Take the time to visit my new site: reemst.com - about web
The Complete Calvin and Hobbes: A New Calvin and Hobbes Collection!

Great news!
The Complete Calvin and Hobbes is published October 4, 2005, containing 3 large hard-cover albums featuring all Calvin and Hobbes cartoons that ever appeared in syndication.
The list price is $150, but it's now
available for only $99.00!
The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
New print fully available again!
Welcome, you've come to the place where Calvin and Hobbes® once were honored with a great tribute and fan-site, "Calvin and Hobbes at Martijn's". Unfortunately the copyright owners didn't agree with that and made me shutdown the entire site. The biggest success of the site was the Calvin and Hobbes Strip Search, which received thousands of visitors every single day.
I want to thank for all your visits and nice comments. I've received hundreds of emails because of this shutdown; thanks for all the nice comments! It would take way too much time to reply to all of them, so don't think I don't read them. I've read every single one of them and appreciate your comments.
If you want, you can send me an email as well.
Martijn
For completeness, here's a list of all available Calvin and Hobbes® books, with direct links to buy them.
Calvin and Hobbes
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Something Under the Bed is Drooling
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The Essential Calvin and Hobbes: A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury
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Yukon Ho!
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The Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book: A Collection of Sunday Calvin and Hobbes Cartoons
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Weirdos From Another Planet!
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The Authoritative Calvin and Hobbes: A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury
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The Revenge of the Baby-Sat
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Scientific Progress Goes "Boink"
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Attack of the Deranged Mutant Killer Monster Snow Goons
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The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes
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The Days are Just Packed
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Homicidal Psycho Jungle Cat
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The Calvin and Hobbes Tenth Anniversary Book
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There's Treasure Everywhere
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It's A Magical World
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Calvin and Hobbes: Sunday Pages 1985-1995
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The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
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If you want to have all strips, but not all books (i.e. the least amount of books, but have every single strip) then you need to buy this list of books:
Of course you could also buy "The Complete Calvin and Hobbes" listed above!
Calvin and Hobbes is copyright © Bill Watterson and Universal Press Syndicate. Calvin and Hobbes are registered trademarks of Bill Watterson and Universal Press Syndicate.
An interview from "Honk" magazine #2, January 1987, with Bill Watterson,
the creator of Calvin and Hobbes on cartooning, syndicates,
Garfield, Charles Schulz, and editors.
Thanks a lot to Alex from Germany for sending me additional
info regarding this interview, and sending the coverscan displayed on the
right of this page. Click the image to view the large version.
When Calvin and Hobbes hit the nations funny pages in late 1985, it
took everybody by surprise. A literate comic strip? By a guy who can draw?
About a kid who acts like a real kid? And it's funny? And it's from a major
syndicate!? The cognoscenti of the graphic narrative form thought they'd died
and gone to comic strip heaven.
But its true. Against heavy odds, one man with a lot of determination and a
fierce sense of his craft may have single-handedly given the strips a new
lease on their artistic life. It's been a struggle, but Bill Watterson, like
his creation, is the real thing at last.
Andrew Christie: Let's start with the basics: when, where, why, and
how?
Bill Watterson: Well, I don't know how far back you want to go; I've
been interested in cartooning all my life. I read the comics as a kid, and I
did cartoons for high school publications -- the newspaper and yearbook and so
on. In college, I got interested in political cartooning and did political
cartoons every week for four years at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, and
majored in political science there.
Christie: All in Ohio?
Watterson: Yes. I grew up in Chagrin Falls, Ohio.
Christie: What kind of time frame are we talking about?
Watterson: I was born in 1958; we moved to Chagrin when I was 6, so
from the first grade on, really. My whole childhood was in Chagrin Falls.
Right after I graduated from Kenyon, I was offered a job at the Cincinnati
Post as their editorial cartoonist in a trial six month arrangement. The
agreement was that they could fire me or I could quit with no questions asked
if things didn't work out during the first few months. Sure enough, things
didn't work out, and they fired me, no questions asked.
Christie: What was the problem?
