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Bill Watterson talks: Calvin and Hobbes
One of my favorite cartoonists is Bill Waterson, of Calvin and Hobbes fame. (The other is Torplexed, of course). As you may know, Bill did C&H for 10 years then withdrew from public view. Almost no interviews since he retired. Now he has provided a really lengthy interview in a new book, Exploring Calvin & Hobbes
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Wow, there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. I miss his comics, along with Bloom County.
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He lives (or lived) only a few (dozen) minutes from me.
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WOW who would have known that..have several albums with these two..
Love these two Markus |
Calvin & Hobbes > Peanuts
That's just me... :haha: |
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For Christmas a few years back, my mother gave me the three volume complete collection. I'm still impressed the Watterson managed to avoid the push to turn his comic strip into a huge merchandise franchise. |
I have The Complete Calvin & Hobbes its a four volume set. Pretty nice printed on high quality paper. Its pretty short on text though it has a pretty good introduction by Watterson.
I actually like that he just explains his history(in the collection intro) and how he developed C&H and how the two represent parts of his own personality. I like that it did not break down each strip. To me the great thing about C&H is how the reader takes the individual strip. EDIT: I always get annoyed by those stickers you see with the kid weeing on an automakers emblem. If you recall at one time the kid was an obvious rip off of Calvin(they changed him at some point to look un Calvin I wonder if he sued over the likeness or not What I'm talking about (if you have one may your tires explode) https://triviahappy.com/articles/the...g-calvin-decal |
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I'm with you on those stickers. |
I think what I find most admirable about Bill Watterson of Calvin & Hobbs, along with Berkeley Breathed of Bloom County and Gary Larson of The Far Side is that they all had the integrity to retire their strips at or near the height of their popularity. There are too many cartoonists who just phone it in year after year, or have turned the actual work over to someone else.
Reading those tired worn-out comic strips is sort of the pen and ink equivalent of Late Night with David Letterman. It's still the same guy, but the passion and originality are long gone. |
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Yes one in the same I guess they split it into four books for the paperback edtion makes sense a quality paperback can only be so large before the integrity of the binding is compromised. They are split into years(1st book Nov 85 to Nov 87) so I'm guessing in the hard back they divide the ten years into three sections rather than four. I really enjoy how they just went right in order like that very well done. @torplexed in the collection introduction he says exactly what you posted. He wanted to maintain the quality so he retired the strip when he did. |
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This. |
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Well, "Weighty Brass", at least. Somewhere, I've still got the album that came with the book. If only I could find a record player. |
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Sometimes it's just better to slip on the one ring and disappear.:salute:
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My Great uncle: Charles Dahl Pearson
I never met this member of the clan except as an infant ( that I recall:hmmm: ) 1913-1991 but famously did cartoons for Yank, Colliers, and Life and the wacko humor seems to run in the family...:smug: http://strippersguide.blogspot.com/2013_12_29_archive.htmlhttp://4.bp.blogspot.com/-LWZ-PvTQD7...+This+Week.jpghttp://books.google.com/books?id=U1MEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA12&source=gbs_toc_r&cad =2#v=onepage&q&f=false
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