Calvin

Calvin is named for a sixteenth-century theoligan who belived in  predestination. Most people assume that Calvin is based on a son of mine, or  based on detailed memories of my own childhood. In fact, I don't have children,  and I was a firly quiet, obedient kid--almost Calvin's opposite. One of the  reasons that Calvin's character is fun to write with is that I often Don't agree  with him....

  Many of Calvin's struggles are metaphores for my own. I suspect that most of  us get old without growing up, and that inside every adult (sometimes not very  far inside) is a bratty kid who wants everything his own way. I use Calvin as an  outlet for my immaturity, as a way to keep myself curious about the natural  world, as a way to ridicule my own obsessions, and as a way to comment on the  human nature. I wouldn't want Calvin in my house, but on paper, he helps me  sort through my life and understand it.
Hobbes

  Named after a seventeenth-century philosopher with a dim view of human  nature, Hobbes has the patient dignity and common sense of most animals I've met. Hobbes was very much inspired by one of our cats, a gray tabby named  Sprite. Sprite not only provided the long body and facial characteristics for Hobbes, she also was the modle for his personality. She was good-natured,  intelligent, friendly, and enthusiastic in a sneaking-up-and-pouncing sort of  way. Sprite suggested the idea of Hobbes greeting Calvin at the door in midair  at high velocity.

  The so-called "gimmick" of my strip--the two versions of Hobbes--is                  sometimes misunderstood. I don't think of Hobbes as a doll that miraculously     comes to life when Calvin's around. Neither do I think of Hobbes as a product     of Calvin's imagination....Calvin sees Hobbes one way, and everyone else sees    Hobbes another way. I show two versions of reality, and each makes complete     sense to the participant who sees it. I think that's how life works. None of us      sees the world exactly the same way, and I just draw that literally in the strip.
Calvin's parents

  I've never given calvin's parents names, because as far as the strip is  concerned, they are important only as calvin's mom and dad. Calvin's dad has  been rumored to be a self-portrait. All my caracters are half me, so it's true in  some ways, but Calvin's dad is also partly a satire of my own father. Any strip  about how suffering "builds character" is usually a verbatim transcript of my  dad's explanations for why we were all freezing, exhausted, hungry, and lost on  camping trips. these things are a lot funier after twenty-five years have passed.

  Calvin's mom is the daily disciplinarian, a job that taxes her sanity, so I think  we get to see her at her best. I regret that the strip mostly shows her impatient  side, but I try to hint at other aspects of her personality and her intrest by what  she's doing when calvin barges in.

...As secondary characters, I've tried to keep Calvin's parents realistic, with a  reasonable sense of humor about having a kid like Calvin. I think they do a  better job than I would.
Susie Derkins

  Susie is earnest, serious and smart....I suspect that Calvin has a mild crush on   her that he expressed by trying to annoy her, but Susie is a bit unnerved and  put off by Calvin's weirdness. This encourages Calvin to be eve weirde, so it's a  good dynamic. Neither of them quite understands what's going on, which is  probably true of most relationships.
Miss Wormwood

 
As a few readers guessed, Miss Wormwood is named after the apprentice devil  in C.S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters. I have a lot of sympathy for miss  wormwood. We see hints that she's waiting to retire, that she smokes too  much, and that she takes a lot of medication. I think she seriously belives in  the value of education, so needless to say, she's an unhappy person.
Rosalyn

 
Probably the only person Calvin fears is his baby-sitter. I put her in a Sunday  strip early on, never thinking of her as a regular character, but her  intimidation of Calvin suprised me, so she's made a few appearances since.  Rosalyn even seems to daunt Calvin's parents, using their desperation to get  out of the house to demand advances and raises. Rosalyn's relationship with  Calvin is pretty one-dimentional, so baby-sitter stories get harder and harder  to write, but for a later addition to the strip, she's worked pretty well.
Moe

  Moe is every jerk I've ever known. He's big, dumb, ugly, and cruel. I  remember school being full of idiots like Moe. I think they spawn on damp  locker room floors.
The Characters
These are the discriptions Bill Waterson gave of his characters in the Tenth Anniversary Book.
Calvin and Hobbes World Guide
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