Looking for Calvin and Hobbes: The Unconventional Story of Bill Watterson and His Revolutionary Comic Strip
by:
Nevin Martell (author)
For ten years, Calvin and Hobbes was one the world's most beloved comic strips. And then, on the last day of 1995, the strip ended. Its mercurial and reclusive creator, Bill Watterson, not only finished the strip but withdrew entirely from public life. In Looking for Calvin and Hobbes, Nevin...
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For ten years, Calvin and Hobbes was one the world's most beloved comic strips. And then, on the last day of 1995, the strip ended. Its mercurial and reclusive creator, Bill Watterson, not only finished the strip but withdrew entirely from public life. In Looking for Calvin and Hobbes, Nevin Martell sets out on a very personal odyssey to understand the life and career of the intensely private man behind Calvin and Hobbes. Martell talks to a wide range of artists and writers (including Dave Barry, Harvey Pekar, and Brad Bird) as well as some of Watterson's closest friends and professional colleagues, and along the way reflects upon the nature of his own fandom and on the extraordinary legacy that Watterson left behind. This is as close as we're ever likely to get to one of America's most ingenious and intriguing figures - and it's the fascinating story of an intrepid author's search for him, too.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780826429841 (082642984X)
Publish date: October 5th 2009
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages no: 247
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Humor,
Biography,
Writing,
History,
Journalism,
Art,
Culture,
Sequential Art,
Graphic Novels,
Comics,
Pop Culture,
Comic Strips
Nevin Martell, like just about everyone who ever read him, is a Calvin and Hobbes fan -- what's more, he discovered the strip at the right age and was able to appreciate it as only a child can -- without being self-conscious about reading a comic strip and with devotion. Years later, when trying to ...
I was disappointed in this book. It doesn't give any real insight into Bill Watterson and instead reads more like a biography, interspersed with interviews and descriptions of Calvin & Hobbes strips to demonstrate certain points. The book is noticeably lacking in any reproductions of Watterson's wo...