Watterson: To this day, I'm not completely sure. My guess is that the
editor wanted his own Jeff MacNelly (a Pulitzer winner at 24), and I didn't
live up to his expectations. My Cincinnati days were pretty Kafkaesque. I had
lived there all of two weeks, and the editor insisted that most of my work be
about local, as opposed to national, issues. Cincinnati has a weird,
three-party, city manager-government, and by the time I figured it out, I was
standing in the unemployment lines. I didn't hit the ground running.
Cincinnati at that time was also beginning to realize it had major cartooning
talent in Jim Borgman, at the city's other paper, and I didn't benefit from
the comparison.
Christie: I'm not familiar...
Watterson: He's syndicated through King Features, and had been for a
couple years by the time I arrived in Cincinnati. This is an odd story.
Borgman graduated from Kenyon Collage the year before I went there, and it was
his example that inspired me to pursue political cartooning. He had drawn
cartoons at Kenyon, and landed his job at the Cincinnati Enquirer right
after graduation. His footsteps seemed like good ones to follow, so I
cultivated an interest in politics, and Borgman helped me a lot in learning
how to construct an editorial cartoon. Neither of us dreamed I'd end up in the
same town on the opposite paper. I don't know to what extent the comparison
played a role in my editor's not liking my work, but I was very intimidated by
working on a major city paper and I didn't feel free to experiment, really, or
to travel down my own path. I very early caught on that the editor had
something specific in mind that he was looking for, and I tried to accommodate
him in order to get published. His idea was that he was going to publish only
my very best work so that I wouldn't embarress the newspaper while I learned
the ropes. As sound as that idea may be from the management standpoint, it was
disastrous for me because I was only getting a couple cartoons a week printed.
I would turn out rough idea after rough idea, and he would veto eighty percent
of them. As a result I lost all my self-confidence, and his intervention was
really unhealthy, i think, as far as letting me experiment and make mistakes,
and become a stronger cartoonist for it. Obviously, if he wanted a more
experienced cartoonist, he shouldn't have hired a kid just out of college. I
pretty much prostituted myself for six months but I couldn't please him, so he
sent me packing.
Christie: Well, it was mercifully brief, then.
Watterson: Yeah, in a way it was; and actually, I think the experience
-- now, in hindsight -- was probably a good thing. It forced me to consider
how interested I was in political cartooning. After I was fired, I applied to
other papers but political cartooning, like all cartooning, is a very tough
field to break into. Newspapers are very reluctant to hire their own
cartoonists when they can get Oliphant or MacNelly through syndication for a
twentieth of the price.
So I wasn't having any luck getting accepted anyway and it forced me to
re-examine what it was that I really wanted to do. In my experience in
political cartooning, I was never one of those people who read the headlines
and foams at the mouth with rabid opinion that I've just got to get down on
paper. I'm interested in the issues but...I don't know...I guess I just don't
have the killer instinct that I think makes a great political cartoonist. I'd
always enjoyed the comics more, and felt that as long as I was unemployed it
would be a good chance to pursue that and see what response I could get from a
syndicate, as I didn't have anything to lose at that point. So I drew up a
comic strip -- this was in 1980 -- and sent it off and got rejected. I
continued that for five years with different comic strip examples 'til finally
Calvin and Hobbes came together. But it's been a long road.
Christie: Were you submitting different strips to different syndicates,
or did you go after one syndicate?
Watterson: I didn't know a lot then -- and don't know a lot now -- as
to what the best way to do this is, but my procedure was I would draw up the
submission -- a month's worth of strips, made to look as professional as I
could, and send copies to the five major syndicates, and then just sit around
and wait for their rejection letters. I would then try to see if I could second
guess them or imagine what they were looking for that I could put in my next
say, I'm not convinced that that's the best way to go about it. Trying to
please the syndicates was pretty much the same as what I had ended up doing at
the Cincinnati Post, and I don't think that's the way to draw your best
material. You should stick with what you enjoy, what you find funny -- that's
the humor that will be the strongest, and that will transmit itself. Rather
then trying to find out what the latest trend is, you should draw what is
personally interesting.
Christie: So after five years you just quit doing what you'd been doing
and did what you wanted to do?
