High School and for fans of Calvin &
Hobbes
As a child, Calvin felt a connection with the comic
book character from Bill Watterson’s Calvin
& Hobbes.
He was born on the day the last strip was published;
his grandpa left a stuffed tiger named Hobbes in his crib; and he even had a
best friend named Susie. Then Calvin’s mom washed Hobbes to death, Susie grew
up beautiful and stopped talking to him, and Calvin pretty much forgot about
the strip – until now.
Now he is 17-years-old and had been diagnosed with
schizophrenia. Hobbes is back, as a delusion, and Calvin can’t control him.
Calvin decides that Watterson is the key to everything – if he would just make
one more comic strip, but without Hobbes, Calvin would be cured. Calvin and
Susie (is she real?) and Hobbes (he can’t be real, can he?) set out on a
dangerous trek across frozen Lake Erie to track down Watterson.
When I found this book at the library, I practically
jumped with joy. I thought Bill Watterson had written a book about a teenaged
Calvin & Hobbes. Then I was immediately disappointed when I read that this
was a story about someone who thought they were Calvin. But I had to keep
reminding myself that this Calvin wasn’t the
Calvin.
I owe a lot to the Calvin
& Hobbes comics. They were what got me into drawing in the first place.
When I was in fifth grade, the boy who sat next to me was almost always reading
one of the big Calvin & Hobbes comic
books. I would lean over to try to read the comics but I was on his left side
and I could never see the ending of the comics. After awhile I found the comics
at the library and was hooked.
Schizophrenia (to me) seems pretty scary. For those
who have delusions, you never know if the person you’re talking to is real or
if it’s all in your head. I first found out about schizophrenia from a TV show
called ‘Perception’. It’s about Dr.
Daniel Pierce, a talented but eccentric neuropsychiatrist, who is enlisted by
the FBI to assist in solving complex cases in Chicago. Daniel has paranoid
schizophrenia and his hallucinations sometimes help him to pick out subtle
clues in solving crimes. This was my favorite part of the show because his
hallucinations were so funny. One time he hallucinated the devil and the devil
made a joke about how many lawyers were in hell. He said, “You can’t throw a
rock without hitting one. Actually that’s a game we play down there.” That was
one of my favorite hallucinations. I’ve always liked shows about people with
hallucinations or can see someone that no one else can see. I find it strangely
amusing watching someone talk to thin air.
I don’t know if this book or the show ‘Perception’ are being truthful about the
facts on schizophrenia. I read two other books about characters with
schizophrenia that probably are more factual but I don’t know when or if I’ll
review those books.
This is one of my favorite comics. I even did my own
version with my own characters.
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