Download PDF The Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book Bill Watterson 0050837117358 Books

By Bryan Richards on Tuesday 30 April 2019

Download PDF The Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book Bill Watterson 0050837117358 Books





Product details

  • Series Calvin and Hobbes (Book 4)
  • Paperback 128 pages
  • Publisher Andrews McMeel Publishing; Later Printing edition (January 3, 1989)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0836218523




The Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book Bill Watterson 0050837117358 Books Reviews


  • The kids LOVE the content, but the publishers should be ashamed. From the moment the book arrived and we opened the first page, the pages started falling out. Every time a page was turned it fell out. We are returning for a refund because I don't trust the other copies to be any better quality.
  • This is a review of the product, not Bill Watterson's delightful content.

    I bought this to read to my kids to help them discover the love and magic of everybody's favorite suburban boy and Tiger and I was disappointed nearly immediately with the low quality of the binding.

    It has not been abused or molested the way books often are after years of unsupervised service at the hands of a five year old, this book has only spent three weeks being read together in bed and under this light duty the pages immediately began to come out and the spine separate.

    She loves it so much she didn't want to be without it so I had the local Officemax guillotine-cut the binding off and spiral bind it for $5.00 bit it was still unexpected, unacceptable, and inconvenient.
  • Great content! Calvin and Hobbes comics are enjoyable for whole family. However the book is cheaply made. After the second day, pages started falling out of the book. Now a few days later about 20 pages have come loose and have fallen out. Frustrated when you feel your money was spent on poor quality materials.
  • My sons loved reading Calvin and Hobbes. So did I. After the comic strip had ended, we purchased several of the books so that we could enjoy our favorite strips all over again.

    Now I have a granddaughter who is old enough to enjoy Calvin and his antics. My son and his wife, and granddaughter, live more than 2,000 miles away from me. Reading Calvin and Hobbes is a way to bond across the miles. I order a copy of Calvin for her, and one for me. When we talk on the phone, we laugh together over our favorite strips.

    Even though she is under ten, she enjoys the Calvin books, plus the strips make her think about actions and consequences, especially when she has to use her imagination to think about what happens after the last picture in the strip ends with Calvin ready to pounce. Young children can read for fun while pondering the deeper meanings.
  • It is my feeling that Bill Watterson had enough integrity and ethics to prevent the syndicate from cranking out endless meaninglessly repetitive compilations. Of course, he did quit partly because he was becoming disgusted with many of the commercial aspects of his work. With most comics, even good ones, the collections get stale after a few. Watterson's collections dont. There are a dozen or so C&H compilations/collections, but you wont be dissapointed with owning the whole shebang, especially since Watterson frequently did a lot of extra work to ensure that each collection had something new to offer. Even without this extra stuff, Watterson's body of work is extensive enought to warrant owning all these collections. He was steadily cranking out great material for a decade or so, and if you are like me you will be reading some C&H weekly for as long as you are on this earth, so tons of books is not a bad thing. Basically, I wholeheartedly reccomend all the books. If you like one you will like them all. They only get better as you get to know the characters. Watterson never goes for the cheap laugh by having any of the comic's principals act out of character. As you progress through the years with C&H, and I do reccomend reading them in order, you will see how art progresses and grows when the artist is committed to excellent work. So, go get the first one, titled simply Calvin & Hobbes, and then start down the enjoyable road to making Calvin and his tiger a pleasant little chunk of your life.
  • My 9 year child has been a Calvin and Hobbes fanatic for the past 1-2 years, and just can't get enough of these books. He loves them!
  • all is right with the world for just a moment within the pages. Grand children of all ages enjoy Calvin and Hobbes and it's refreshing to see them with their noses in a book - giving their technology mind a break.
  • I really don't know why this wasn't in my collection. Maybe it was published when we made the move from Chicago to the Adirondacks. I love the insights that Watterson has into the trials and tribulations, the victories and defeats and the marvelous adventure of childhood. It addresses the question of what is real, what is not, and the possibility that all are real in parallel. This is high on my list of alternative reading for the classroom.