Watterson: It was a slow process, and actually what happened is another
odd coincidence. One of the strips I'd sent had Calvin and Hobbes as minor
characters. Calvin was the little brother of the strip's main character, and
Hobbes was like he is now, a stuffed tiger that came to life in Calvin's
imagination. One of the syndicates suggested that these two characters were the
strongest and why didn't I develop a strip around them? I had thought they were
the funniest characters myself, but I was unsure as to whether they could hold
their own strip. I was afraid that maybe the key to their wackiness was the
contrast between them and the more normal characters in the rest of the strip.
I wasn't sure Calvin and Hobbes would be able to maintain that intensity on
their own. But I tried it, and almost immediately it clicked in my mind; it
became much easier to write material. Their personalities expanded easily, and
that takes a good 75 percent of the work out of it. If you have the
personalities down, you understand them and identify with them; you can stick
them in any situation and have a pretty good idea of how they're going to
respond. Then it's just a matter of sanding and polishing up the jokes. But if
you've got more ambiguous characters or stock stereotypes, the plastic comes
through and they don't work as well. These two characters clicked for me almost
immediately and I feel very comfortable working with them. That syndicate,
oddly enough, declined my strip, so I started sending it around. Universal
expressed an interest in it and wanted to see more work, so I drew another
month's worth of art, sent that to them, and they decided to take it.
Christie:That's rather ironic: The syndicate that suggested you bring
out those two characters rejected the strip?
Watterson: Yeah.
Christie: Who was this?
Watterson: Well, if you want to rub their noses in it, it was United
Features. I was sort of mystified when they rejected the strip. They had given
me a development contract, which meant I was to work exclusively with them and
rather than completing everything on my own and turning it in to them and
having it rejected or accepted, I was working much more directly with the
syndicate, turning in smaller batches much more frequently, and getting
comments on them. The idea was that they would help me develop the strip and
then, assuming that they liked it, it would flow into a normal contract for
syndication. I'm not sure exactly what happened; I gather that the sales staff
didn't have much enthusiasm for it, I don't know--but apparently they couldn't
convince enough people there in high places.
Christie: I would guess, and I don't know if you share this opinion, but
there is probably considerable resistance to a strip that doesn't have a lot of
immediate, apparent marketing potential.
Watterson: I think United really looks for the marketing more than some
of the other syndicates, and they saw Hobbes as having marketing potential, so
I don't think that was it. I was later offered the chance to incorporate
Robotman into my strip. There they had envisioned a character as a product--toy
lines, television show, everything--and they wanted a strip written around the
character. They thought that maybe I could stick it in my strip, working with
Calvin's imagination or something. They didn't really care too how much I did
it, just so long as the character remained intact and would be a very major
character...And I turned them down. It really went against my idea of what a
comic strip should be.
I'm not interested in slamming United Features here. Keep in mind that at the
time, it was the only syndicate that had expressed any interest in my work. I
remain grateful for their early attention. But there's a professional issue
here. They told me that if I was to insert Robotman into my strip, they would
reconsider it, and because the licensing was already in production, my strip
would stand a better chance of being accepted. Not knowing if Calvin and
Hobbes would ever go anywhere, it was difficult to turn down another chance
at syndication. But I really recoiled at the idea of drawing somebody else's
character. It's cartooning by committee, and I have a moral problem with that.
It's not art then.
Christie: I've never heard of anything like that before.
Watterson: Yea, well, I think it's really a crass way to go about it--the
Saturday morning cartoons do that now, where they develop the toy and then draw
the cartoon around it, and the result is the cartoon is a commercial for the
toy and the toy is a commercial for the cartoon. The same thing's happening now
in comic strips; it's just another way to get the competitive edge. You
saturate all the different markets and allow each other to advertise the other,
and it's the best of all possible worlds. You can see the financial incentive
to work that way. I just think it's to the detriment of integrity in comic
strip art.
Christie: It may be good business but it would be unfortunate to see that
catch on.
Watterson: Yeah, I don't have a lot of respect for that.
Christie: Well, enough of this depressing stuff; let's talk about
Calvin and Hobbes.
Watterson: Okay.
Christie: Is there a Calvin?
Watterson: A real one? No.
Christie: Is he in some way autobiographical?
