TGIF

A couple of bookish links to brighten your Friday:

  • The Cleveland Plain Dealer offers a charming interview with Bill Watterson, the brains behind Calvin and Hobbes:

    Readers became friends with your characters, so understandably, they grieved — and are still grieving — when the strip ended. What would you like to tell them?

    This isn’t as hard to understand as people try to make it. By the end of 10 years, I’d said pretty much everything I had come there to say.
    It’s always better to leave the party early. If I had rolled along with the strip’s popularity and repeated myself for another five, 10 or 20 years, the people now “grieving” for “Calvin and Hobbes” would be wishing me dead and cursing newspapers for running tedious, ancient strips like mine instead of acquiring fresher, livelier talent.

  • And at the Millions, the first few lines of the eagerly anticipated (at least by me) new David Mitchell novel, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet. I don’t want to spoil anything for anyone, but somehow a cacophany of frogs is involved. Here’s hoping this book is half as good as The Cloud Atlas.
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