17 votes

Reading Calvin & Hobbes for the first time as an adult

12 comments

  1. [4]
    pseudolobster
    Link
    Animated version? I'm pretty sure this author is completely and utterly mistaken here. I'm fairly certain there was never a Calvin & Hobbes animated series. The only other merch that I know of...

    Watterson moved on and refused almost every offer to make any official merchandising from the comics. There was an animated version, and a few books have been sold, but the type of merchandise you’d expect from a comic strip that achieved this kind of fame? Plushies, T-shirts, mugs? Nope.

    Animated version? I'm pretty sure this author is completely and utterly mistaken here. I'm fairly certain there was never a Calvin & Hobbes animated series. The only other merch that I know of other than books was calendars.

    Anyway, pretty shallow article. The author has only read part of the best-of book, and is stretching out to how they feel about the few pages they read into an entire 7 paragraph "article" filled with affiliate links and links to barely-related posts on their own site.

    Also, OP, I'm not sure it's kosher to quote the article in its entirety here on Tildes. Unless you're providing a lot of commentary on what they're writing, if you're just posting it verbatim with no deeper analysis it's pretty much just copyright infringement.

    22 votes
    1. [2]
      Omnicrola
      Link Parent
      #offtopic I've noticed @Anum does this is most articles they post, and have had the same thought. Anum you clearly put some thought and care into it because you format it nicely with headers and...

      Also, OP, I'm not sure it's kosher to quote the article in its entirety here on Tildes.

      #offtopic
      I've noticed @Anum does this is most articles they post, and have had the same thought. Anum you clearly put some thought and care into it because you format it nicely with headers and collapsible blocks, but I also think including most or all of the entire article in the post isn't good Tildes practice.

      7 votes
      1. mycketforvirrad
        Link Parent
        Source: Deimos

        Please don't copy-paste entire articles into a comment like this. That's the kind of thing that can get the site in trouble for copyright infringement.

        Source: Deimos

        8 votes
    2. Caliwyrm
      Link Parent
      I was deeply into Calvin and Hobbes (and The Far Side) back in the day. From what I remember, Watterson didn't want merchandise and things like an animated series because he didn't want a...

      I was deeply into Calvin and Hobbes (and The Far Side) back in the day. From what I remember, Watterson didn't want merchandise and things like an animated series because he didn't want a definitive answer to Hobbes exisitince--did he really come to life, a la Toy Story, or was it Calvin's imagination?

      5 votes
  2. [7]
    triadderall_triangle
    Link
    What is the best way to "get into" Calvin and Hobbes as an adult who has had basically zero exposure or even passive memory of it? Where does one start and in which medium?

    What is the best way to "get into" Calvin and Hobbes as an adult who has had basically zero exposure or even passive memory of it?

    Where does one start and in which medium?

    2 votes
    1. [5]
      pseudolobster
      Link Parent
      I would suggest you buy The Essential Calvin and Hobbes - A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury, it's a single, cheap book that captures most of the best strips from the first few years of the series. From...

      I would suggest you buy The Essential Calvin and Hobbes - A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury, it's a single, cheap book that captures most of the best strips from the first few years of the series. From there if you enjoy it enough, you might want to buy all the individual books or The Complete Calvin and Hobbes box set if you're really into it.

      There are also some websites that have all the comic strips available online, but I'd really try and support the author if you can.

      12 votes
      1. [3]
        triadderall_triangle
        Link Parent
        Thanks, I'll see what I can find

        Thanks, I'll see what I can find

        1. [2]
          Caliwyrm
          Link Parent
          Around me you can routinely find Calvin and Hobbes books at thrift stores pretty cheaply (condition may vary). I seem to remember seeing them at Barnes & Nobles pretty cheap sometimes too.

          Around me you can routinely find Calvin and Hobbes books at thrift stores pretty cheaply (condition may vary). I seem to remember seeing them at Barnes & Nobles pretty cheap sometimes too.

          1 vote
          1. KapteinB
            Link Parent
            C&H ran as a monthly comic book in Norway from 1989 to 2009 (yep, more than a decade after Watterson stopped creating new material). Every thrift store in the country seems to have a few issues!...

            C&H ran as a monthly comic book in Norway from 1989 to 2009 (yep, more than a decade after Watterson stopped creating new material). Every thrift store in the country seems to have a few issues! Probably the same in other Nordic countries, maybe other European countries as well. Still my favourite way to consume C&H and other 90s strip comics.

            2 votes
      2. Eabryt
        Link Parent
        Every day I'm sad I (my parents) didn't buy that box set at my local bookstore when I was a kid. I think I have most of the individual books, but my buddy got the box set and it was so satisfying...

        The Complete Calvin and Hobbes box set if you're really into it.

        Every day I'm sad I (my parents) didn't buy that box set at my local bookstore when I was a kid. I think I have most of the individual books, but my buddy got the box set and it was so satisfying to read.

