Regular Show Books in Order
Part ofMax Brallier Books in OrderBrowse Max Brallier's Regular Show tie-in books in order, with summaries, series background, reading-age info, and guidance on which off-the-wall adventure to read first.
Last updated: December 19, 2025
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Publication Order
3 books
It's a Regular Life
by Max Brallier
2015
This holiday-themed Regular Show story spins a what-if tale where Mordecai and Rigby see how life might look if they made different choices. Ghostly visitors, alternate realities, and bad decisions keep things both funny and strangely heartfelt.
Best. Journal. Ever.
by Max Brallier
2014
Set in the world of Regular Show, this in-universe journal is stuffed with doodles, lists, notes, and space for readers to add their own chaos. Mordecai and Rigby’s voices guide you through the weirdest days at the park.
Benson's Big Book of Freak-Outs
by Max Brallier
2014
Benson documents the many times the park staff has nearly driven him over the edge in this Regular Show companion. Packed with stories, files, and dramatic commentary, it catalogs every meltdown, disaster, and near-firing in over-the-top style.
Series background & context
Max Brallier’s Regular Show books extend the anything-can-happen energy of the animated series onto the page. They spotlight Mordecai, Rigby, Benson, and the rest of the park crew as they bungle simple tasks, trigger ridiculous consequences, and somehow stumble back to normal by the end.
Some titles are framed as in-world journals or guides, packed with doodles, lists, and “official” records of the weirdest days on the job. Others play out like short story collections or episode-like adventures, where an everyday problem—cleaning, paperwork, the holidays—spirals into a supernatural or sci-fi disaster.
The humor leans hard on overreactions, surreal images, and the kind of arguments that start small and quickly become epic. Brallier’s tie-ins keep the character voices recognizable, so fans of the show can almost hear the dialogue as they read.
Because these books often include interactive elements like prompts, spaces to write, and faux documents, they are especially fun for readers who enjoy flipping around and dipping in and out rather than reading straight through. They feel like artifacts from the world of Regular Show more than traditional novels.
They are best suited for older kids and young teens who already like the cartoon’s brand of absurd, slightly chaotic comedy. Starting with a general companion like Best. Journal. Ever. is an easy way to step into the printed side of the park.
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