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----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Cans Book" p. 29 in The Comics Journal, no. 145 (Oct. 1991) -- (Newswatch) 1. Tintin: Hergé and His Creations. Call no.: PN6700.C62no.145 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin chez Jules Verne / Jean-Paul Tomasi, Michel Deligne. -- Bruxelles : Lefrancq, 1998. -- 163 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. -- Includes bibliographical references (p. 149-156) and indexes. -- Comparative study of the two authors (Hergé and Verne). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T6 1998 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin chez Jules Verne--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 124) to Principes des Littératures Dessinées / Harry Morgan (Angoulême : Editions de l'An 2, 2003). -- Call no.: PN6710.M57 2003 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Chez Jules Verne--Reviews. "Hergé s'invite chez Jules Verne" / Pascal Paillardet. p. 29 in Bachi-Bouzouk, no. 1 (fév. 1999). -- (Le Dossier Tintin) -- Notes a new book by Jean-Paul Tomasi and Michel Deligne, comparing Verne and Hergé, titled Tintin chez Jules Verne. -- Call no.: PN6745.B3no.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin chez le Psychanalyste : essai sur la création graphique et la mise en scène de ses enjeux dans l'œuvre d'Hergé / Serge Tisseron ; présentation par Didier Anzieu. -- Paris : Aubier/Archimbaud, 1985. -- 191 p. ; 22 cm. -- (Ecrit sur Parole) -- Bibliography: p. 175-184. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T5 1985 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Collectors Step In to Solve Dispute over Belgian Festival" p. 30 in The Comics Journal, no. 268 (June/July 2005). -- (Newswatch : Journal Datebook) -- The Hergé estate apparently asked for too much money to show materials in a festival that celebrates the 175th anniversary of Belgium. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.268 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Consultant Chang Dies" p. 42 in The Comics Journal, no. 208 (Nov. 1998). -- (News Watch) -- Chang Chong-Jen (1905-1998) helped Hergé with The Blue Lotus (1934). -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.208 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin de Parti-Pris" / propos recueillis par Sébastien Langevin. p. 28 in Bachi-Bouzouk, no. 1 (fév. 1999). -- (Le Dossier Tintin) -- Summarizes the debate whether Tintin is politically left or right wing, with the arguments of André Santini and Yann Galut. -- Call no.: PN6745.B3no.1 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Détective" / Josette Gousseau. p. 151-180 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin di Congo / Hergé. -- Jakarta : Indira, 1996. -- 112 p. : ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Kisah Petualangan Tintin) -- "Judul asli: Tintin au Congo". -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T4919 1996 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin di Soviet / Hergé. -- Jakarta : Indira, 1996. -- 141 p. : ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Kisah Petualangan Tintin) -- "Judul asli: Tintin au Soviet". -- Indonesian translation of: Les Aventures de Tintin, reporter du Petit vingtieme au pays des Soviets. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T4819 1996 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin en AmériqueThe third of Hergé's albums in the series Les Aventures de Tintin. For a story summary see the entry for the English language edition Tintin in America |
----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique / Hergé. -- Tournai : Casterman, 1947. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (Les Aventures de Tintin) -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T52 1947 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique / Hergé. -- Tournai : Casterman, 1973. -- 61 p. : col. ill ; 31 cm. -- (Les Aventures de Tintin) -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T52 1973 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique. Archives Hergé. -- Tournai : Casterman, 1973-1980. -- ill. ; 31 cm. -- "Versions originales." -- CONTENTS: 1. Les Aventures de Totor. Les Aventures de Tintin Reporter du Petit Vingtième au Pays des Soviets (1929). Les Aventures de Tintin Reporter du Petit Vingtième au Congo (1930). Tintin en Amérique (1931). 2. Cet aimable M. Mops. Les Exploits de Quick et Flupke. 3. Les Cigares du Pharaon (1932). Le Lotus Bleu (1934). L'oreille cassée (1935). 4. L'Île Noire (1937). Le Sceptre d'Ottokar (1938). Le Crabe aux Pinces d'Or (1940). -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1-4. