Roz Warren, introvert, examines fellow introvert Bill Watterson. Mr. Watterson, the artist behind the beloved Calvin and Hobbs comic, may be the truest example of an introvert. Roz originally published this piece on Broad Street Review.
Bill Watterson isn’t just the creator of the world’s best comic strip. According to the book Looking for Calvin and Hobbes, a biography of the elusive and reclusive cartoonist, Watterson is also a world-class introvert.

(Image © Bill Watterson)
Bill Watterson, Introvert
Watterson refuses to make public appearances, give interviews, or talk to fans, although he sometimes responds to fan mail and occasionally corresponds or collaborates with fellow cartoonists. Family and friends have been instructed not to reveal where he lives. (For years, he had an unlisted number and lived under his wife’s maiden name.) There’s just one, early, photo of him available to the public: It shows a dorky looking dude seated at a drawing table.
Apparently, Watterson, like J.D. Salinger and Thomas Pynchon, is one of those very smart, very creative people who just want to be left alone. He doesn’t want to be the life of the party. He doesn’t even want to go to the party. He wants to stay home and get on with his work.
Fame, for these folks, isn’t a perk. It’s an ordeal.
An introvert is “a person who is energized by being alone and whose energy is drained by being around other people.” Introverts enjoy exploring their own thoughts and feelings. Being with people, even people they are comfortable with, interferes with their desire to be “quietly introspective.“
For instance?
Although Watterson won the Harvey Award for Best Syndicated Comic Strip seven years in a row, from 1990 to 1996, he never once showed up to claim his award and accept the acclaim of his peers. “From most reports and reported anecdotes,” says fellow cartoonist Berkeley Breathed, with affection, “he is most assuredly a serious whack job.”
Or just a serious introvert.
As he worked on the strip, the man had no need (and even less desire) to leave the house seeking acclaim or inspiration. Everything he needed was inside his own head.
Not for sale
Watterson, famously, also refused to sell out.
He wouldn’t agree to license or merchandise “Calvin and Hobbes.” When pressured to do so by the syndicate, he threatened to stop drawing the strip altogether. After several years of wrangling, the syndicate backed down and handed control of his creation back to the artist.
About the millions he passed up by refusing to merchandise the strip? “The so-called opportunities I faced,” he once said, “would have meant giving up my individual voice for that of a money-grubbing corporation. It would have meant my purpose in writing was to sell things, not say things.”
Watterson gave us, in all, a total of 3,160 Calvin and Hobbes strips. He also gave us an instructive example of one way to live, with integrity, a creative life.
“He doesn’t get his kicks from being famous.” his mother once said in an interview. “He was just doing something he enjoyed doing. He definitely wants to disappear.”
Nearly 20 years after that last strip — mission accomplished. Today, nobody knows where the guy is or what he’s up to.
Nicely done, Mr. Watterson, On behalf of fellow introverts everywhere, I salute you.
Mo at Mocadeaux
Wednesday 8th of October 2014
Oh how I missed the wit and wisdom of Calvin & Hobbes! They have been favorites in our house for a very long time. My son even named one of his twin sons Calvin hoping, of course, that he would grow up to have the humor and independent thinking of the cartoon character with perhaps a little less of the mischievousness. I recently discovered the Calvin & Hobbes Facebook page run by Mr. Watterson's cartoon syndicate so I am back to getting a regular fix of these classic cartoons.