Daniel Clowes was born on April 14, 1961, in Chicago, Illinois. He is best known for his solo anthology series *Eightball*, which he launched in 1989. That series became a showcase for his evolving style, blending deadpan satire, psychological unease, and meticulous draftsmanship. Most of his major graphic novels first appeared as serialized chapters in *Eightball*, including *Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron* (1993), *Ghost World* (1997), *David Boring* (2000), and *Patience* (2016). His illustrations have also appeared in *The New Yorker*, *Newsweek*, *Vogue*, and *The Village Voice*.
#$@&!: The Official Lloyd Llewellyn Collection #[nn] (1989)
Clowes entered comics in the early 1980s, drawing the alternative series *Lloyd Llewellyn* before launching *Eightball*. His work often explores loneliness, pop culture obsession, and the strangeness of everyday life. He collaborated with filmmaker Terry Zwigoff to adapt *Ghost World* into a 2001 film and later turned another *Eightball* story into the 2006 film *Art School Confidential*. Both films earned critical attention, and the *Ghost World* screenplay received an Academy Award nomination.
Young Lust #7 (1990)
Over his career, Clowes has won a PEN Award for Outstanding Work in Graphic Literature and more than a dozen Harvey and Eisner Awards. He continues to write and draw, with credits on 145 issues from 1982 to 2024, including *The New York Times Magazine* and the graphic novel *Wilson*. His influence on independent comics and graphic storytelling remains substantial.