Garfield Comic Strips book cover

The Garfield Comic Strips Series in Order

Garfield Comic Strips Books in Order

79 books
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About the Garfield Comic Strips series

Series Premise

The core premise of the Garfield comic strips—and thus the compilation books—revolves around the daily life of Garfield, an overweight, orange tabby cat born in an Italian restaurant kitchen, who lives a life of leisure, sarcasm, and endless eating in the suburban home of his hapless owner Jon Arbuckle and Jon's overly enthusiastic dog Odie. Through three-to-four-panel daily strips and larger Sunday installments, Davis explores universal themes like hating Mondays, battling diets, outsmarting (or tormenting) others, and finding joy in simple pleasures like napping, watching TV, and consuming massive amounts of food, all delivered with Garfield's dry, cynical narration via thought bubbles.

The series can be read in any particular order, as the compilation books are episodic collections of standalone comic strips with no continuous storyline, overarching plot, or character development that requires sequence. Each volume reprints a chronological chunk of the newspaper run, but humor relies on recurring gags, character quirks, and situational comedy rather than progression; readers can pick up any book—even jumping between early black-and-white classics and later color editions—without missing context or spoilers.

Main Characters

The series revolves around a small, iconic trio of main characters whose personalities drive every gag. Garfield, the titular orange tabby cat, is lazy, overweight, sarcastic, and endlessly hungry—communicating through thought bubbles with biting commentary, a hatred for Mondays and exercise, and an obsessive love for lasagna and naps; he's self-centered yet oddly endearing in his honesty about flaws. Jon Arbuckle, Garfield's tall, awkward, bespectacled owner, is the well-meaning straight man—kind, optimistic, perpetually single, and often the butt of Garfield's jokes as he tries (and fails) to diet, date, or maintain order in the house. Odie, the yellow beagle with floppy ears and a perpetual grin, is the cheerful, dim-witted foil—energetic, drooling, and blissfully unaware, frequently kicked off tables or tormented by Garfield in classic slapstick fashion. Recurring minor characters add flavor: Nermal (the world's cutest kitten, whom Garfield resents), Pooky (Garfield's teddy bear), Liz (Jon's eventual veterinarian girlfriend), and occasional guests like spiders or mail carriers, but the core dynamic remains the three-household ensemble.

Setting

The setting is a simple, timeless suburban American household—primarily the interior of Jon Arbuckle's modest home, with occasional forays into the backyard, veterinarian's office, or neighborhood spots. The environment is deliberately generic and relatable: living room couches for napping, kitchen tables laden with food (especially lasagna pans), television sets for Garfield's viewing pleasure, and a basic backyard where Odie plays and Garfield schemes. No specific city or era is emphasized; the world feels eternally contemporary yet ageless, focusing on domestic interiors and everyday objects rather than elaborate backdrops. This minimalism keeps the focus squarely on character interactions and visual humor, allowing the strips to remain fresh and universally accessible across decades.

Tone & Themes

The tone is lighthearted, sarcastic, and consistently humorous, with a dry wit that pokes fun at everyday annoyances, human (and feline) weaknesses, and the absurdities of domestic life. Garfield's cynicism and one-liners provide sharp, relatable commentary—often delivered with deadpan delivery—while avoiding mean-spiritedness; the humor is gentle enough for all ages yet clever enough for adults to appreciate the irony. There's no deep drama or moralizing; instead, the strips deliver quick, satisfying laughs through exaggeration, repetition of classic motifs (Monday hatred, diet failures, Odie-bashing), and Garfield's unapologetic self-indulgence. The overall feel is comforting and escapist—like a reliable daily chuckle that doesn't demand emotional investment but rewards familiarity with recurring punchlines and visual gags.

The Garfield Comic Strips series by Jim Davis endures as a cornerstone of American humor, distilling universal annoyances and indulgences into timeless, bite-sized laughs that have entertained generations through newspapers and collected volumes alike. With Garfield's unfiltered sarcasm, Jon's hapless charm, and Odie's innocent energy, the books offer a reliable source of comfort reading—perfect for quick smiles, nostalgic revisits, or sharing with kids who discover the same delight in a cat who says what we all sometimes think. It's a gentle reminder that life's absurdities—Monday blues, diet struggles, endless snacking—are funnier when viewed through the eyes of a fat, orange feline who refuses to apologize for being exactly who he is. In a world of constant change, these compilations preserve a simple, satisfying truth: sometimes the best entertainment comes from a lazy cat on a couch, plotting his next meal.

FAQ

How many books are in the Garfield Comic Strips series?

79 books

When will the next book in the series be released?

The next book in the Garfield Comic Strips series, Garfield Half-Baked, will be published in Jun-2026.

When was the most recent book released?

Garfield Crash Diet was published in December 2025.

What was the first book in the series?

The first book in the series is Garfield At Large, published in February 1980.

What genre is the Garfield Comic Strips series?

The series primarily falls into the Graphic Novel genre.

What is the Garfield Comic Strips series about?

The core premise of the Garfield comic strips—and thus the compilation books—revolves around the daily life of Garfield, an overweight, orange tabby cat born in an Italian restaurant kitchen, who lives a life of leisure, sarcasm, and endless eating in the suburban home of his hapless owner Jon Arbuckle and Jon's overly enthusiastic dog Odie. Through three-to-four-panel daily strips and larger Sunday installments, Davis explores universal themes like hating Mondays, battling diets, outsmarting (or tormenting) others, and finding joy in simple pleasures like napping, watching TV, and consuming massive amounts of food, all delivered with Garfield's dry, cynical narration via thought bubbles. The series can be read in any particular order, as the compilation books are episodic collections of standalone comic strips with no continuous storyline, overarching plot, or character development that requires sequence. Each volume reprints a chronological chunk of the newspaper run, but humor relies on recurring gags, character quirks, and situational comedy rather than progression; readers can pick up any book—even jumping between early black-and-white classics and later color editions—without missing context or spoilers.

Is the Garfield Comic Strips series finished?

The series is ongoing, with the next book currently scheduled.