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4A4 1973 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique. English. Tintin in America / Hergé. -- London : Methuen Children's Books, 1978. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (The Adventures of Tintin) -- Translation of: Tintin en Amérique. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T5213 1978 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique. English. Tintin in America / Hergé ; translated by Michael Turner. -- Bruxelles : Casterman, 2004. -- 1 v. : ill. ; 30 cm. -- (The Adventures of Tintin) -- Translation of Les Aventures de Tintin Reporter: Tintin en Amérique. -- Reprints an early black and white version of the album. -- Summary (from OCLC): The boy hero comes to the United States and triumphs over gangsters in Chicago of the 1930's and the pitfalls of the wild West. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T5213 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique. German. Tim in Amerika / Hergé ; aus dem Französischen von Ilse Strasmann. -- Hamburg : Carlsen, 1974. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tim und Struppi ; 19) -- Translation of: Tintin en Amérique. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T5215 1974 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique--Books About. Comment Hergé a Créé Tintin en Amérique / Jean-Loup de la Batelière ; artwork & layout, Sternic. -- Editions BédéStory, 2009. -- 45 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Comment Hergé a Créé ; 2) -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5D402 2009 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en Amérique--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 138) to Comics of the American West / Maurice Horn (New York : Winchester Press), 1977). -- Call no.: PN6714.H57 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en el País del Oro Negro / Hergé ; traducción del francés por Concepción Zendrera. -- Barcelona : Editorial Juventud, 1995. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Las Aventuras de Tintin) -- Translation of: Tintin au Pays de l'Or Noir. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53417 1995 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin en el Tibet / Hergé ; traducción del francés de Concepción Zendrera. -- Barcelona : Editorial Juventud, 1993. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Las Aventuras de Tintín) -- Translation of: Tintin au Tibet. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53917 1993 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin en Voyage : une Vision Belge des Mondes Exotiques?" / Marcel van de Kerckhove. p. 25-37 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin et l'Alph-ArtUnfinished Tintin album by Hergé |
----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et l'Alph-Art / Hergé. -- Tournai? : Casterman, 1986. -- 2 v. in 1 (42, 42 p.) : ill (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- A collaboration between Les Studios Hergé and Casterman. -- Contents: Transcriptions des dialogues ; Découpage graphique. -- Presents Hergé's script and breakdowns for his unfinished final Tintin album. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T544 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et l'Alph-Art. English. Tintin and Alph-Art : Tintin's Last Adventure / Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Egmont, 2004. -- 62 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- Translation of: Tintin et l'Alph-Art. -- Reproductions of the original drawings and text of an unfinished story by Hergé, with English translation and commentary. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T54413 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et l'Alph-Art. German. "Tim und die Alpha-Kunst" p. 134-154 in Comic Jahrbuch 1990. -- A version of Hergé's incomplete final Tintin story (Tintin et l'Alph-Art), completed by an unknown French artist and translated here into German. -- Call no.: PN6755.C635 1990 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et l'Alph'Art--Articles About. "Tintin et l'Alph'Art" / par Pierre Stercks. p. 72-77 in Les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 59 (Sept./Oct. 1984). -- (Galerie) -- (Hergé) -- On Hergé's last and uncompleted story. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.59 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et L'Alph-Art--Miscellanea. "Tintin et l'Alph-Art" p. 51-53 in Les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 72 (Nov./Dec. 1986). -- Interviews with Denis Schmidt & Jean-Manuel Duvivier, and Benoît Peeters, and a short essay by Thierry Groensteen, on the publication of Hergé's last and incomplete Tintin story. