drawerofdrawings Lastly, D.C. Stuelpner shared with us the most rewarding aspects of being a comic artist: “A lot of my work-for-hire art jobs never see the light of day.