
Let Fanta be your Santa this year! We’ve got hundreds of incredible titles to choose from, but we’ve narrowed it down to our top gift picks of 2025. We’ve got something for everyone on your list: the best (no exaggeration) calendar you’ve ever seen, the cutest (still no hyperbole) comic strip of all time, a satirical comedy that manages to capture our current oligarchal era with mid-century aesthetics, and so much more!

Emil Ferris‘s exhilarating cast of characters come to life in this landmark work of graphic fiction that has captivated readers of all ages around the world with its story of love, friendship, and empowerment. And now, My Favorite Thing Is Monsters is available in one complete package for the first time!

Ten years in the making (and torn from the pages of the legendary Love and Rockets), Jaime Hernandez‘s newest graphic novel skillfully weaves two generations of his beloved characters into a satisfying story of love—both young and middle-aged.

Jim Woodring’s dream-like visions and masterful skill translate to medium after medium, and in this 12-month calendar, he brings his otherworldly images from his hand and brain to your walls–each is rich and strange enough to reward a month’s repeated viewing!

Restored and remastered in warm, vibrant full color, Peanuts Every Sunday: 1952-1955 compiles the first four years of the strip. This collection offers a fascinating peek at Schulz‘s creative process, as iconic characters such as Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Schroeder, Linus, and Lucy quickly evolve from their initial renderings to the elegant stylizations we’ve all come to know and love.

Our Peanuts All Year-Round Mini Collection features over 300 pages of comic adventures in five easy to read square format mini volumes inside a beautiful little slipcase. A perfect celebration for Peanuts fans of all ages!

Classic sports-themed strips from the most beloved newspaper comic of all time! Baseball, football, ice hockey and more, all from the pen of Charles M. Schulz, in a handsome box set of four hardcover compilations.

“Slightly-grungy Wes Anderson.” — Comics Beat
This brilliant YA graphic novel is a love letter to family and all of the messy complexities they come with, from the acclaimed author of Ephemera: A Memoir.

Eisner Award winner Moa Romanova returns with an autobiographical graphic novel about accompanying her rock star bestie on a U.S. tour, fueled only by alcohol, drugs and sex.

In this period drama set in the 16th-century Netherlands, the unlikely pair of a proper Dutchwoman and her husband’s slave mistress collaborate on a scientific discovery that could free them from the bounds of patriarchal society. The print debut of Korean manga artist Yudori is a richly imagined, erotic, feminist graphic novel.

A rich collection/scrapbook of over two dozen short stories, plus diary entries, photos, and other images fueled by a propensity to understand the way we relate to each other, and told with a visual and lyrical beauty — and raw emotion — that collectively reaffirms the power of art.

“The combination of Kago’s precise, expressive, and kinetic line work with his wacky storytelling is at turns engrossing and repulsive. Mature fans of unconventional manga will appreciate the surreal spiral of body horror, tragicomedy, and dark humor.” — Publishers Weekly
Brain Damage collects four new short manga stories, a tantalizing blend of the hilarious and the macabre.

“What happens when a navel-gazing egocentric corporate creative decides to improve upon mankind’s best friend? Horrors beyond comprehension of course! Beneath Dogtangle‘s beautiful stylized abstraction (I’m a big fan) is a blunt force absurdist critique of the tech-overlords and business elites remaking the world around us without our consent. I love this book!” — Lale Westvind