"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Nearly 28 years since the final strip of his wildly popular Calvin and Hobbes last graced newspaper ...
The Norman Rockwell Museum’s 2026 season will be anchored by "Revolution to Rockwell," a sweeping survey of American visual ...
On December 31st, 1995, just ten years after Watterson first began his monumental comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes had its ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Bill Watterson was born William Boyd Watterson II on July 5, 1958, in Washington, D.C. When he was 6 ...
Calvin and Hobbes comics present a comical look at the holidays. These strips in particular prove perfect for bringing joy ...
In 1995, Bill Watterson walked away form Calvin and Hobbes, his wildly successful comic strip that the Ohio artist tirelessly protected from merchandising offers and Saturday morning cartoon pitches.
Few comic strips are as wholesome as Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes, yet in the 1990s the duo faced legal trouble due to ...
Bill Watterson, creator of Calvin and Hobbes, returned to comic strips recently with a three-day collaboration with Stephen Pastis on Pearls Before Swine. The art from those three days are going to be ...
Creator of Calvin & Hobbes, Bill Watterson, is creating a new illustrated novel, The Mysteries, with fellow artist John Kascht and published by Andrew McMeels at the end of the year. It is currently ...
Bill Watterson reflects today and marvels at the perch syndicated strips once held, back when the comics page was part of the nation’s daily cultural conversation. “The reach and impact of newspaper ...
The Prime Day deals our readers can't get enough of October Prime Day is right around the corner, with some great early deals already available. But there’s also plenty of deals to take advantage of ...
Why would a pro running back at his peak decamp for India to study ancient healing science? Or a top cartoonist, not yet 40, suddenly decide to retire? That's what Bill Watterson did a decade ago.