Bill Watterson is best known for his comic strip creation "Calvin and Hobbes," about a boy and his imaginary toy tiger friend.

Synopsis Bill Watterson was born on July 5, 1958, in Washington, D.C. While attending Kenyon College, Watterson drew cartoons for the college paper, leading to a position at the Cincinnati Post. Watterson wanted to draw comic strips and began trying to syndicate his original creation, "Calvin and Hobbes," a cartoon about a rambunctious boy and his imaginary toy tiger friend that went on to garner wide fame.

Early Life Bill Watterson was born on July 5, 1958, in Washington, D.C. When he was 6 years old, Bill Watterson moved with his father James, a patent attorney, and his mother, Kathryn, to Chagrin Falls, Ohio. After the family settled in, Kathryn soon won a seat on the city council. James Watterson would also serve on the Chagrin Falls city council, but not until some 30 years later. As a child, Bill Watterson—unlike his creation Calvin—"never had imaginary animal friends," he later remembered. "I generally stayed out of trouble, I did fairly well in school." He developed an early interest in drawing, and was inspired by classic cartoonists like "Peanuts" creator Charles Schulz and "Pogo" illustrator Walt Kelly. In 1976, Watterson enrolled at Ohio's Kenyon College, where he spent four years drawing political cartoons for the Collegian campus newspaper (and a few weeks during his sophomore year painting a copy of Michelangelo's "Creation of Adam" on his dorm room ceiling). Following his 1980 graduation, Watterson was immediately offered a job as an editorial cartoonist at the Cincinnati Post. His editors were unimpressed with his work, however, and less than a year later Watterson found himself unemployed and living back home with his parents. He decided to abandon political cartoons (he was not particularly interested in politics anyway) and return to his first love: comic strips. The next few years proved mostly discouraging. Watterson sent his strips to countless newspapers and received nothing but rejection slips. For a time, he took an unhappy job designing advertisements for car dealerships and grocery stores. This period in his life was important, he later said, because it proved to him that the substance of his work mattered more than money. "To endure five years of rejection to get a job requires either a faith in oneself that borders on delusion, or a love of the work," he told the 1990 graduates of his alma mater in a commencement speech. "I loved the work."