Watterson: Not really. Hobbes might be a little closer to me in terms of
personality, with Calvin being more energetic, brash, always looking for life
on the edge. He lives entirely in the present, and whatever he can do to make
that moment more exciting he'll just let fly...and I'm really not like that at
all.
Christie: You manage a lot of complex shifts between fantasy and
reality; between Hobbes as a stuffed tiger and a real-life playmate. He's
frequently involved in what is apparently the real world, doing real things
together with Calvin that he couldn't possibly be doing. Do you think that kind
of thing out in advance or does it just come to you when the gag calls for
it?
Watterson: Could you name something specifically? I'm not sure I
follow.
Christie: Well, when they're driving down the mountain in their wagon
and flying all over the place. You think, after reading the first few strips,
that you've got the idea; that this is a stuffed tiger and when he and Calvin
are alone he becomes real--to Calvin--but then, obviously, when they're doing
things like that in the real world, he has to be more than fantasy.
Watterson: Yeah, it's a strange metamorphosis. I hate to subject it to
too much analysis, but one thing I have fun with is the rarity of things being
shown from an adult's perspective. When Hobbes is a stuffed toy in one panel
and alive in the next, I'm juxtaposing the "grown-up" version of reality with
Calvin's version, and inviting the reader to decide which is truer. Most of the
time, the strip is drawn simply from Calvin's perspective, and Hobbes is as
real as anyone. So when Calvin is careening down the hillside, I don't feel
compelled to insert reminders that Hobbes is a stuffed toy. I try to get the
reader completely swept up into Calvin's world by ignoring adult perspective.
Hobbes, therefore, isn't just a cute gimmick. I'm not making the strip revolve
around the transformation. The viewpoint of the strip fluctuates, and this
allows Hobbes to be a "real" character.
Christie: It has a lunatic internal consistency.
Watterson: Yeah, I guess that's the best way of putting it.
Christie: Are you familiar with Krazy Kat?
Watterson: Yes! I love it; I wish I thought that that kind of work were
possible today.
Christie: Well, it sounds like it is. George Herriman didn't need to
justify his reality, either.
Watterson: Yeah, I agree on that point. I mean the bizarre dialect, the
constantly changing backgrounds...In the first place, I don't know who would
put enough energy into their work anymore to do something like that; secondly,
and probably more importantly, comic strips are being printed at such a
ridiculous size that elimination of dialogue and linework is almost a necessity
and you just can't get that kind of depth. I think of Pogo, another
strip that had tremendous dialogue and fantastic backgrounds...Those strips
were just complete worlds that the reader would be sucked into. For a few
moments a day we could live in Coconino County; the whole thing was entirely
there. The dialogue was part of it, the backgrounds were part of it, the
characters were off-beat...and you need a little space and time to develop that
sort of thing. I know for a fact that nobody's doing it now and I don't know
that anybody will do it. Garry Trudeau is the only cartoonist with the clout to
get his strip published large enough to accomodate extended dialogue. It's a
shame.
Christie: Well, let's talk about your peers for a bit.
Watterson: You're gonna get me in trouble.
Christie: No, no; you can say anything you want.
Watterson: Yeah, that's what's going to get me into trouble.
Christie: What about Gary Larson?
Watterson: I really like the lunacy of The Far Side. It's a
one-panel strip so it's a slightly different animal than a four-panel strip
like mine. I don't really compare one-panel strips to four-panels strips
because there are different opportunities with each. Larson's working with one
picture and a handful of words, and given that, I think he's one of the most
inventive guys in comics. The four-panel strip has more potential for storyline
and character involvement than just a single panel. But I do enjoy his stuff a
lot.
Christie: What about Jim Davis?
Watterson: Uh...Garfield is...(long pause)...consistent.
Christie: Ooo-kay...
Watterson: U.S. Acres I think is an abomination.
Christie: Never seen it.
Watterson: Lucky you. Jim Davis has his factory in Indiana cranking out
this strip about a pig on a farm. I find it an insult to the intelligence,
though it's very successful.
Christie: Most insults to the intelligence are. Well, how about the old
school, are they holding up their end at all? Johnny Hart? Charles Schulz...?
