I do not know. I came across it on Facebook. I have all the C&H Books by Bill Watterson. C&H has always reminded me of my childhood. I did not have an imaginary friend or a favorite stuffed animal. However, I had many adventures from sun up to sun down away from my house in fields, streams, sewers, woods, abandon houses, and best of all my imagination. When reading C&H I was able to relate & reminisce about those adventures and imagination of my boyhood.
I remember when the movie "Stand By Me" came out. Me and my SO at the time went to see it and many times she turned to me and asked "What is this movie about? I don't understand it." Every man and boy in that theatre understood and could relate to the movie about a group of boys going on an adventure. It's no coincidence that she could not understand C&H either other to say, "No boy is like that." Little did she know that most all little boys are exactly like that and when she wasn't in her "Rose Colored Glasses" world, our son was exactly like Calvin.
No matter how young or young at heart you are, C&H can always take you back to your childhood relating to adventures and getting in trouble for the mischief us boys would get into, be it on purpose or by accident. Even as adults, we have our escapes. For me, instead of ground adventures, flying has become my adulthood C&H world and instead of a stuffed tiger I have a plastic Toothless" from "How to Train Your Dragon" (given to me by my son) sitting on the console next to the compass to guide me on my adventures in the sky.
Over the years I had wondered how the never aging Calvin would be as an adult and if at the moment in a Kid's life when Santa Claus no longer exists slowly fading into a legend his parents used to encourage him to behave, Hobbes would no longer be alive but just a memory of his imagination. Nothing more than an old tattered mildew scented relic in the attic or back of a closet. This story carries the torch to a new generation for a mirror image of Calvin to stress out his parents, teacher, and hopefully a little girl who would also one day be his Soul Mate. The innocence of one life carried to another with a little mischief inheritance.
So my hats off to Bill Watterson for keeping alive the mischievous little boy, or girl in all of us. I had posted this in 2 other locations and just as here, the responses are all similar if not the same and have brought back those memories in all of us. No matter where any of us go, who we meet and how we are affected by them, or how we live our lives in RW or Hobby World, we all have a common connection.
Here is my Hobbes as an adult below.