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Calvin & Hobbes' Bill Watterson Returned to Comics - In Secret!
The Escapist ^
| 7 June 2014
| Bob "MovieBob" Chipman
Posted on 06/07/2014 10:47:22 AM PDT by ShadowAce
The reclusive comics legend ghost-wrote/drew a fellow artist's strip for three days
Bill Watterson spent ten years writing and drawing every installment of Calvin & Hobbes, considered by many to be the single greatest comic strip in the history of the medium. During that period he experimented with daring new art techniques, negotiated unprecedented levels of creative independence from his publisher and famously resisted merchandising or "franchising" his characters; making him a hero to fellow comics professionals and something like a god to legions of devout fans.
Then, at the height of his fame, he walked away.
Since then, Calvin & Hobbes (the adventures of a young boy and his stuffed tiger, who is either secretly alive or imagined to be thus) has only grown in stature - it's hard to find a writer, artist or filmmaker of even vaugely-related material who doesn't cite it as a key influence. But Watterson has remained not only retired but practically invisible; refusing almost all interviews, seldom ever seen or even said to have been seen. In an age where some authors trade quips with fans daily on social media, he's essentially a ghost.
Until now.
Stephan Pastis, author of the comic strip Pearls Before Swine, has now revealed that - unknown to the rest of the world (but suspected by a few dogged comics fans) until today - a just-concluded three day Pearls "meta-story" in which a (supposed) 10 year-old fan swapped-out Pastis usual art with her own Watterson-esque whismical fare was actually executed by Bill Watterson Himself under the condition that the truth not be known until it was concluded.
The three strips now mark the first new newspaper comics work that Watterson has published in almost two decades, though he has contributed a handful of forewards to comics collections and posters made for charity and the documentary Stripped.
TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: comics
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To: ShadowAce
thanks for the post! big fans here.
21
posted on
06/07/2014 11:07:41 AM PDT
by
dadfly
To: dadfly
As are we in my household.
22
posted on
06/07/2014 11:08:29 AM PDT
by
ShadowAce
(Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
To: ShadowAce
23
posted on
06/07/2014 11:10:48 AM PDT
by
InvisibleChurch
(http://thegatwickview.tumblr.com/ http://thepurginglutheran.tumblr.com/)
To: Bon of Babble
click link in #3. It is an awesome homage to Calvin and Hobbs. Honest
24
posted on
06/07/2014 11:11:54 AM PDT
by
GeronL
(Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
To: ShadowAce
one thing though, we did have to ban our kids from reading and re-reading the compiliations after a while... :).
25
posted on
06/07/2014 11:12:57 AM PDT
by
dadfly
To: GeronL
Thanks for the link! Excellent tribute!!
26
posted on
06/07/2014 11:16:45 AM PDT
by
ConservingFreedom
(A goverrnment strong enough to impose your standards is strong enough to ban them.)
To: Norm Lenhart
This is still my all-time favorite.
27
posted on
06/07/2014 11:17:05 AM PDT
by
dfwgator
To: ShadowAce
28
posted on
06/07/2014 11:20:44 AM PDT
by
ConservingFreedom
(A goverrnment strong enough to impose your standards is strong enough to ban them.)
To: ConservingFreedom
29
posted on
06/07/2014 11:24:00 AM PDT
by
GeronL
(Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
To: vladimir998
I was assigned, and read, Canticle for Liebowitz.
Never knew the author did such a thing. The anecdote you relate makes me see him as an ultimate Richard. What a horrible hateful thing to do to people.
To: ShadowAce
“...considered by many to be the single greatest comic strip ...”
Well, there is this one some people have heard of called Peanuts.
Just saying.
To: GeronL
Thanks. That's long been one of my bookmarked FReep articles.
The snowmen are awesome.
My kids are too young to remember Calvin & Hobbs so I've bought all the books and read them with them at bedtime.
I've also got my dad's Herman compilations, he requested them when he was in the hospital before he died.
32
posted on
06/07/2014 11:27:49 AM PDT
by
Bon of Babble
(The dogs bark; the caravan moves on!)
To: ShadowAce
Thanks for posting this. We are huge fans of both strips.
33
posted on
06/07/2014 11:28:38 AM PDT
by
married21
( As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
To: ShadowAce
Calvin and Hobbes best comic street ever published. True genius.
To: ShadowAce
One more, my favorite one of all time:
35
posted on
06/07/2014 11:32:04 AM PDT
by
Bon of Babble
(The dogs bark; the caravan moves on!)
To: Bon of Babble
36
posted on
06/07/2014 11:33:17 AM PDT
by
GeronL
(Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
To: dfwgator
Definitely one of the best. I would have loved to have seen his take on this admin. But I guess BC was a product of it’s time. But oh what a time ;)
37
posted on
06/07/2014 11:37:46 AM PDT
by
Norm Lenhart
(How's that 'lesser evil' workin' out for ya?)
To: ShadowAce
I've always been a Mr. Boffo fan.
38
posted on
06/07/2014 11:41:08 AM PDT
by
RingerSIX
(My wife and I took an AIDS vaccine that they offer down at our Church.)
To: RingerSIX
39
posted on
06/07/2014 11:43:15 AM PDT
by
RingerSIX
(My wife and I took an AIDS vaccine that they offer down at our Church.)
To: ifinnegan
Walter Miller became a troubled man as he got older. He abandoned Christianity and embraced eastern philosophies. By his end he seemed to be very bitter if the letters he wrote are anything to go by. I think his mind was ravaged by depression. Tragic story.
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