    2. Jordan117
      Link Parent
      One thing to try if you don't want to commit to buying one of the collections is to subscribe to GoComics ongoing reruns of the strip. There are no real long-term story arcs so you can pretty much...

      One thing to try if you don't want to commit to buying one of the collections is to subscribe to GoComics ongoing reruns of the strip. There are no real long-term story arcs so you can pretty much dip in whenever and still enjoy it. Personally I use ComicsRSS.com which repackages each daily strip into an RSS feed, but you can just bookmark the page itself if you don't do feeds.

      2 votes
  3. Amun
    Link
    Carolina Ciucci It’s been a long time, but I have vague memories of Calvin and Hobbes A Boy and His Tiger: A History A One-Way Trip Back to Childhood

    Carolina Ciucci


    It wasn’t Calvin and Hobbes that was the problem: over the years, I became so used to sarcastic, jaded humor that Calvin and Hobbes’s wholesome and gentle style went straight over my head.

    It only took a few pages for me to reset my humor meter to welcome this soft, charming duo into my heart. Once I did, there was no going back.

    It’s been a long time, but I have vague memories of Calvin and Hobbes

    Growing up, I loved reading the Sunday comic strips in the newspaper. But as budget cuts hit and newspapers here stopped publishing them altogether, I largely stopped reading comics for over 20 years.

    A few months ago, however, I fell into a conversation about comics with two of my Spanish students: a mother-daughter duo who always made my days brighter. When the mother, Wendy, asked if I had ever read Calvin and Hobbes, I answered with a hesitant “I think so.” It’s been a long time, but I have vague memories of a colourful tiger and a little boy in a red T-shirt. Wendy’s a big fan — so a few months later, when my birthday came around, The Essential Calvin and Hobbes: A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury arrived in the mail.

    A Boy and His Tiger: A History

    If you were old enough to read during the 1985-1995 period, odds are that you’ve read at least a few Calvin and Hobbes cartoons. This daily comic strip, created by cartoonist Bill Watterson, is easily one of the most beloved newspaper comics of all time — towards the end of its run, it was being published in over 2,400 newspapers worldwide. This means that, yes, it is likely that I saw it at some point.

    It’s hardly a wonder that I can’t quite remember, though — once the comic strip came to an end on December 31, 1995, it was done. Watterson moved on and refused almost every offer to make any official merchandising from the comics. There was an animated version, and a few books have been sold, but the type of merchandise you’d expect from a comic strip that achieved this kind of fame? Plushies, T-shirts, mugs? Nope. So Calvin and Hobbes live on in bookcases and imaginations. I think Calvin would like it that way.

    That doesn’t mean that Watterson is done with writing altogether. He’s got a “fable for grown-ups” titled The Mysteries set to release on October 10.

    A One-Way Trip Back to Childhood

    But I didn’t know any of this when I received the book and started reading it. When I read the very first strip, I was underwhelmed. I thought, for a couple of pages, that maybe this little boy and his stuffed-but-not-really tiger were a little overrated. But, well, TV show pilots are usually weaker than the rest of the show, right? Maybe the same principle applied here. So I read on.

    And on, and on.

    At one point, I realized I was smiling — and I wasn’t quite sure when I had started to. A few pages after that, I found myself actually laughing out loud.

    It wasn’t Calvin and Hobbes that was the problem: over the years, I became so used to sarcastic, jaded humor that Calvin and Hobbes’s wholesome and gentle style went straight over my head. It only took a few pages for me to reset my humor meter to welcome this soft, charming duo into my heart. Once I did, there was no going back.

    This boy and his tiger took me straight back to my childhood. I remembered what it was like to need nothing more than my own imagination to be entertained: a time when there wasn’t a phone glued to my hand, when I didn’t need half a dozen books within grabbing distance to quell the anxiety of having nothing to do. I didn’t have a Spaceman Spiff of my own, but I did have elaborate fantasy worlds where life was an endless adventure. And, of course, my own alter-ego always saved the day.

    As I kept reading, childhood memories began to resurface. Nothing significant or earth-shattering, just…warm. Reading these comic strips made me feel like a child again, daydreaming in my sun-warmed bedroom (instead of, you know, actually cleaning it as I was supposed to. Sorry about that, Mom). Hobbes reminded me of my favorite stuffed bear, the beloved and hopelessly tattered Blanca. Granted, she never talked to me, and she was too big to take with me on adventures, but she protected me from the monsters under the bed. Or so I felt at the time. And isn’t that the whole point?

    I haven’t finished the book yet. The subtitle got it right: this is one to treasure. I imagine I’ll read a few strips a day until I’m done. And then, well, I might just have to buy the Complete Calvin and Hobbes. And revisit the comic strips that I grew up with for good measure. Once I’ve done that? I’ll search for more comics like this one. It turns out that a gentler sort of humor was exactly what I needed.

    Oh, and before I go: I don’t care what anyone says, Hobbes was real. He ate Susie’s cookies, okay?