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| Calvin and Hobbes: Sunday Pages 1985-1995 | 
enlarge | Author: Bill Watterson Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $2.22 You Save: $12.73 (85%)
New (26) Used (33) from $2.22
Avg. Customer Rating: 29 reviews Sales Rank: 175188
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 96 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 9.4 x 0.4
ISBN: 0740721356 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973 EAN: 9780740721359 ASIN: 0740721356
Publication Date: September 15, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 1-5 of 29 | | NEXT » |
Great buy May 25, 2007 The book was in great price, and it arrived in great condition. The best thing was, however, the promptness of the delivery!! Thank you very much.
a little bit of perspective...and a lot of fun March 7, 2005 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
The commentary provided by the author on each of the Sunday cominc cartoon included in the collection in itself is worth the book. Each cartoon is presented twice, though. The left panel is similar to the sketches and the right hand presents the same cartoon in color. Each of the two pages provide a narrative related to the specific cartoon - explaining the artistic characteristics and inspiration for the cartoon....All in all, an excellent addition to any Calvin fan (and which intelligent reader isnt!)
Great Look Behind the Scenes December 24, 2004 7 out of 10 found this review helpful
For the eleven years that it ran (1985-1995), Waterson's "Calvin and Hobbes" comic strip was one of the greatest ever. His genius is reflected in a combination of brilliant images, imaginative story lines, unpredictable situations, and just the fun, love, and silliness of a little boy and his stuffed tiger. I have a few of the large format books, and I get a bit tired by Watterson's gassy forewords, in which he never fails to yak on and on about the cruel cartoon industry with its shrinking sizes, loss of artistic greatness, and insistence on merchandising every successful strip. Whatever. He does it again in this book, so you'll have to skip past that. The book doubled as the exhibit catalog for a showing of Watterson's works at Ohio State a few years ago. The interesting pages are dozens of Sunday strips with his personal comments under most of them. They appear in both the original draft and the final colored form (though personally, I didn't see much value added in running the same strip twice --in black-and-white and then in color). But it is fun to page through and laugh again at some of the most creative, clever, humorous, and well-drawn strips ever.
Insightful looks at classic sunday strips May 13, 2004 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Calvin & Hobbes was much more than a really good newspaper comic strip.Created by Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes will be hailed among the greatest ever created, right alongside Peanuts and Krazy Kat for its creativity, scope of influence and the enjoyment it offered the reader. It was a strip capable of being all things gleeful and all things sad, all things goofy and all things serious. Bill Watterson's genius cannot be overstated. He was a master of the comic form. He somehow managed to be funny, clever, touching, insightful, warm, cynical, uplifting, devious, nostalgic, and mischievous, all in the space of a little three- or four-panel comic strip. And his Sunday strips? A feast. His use of space and color, especially in the strip's later years, was masterful. He knew how to work a page like no other. In this collection, some of the best Sunday strips are collected in glorious color. Each is amended with footnotes and annotations by the creator himself, along with early pre-newspaper versions of the strips. While many of these can be found elsewhere, this collection is a nice look back at some favorites, made even better by the insight and observations of the man who drew them. Even those intimately familiar with these cartoons will learn something new about the craft of comic creation through his annotations. Each comic strip is a story - and for longtime Calvin & Hobbes readers, a memory. That final strip, with its clean slate of white snow into which Calvin and Hobbes disappear, talking of discovery and exploring ... just fantastic. If you're a fan of Watterson's work and Calvin & Hobbes, you owe it to yourself to pick this up.
Bill Watterson. Cartoonist exrtodinaire. February 23, 2003 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
Another in a collection of zany, wonderful episodes brought to us by a cartooning master. Keeps us in touch with sanity and makes us laugh because we need it! Good job, Bill!
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