Watterson: That's an interesting question. I have a tremendous amount of
respect for Peanuts. Every now and then I hear that Peanuts isn't
as funny as it was or it's gotten old or something like that. I think what's
really happened is that Schulz, in Peanuts, changed the entire face of
comic strips, and everybody has now caught up to him. I don't think he's five
years ahead of everybody else like he used to be, so that's taken some of the
edge off it. I think it's still a wonderful strip in terms of solid
construction, character development, the fantasy element...Things that we now
take for granted--reading the thoughts of an animal for example--there's not a
cartoonist who's done anything since 1960 who doesn't owe Schulz a tremendous
debt.
Johnny Hart; I admire the simplicity, the way he's gotten that strip down to
the bare essentials; there's nothing extraneous in the drawing, and the humor
is very spartan. It doesn't grab me, though, because I look for real
involvement with characters, and the characters in B.C> are pretty much
interchangeable; they're props for humor. I think his style of humor is mostly
in words, not in the characters. I look to strips like Peanuts, where
you're really involved with the characters, you feel that you know them. I
guess that's why I don't enjoy B.C. quite as much. It's better than
many, though.
Christie: A lot of golf jokes.
Watterson: Yeah, yeah. I don't know, it's hard to knock a strip that
bangs out a solid joke every day, but I'd like to think more comic strips
could be pushing the boundaries. A lot of comic characters are flat and
predictable, and a lot of jokes are no more than stupid puns. For most readers,
sure, that passes the mustard, but it certainly doesn't take full advantage of
a remarkably versatile medium. I'd like to see cartoonists measuring their work
by higher standards than how many papers their strips are in and how much money
they make. With four panels, the cartoonist has the opportunity to develop
characters and storylines. It can be like writing a novel in daily
installments. That's where the potential of the medium is, and I see very few
cartoonists taking advantage of it. Peanuts does it. Bloom County,
Doonesbury, and For Better Or For Worse and others, and that's more
or less it. These strips have heart, and an involvement with the characters, so
that they're more than just props to relate a gag. We read about them and sort
of through the life with them. I think that's taking the strip to a deeper and
more significant level. The strips I admire go farther than a gag a day, and
take us into a special world.
Christie: Would it be the accurate to call Charles Schulz the major
influence on you?
Watterson: Oh yeah. As a child, especially, Peanuts and
Pogo were my two biggest influences.
Christie: Did you ever see any of Percy Crosby's Skippy?
Watterson: No, never did.
Christie: There are some interesting similarities.
Watterson: I've had a couple of people write in comparing my work to
Barnaby by Crockett Johnson, and that's another strip I've never seen.
Or rather, with both of those I think I've seen one or two strips in
anthologies, but I've never seen the work at any length.
Christie: I believe Dover is reprinting two books worth of
Barnaby in the next few months. That would be worth your picking up.
Also Harold and the Magic Crayon.
Watterson: I remember that. The drawings don't interest me a great deal,
but I should look it up just to see what the fuss is about.
Christie: Do you see yourself doing this forever?
Watterson: I'd like to, yeah, if the market will bear it.
Christie: Calvin and Hobbes exclusively?
Watterson: Yeah, I'm really enjoying the work. I feel that the
characters have a lot of potential. I'd like to have the opportunity to draw
this strip for years and see where it goes. It's sort of a scary thing now to
imagine; these cartoonists who've been drawing a strip for twenty years. I
can't imagine coming up with that much material. If I just take it day by day,
though, it's a lot of fun, and I do think I have a long way to go before I've
exhausted the possibilities.
Christie: Do you think you'll ever need a ghost?
Watterson: No, that's against what I believe about comic strips. In
fact, I'd go even further and say I don't think a strip should ever be
continued after the death or retirement of a cartoonist.
Christie: Well, you know, a lot of the very good ones used assistants.
Watterson: Yeah, Pogo did. Schulz has a good comment on that:
"It's like Arnold Palmer having someone to hit his chip shots." I spent five
years trying to get this stupid job and now that I have it I'm not going to
hire it out to somebody else. The whole pleasure for me is having the
opportunity to do a comic strip for a living, and now that I've finally got
that I'm not going to give it away. It also gives me complete creative control.
