The Adventures of Tintin: Cigars of the Pharaoh
The Adventures of Tintin
The Adventures of Tintin #4Herge
ISBN: | 9780416088304 |
Publisher: | French & European Pubns |
Published: | 1 August, 1971 |
Format: | Hardcover |
Language: | English |
Links | Australian Libraries (Trove) |
Editions: |
93 other editions
of this product
|
- 1 Tintin in the Land of the Soviets
- 2 Tintin in the Congo
- 3 Tintin in America
- 4 Cigars of the Pharaoh
- 5 The Blue Lotus
- 6 The Broken Ear
- 7 The Black Island
- 8 King Ottokar's Sceptre
- 9 The Crab with the Golden Claws
- 10 The Shooting Star
- 11 The Secret of the Unicorn
- 12 Red Rackham's Treasure
- 13 The Seven Crystal Balls
- 14 Prisoners of the Sun
- 15 Land of Black Gold
- 16 Destination Moon
- 17 Explorers on the Moon
- 18 The Calculus Affair
- 19 The Red Sea Sharks
- 20 Tintin in Tibet
- 21 The Castafiore Emerald
- 22 Flight 714
- 23 Tintin and the Picaros
- 24 Tintin and Alph-Art
- Le Thermozéro
- Tintin and the Lake of Sharks
The Adventures of Tintin: Cigars of the Pharaoh
The Adventures of Tintin
The Adventures of Tintin #4Herge
This 2006 hardcover reissue of Cigars of the Pharaoh is a must for the Tintin completist. It's a black-and-white facsimile edition of the story as it appeared in the 1930s, before Herge revised, shortened, and redrew it to for the style of the later adventures. So it's 129 pages compared to the standard 62, though the larger panels mean it isn't really twice as long as the familiar version. But there are noticeable differences. The detectives Thompson and Thomson call themselves X33 and X33A, frequent nemesis Captain Allan is no longer involved, and when Tintin is forced to enlist, rather than happening in Abudin, it's in Mecca in the middle of a Christian-Muslim dispute. The anachronistic glimpse of Destination Moon is now gone, replaced by the more logical Tintin in America, and most interestingly, Tintin encounters additional perils (two involving cobras) while on the trail of the fakir. When he revised Cigars in the 1950s, Herge left pretty much all of the story intact, but his layouts and storytelling were vastly improved. If you've read all the standard Tintin adventures, this is fascinating stuff. --David Horiuchi
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