Any time somebody else has their hand in the ink it's changing the product, and
I enjoy the responsibility for this product. I'm willing to take the blame if
the strip goes down the drain, and I want the credit if it succeeds. So long as
it has my name on it, I want it to be mine. I don't know, if you don't have
that kind of investment in it...I guess that's the difference between looking
at it as an art and looking at it as a job. I'm not interested in setting up
an assembly line to produce this thing more efficiently. There are certainly
people who could letter the strip better than I do; I don't enjoy lettering
very much, but that's the way I write and that belongs in the strip because the
strip is a reflection of me. If cartoonists would look at this more as an art
than as a part time job or a get-rich-quick scheme, I think comics overall
would be better. I think there's a tremendous potential to be tapped.
Christie: Speaking of creative control, do you ever have a problem with
an editor or the syndicate sending a strip back and saying you're using big
words, or you're getting political...?
Watterson: Universal is really good about that. I send in roughs to the
syndicate, which they okay or veto. If the rough is okayed, I ink it up. I
understand this arrangement will continue for the first year or two while I get
on my feet. Unlike the other places I've worked, though, Universal seems to
have some basic respect for what I'm trying to do. Sometimes they'll axe a
strip idea I kind of liked--that's inevitable when you judge something as
subjective as humor--but they're not altering things, or telling me what to do
instead. Either a joke is okay as I have it, or it's rejected, and I've never
argued about a decision yet. At the other syndicate, I'd hear, "this is funny,
but it's too wordy," or "simplify the drawings." That's interfering with the
craft. And if you give a little credit to the concept of the artist, I think
you ought to indulge excesses a bit, because that reflects the personality of
the writer. Now if a joke is in bad taste or it's not funny, okay, that's a
whole different thing, but how you craft a joke is really what the writer's job
is, and I don't think that technique should be subject to any editorial
constraints, and Universal has been tremendous about that.
Christie: So you actually have to draw up more than seven strips a
week?
Watterson: Yeah...unless they're all really great.
Christie: How much time do you put in?
Watterson: I've never really measured it out. Obviously the great thing
about this job is the complete freedom of the schedule. So long as I meet the
deadline, they don't care when I work or how I work. Sometimes I work all day
if I'm under a crunch; I take a day off here and there if I have something else
pressing or if I'm just tired of what I'm doing...so I don't know, I've never
sat down to quantify how many hours I actually spend on the strip. I use the
deadlines to estimate my progress; each month I know that I have to produce so
many strips, and by the end of the month I'll make sure that I have.
Christie: When you sit down at the drawing table, though, do you do one
at a time or just keep going--?
Watterson: I write separately from the inking up. I'm sure this varies
from cartoonist to cartoonist; I find that the writing is the hard part and the
drawing is the fun part. I like to separate the two so I can give my full
attention to one or the other. Writing it, I'll sit down and stare into space
for an hour and sometimes not come up with a single decent idea, or sometimes
no idea at all, and it's very tempting to go do something else or just draw up
a strip, but I find that if I make myself stick to it for another hour I can
sometimes come up with several good ideas. And when I get to the drawing, I
really enjoy taking a big chunk of time and working on the drawing and nothing
else. That allows me to make sure that I'm really challenging the art, making
each picture as interesting as I can...stick in a close-up or an odd
perspective. This way, the writing doesn't distract me while I'm drawing and
vice versa. I can devote my full attention to each.
Christie: Is that original artwork available to your admirers? Say,
people who interview you for prestigious national magazines?
Watterson: No, I've decided not to sell or give any of it out. Don't
feel slighted.
Christie: No, no. I would only make such a request because in my
opinion, and in the opinion of just about everybody I know, what you're doing
is the best stuff in the papers.
Watterson: Thank you very much; it's gratifying to hear that from people
who care about comic art. I never know what to make of it when someone writes
to say, "Calvin and Hobbes is the best strip in the paper. I like it
even more than Nancy." Ugh.
Christie: That's Andy Warhol's favorite strip.
Watterson: Oh, well, that would figure. Maybe he's the nut writing
me.