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.72 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin et l'Amérique Latine" / Robert Jouanny. p. 89-102 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin et la Ligne Claire" / Daniele Barbieri ; traduction de Isabelle Adriaens. p. 261-275 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et la Ville / textes de François Schuiten, et al. -- Brussels? : Editions Moulinsart, 2004. -- 63 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- Book to accompany an exhibition on cities in the Tintin comics. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5V5 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et le Lac aux Requins. English. Tintin and the Lake of Sharks / based on the characters created by Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Mammoth, 1989. -- 44 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- (A Tintin Film Book) -- Translation of: Tintin et le lac aux requins. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T54513 1989 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et le Temple du Soleil. Index entry (p. 550-551) in The World Encyclopedia of Cartoons, ed. by Maurice Horn (Detroit : Gale Research, 1980). 1. Animated feature films. Call no.: NC1325.W67 1980 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Héritiers : Chronique de l'Après-Hergé / Hugues Dayez. -- Bruxelles : Les Éditions du Félin, Éditions Luc Pire, 1999. -- 183 p. ; 24 cm. -- (Kiron Espace) -- Call no.: PN6745.D34 1999 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Oranges Bleues / texte d'André Barret ; illustré avec les photos du film. -- Paris : Casterman, 1965. -- 47 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- "Les aventures de Tintin au cinéma." -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T546 1965 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin et les Phénomènes Paranormaux" / Numa Sadoul. p. 60-63 in "L'Univers de Tintin" p. 38-63 of Schtroumpf : les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 14/15 (1978) -- (Spécial Hergé, nouv. éd.) -- Illustrated article on the paranormal in the Tintin stories, followed by an index by Francis Groux (p. 63) of paranormal objects and events in the stories. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.14/15 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin et les PicarosThe twenty-third of Hergé's albums in the series Les Aventures de Tintin. For a story summary see the entry for the English language edition Tintin and the Picaros |
----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Picaros / Hergé. -- Tournai : Casterman, 1976. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (Les Aventures de Tintin) -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T543 1976 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Picaros--Books About. Hergé et les Bigotudos : le Roman d'une Aventure / Philippe Goddin. -- Tournai : Casterman, 1990. -- 287 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. -- (Bibliothèque de Moulinsart) -- About the creation of the album Tintin et les Picaros. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5G6 1990 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Picaros--Miscellanea. "Déclarations Supplémentaires : à propos des Picaros" / Numa Sadoul. p. 18-22 in "La Carrière d'Hergé" p. 4-37 of Schtroumpf : les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 14/15 (1978) -- (Spécial Hergé, nouv. éd.) -- Continuation of the previous interview with Hergé on the subject of Tintin et les Picaros, including reproduction of an early version of the first page. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.14/15 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et les Picaros--Reviews. "Viva Picaros!" / Numa Sadoul. p. 20 in "La Carrière d'Hergé" p. 4-37 of Schtroumpf : les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 14/15 (1978) -- (Spécial Hergé, nouv. éd.) -- Brief review of Tintin et les Picaros, in reaction to reviews by other critics. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.14/15 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintín et Milou (Tintín y Milú). Index entry (p. 35) in La Historieta Argentina : una Historia / Judith Gociol, Diego Rosemberg (Buenos Aires : Ediciones de la Flor, 2000). -- Call no.: PN6790.A7G6 2000 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et Moi. "Hergé Interview" p. 180-205 in The Comics Journal, no. 250 (Feb. 2003). -- Excerpts from interviews conducted by Numa Sadoul in 1971 and 1972, previously excerpted in Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée in 1971 and published in full in 1975 as Tintin et Moi. -- Translated by Michel Didier. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.250 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et Moi--Reviews. "Tintin et Moi" / Jacques Glénat-Guttin. p. 47 in Schtroumpf : les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 27 (1975)-- (Schtroumpf-Bis) -- Reviews the book of Hergé interviews done by Numa Sadoul. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.27 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin et son ti-gars. Index entry (p. 91) in La bande dessinée au Québec / Mira Falardeau (Montréal : Boréal, 1994). -- Call no.: PN6731.F34 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Explorateur. Super Tintin Explorateur. -- Bruxelles : Editions du Lombard, 1981. -- 82 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm. -- "No. 38bis/14". -- Adventure story genre. -- Contents: "A la Conquête du Monde" text p. 2 ; "Les Rayons de Feu du Soleil" (Luc Orient) p. 3-12 ; "Les Gardiens de la Cité Perdue" p. 13-19 ; "Teotihuacan, ville Oubliée" text p. 20-22 ; "Cubitus et le Matou Grosso" (Cubitus) 23-27 ; "Dans le Royaume de Rangda" (Capitaine Sabre) p. 28-35 ; "Le Trésor de l'Araignée" (Zanie) p. 36-42 ; "Les Gorilles vous Saluent Bien" text p. 43-45 ; "La Piqûre" (William Lapoire) p. 47-58 ; "L'Homme d'Isabrayka" p. 59-64 ; "Le Drakkar Perdu" (Thorgal) p. 65-74 ; "Le Labyrinthe Sacré" (Papilio) p. 76-82 -- Call no.: PN6748.T48S6314 1981 ----------------------------------------------------- A Tintin Film Book. Tintin and the Lake of Sharks / based on the characters created by Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Mammoth, 1989. -- 44 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- (A Tintin Film Book) -- Translation of: Tintin et le lac aux requins. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T54513 1989 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin, Gåtfull som Belgien : intervju med Alain Resnais" / Alain Dugrand. p. 8-9 in Tintin och de Fyrtio Tecknarna : ett hyllningsalbum till Hergé (Stockholm : Medusa, 1989) -- Call no.: PN6747.H4Z5 A219 1989 ----------------------------------------------------- The Tintin Games Book / Hergé. -- Boston : Little, Brown, 1990. -- 31 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- Board games from Jouons avec Tintin en Sylvadie and Jouons avec Tintin à Moulinsart. -- Call no.: GV1312.H47 1990 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, Haddock et les Bateaux / Yves Horeau. -- Bruxelles : Éditions Moulinsart, 1999. -- 57 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- Book about ships in the Tintin comics. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5H6 1999 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, Haddock et les Bateaux. English. The Adventures of Tintin at Sea / Yves Horeau ; edited and translated by Michael Farr. -- London : John Murray, 2004. -- 57 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. -- Translation of: Tintin, Haddock et les Bateaux. -- Accompanies an exhibition at the National Maritime Museum (Great Britain). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5H613 1999 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin: Hergé and His Creations. "Tintin Cans Book" p. 29 in The Comics Journal, no. 145 (Oct. 1991) -- (Newswatch) 1. Tintin: Hergé and His Creations. Call no.: PN6700.C62no.145 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" / a cura di Anna Soncini Fratta. -- Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994. -- 302 p. ; 17 cm. -- (Bussola ; 15) -- (Belœil ; 4) -- Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-302). -- Contents: "L'Aventurier de l'Aurore" p. 15-23 ; "Tintin en Voyage : une Vision Belge des Mondes Exotiques?" p. 25-37 ; "Tintin, Paradigme du Héros Colonial Belge?" p. 39-56 ; "Tintin au Congo, ou la Stratégie d'une Démarche Coloniale" p. 57-73 ; "De l'Afrique à l'Amérique : l'Odyssée Mentale des Héros chez Hergé et Céline" p. 75-87 ; "Tintin et l' Amérique Latine" p. 89-102 ; "Tintin Saisi par la Guerre Froide" p. 103-109 ; "Tintin Italien" p. 111-123 ; "Fausse Ressemblance, Fausse Différence: Les Dupondt" p. 125-135 ; "Tintin in the New World: Révision d'un Mythe" p. 137-150 ; "Tintin Détective" p. 151-180 ; "Milou et l'Enfance de l'Homme" p. 181-202 ; "Les Bijoux de la Castafiore : de Métaphores en Métaplasmes la langue en Marche" p. 203-217 ; "Les Formes du Comique dans les Aventures de Tintin" p. 219-246 ; "Qui a Peur du Grand Anthropoïde?" p. 247-259 ; "Tintin et la Ligne Claire" p. 261-275 ; "Tintineries" p. 277-280 ; "Tintin, Protagoniste au Grand Écran" p. 281-288 ; "Bibliographie Hergé" p. 289-302 -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, Hergé et les Autos / texte, Charles Henri de Choiseul Praslin ; Andy Jacobs (chap 6). -- Éditions Moulinsart, 2004. -- 59 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- Book about automobiles in the Tintin comics. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5C47 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Héros du XXe Siècle" / par Claude Le Gallo. p. 2-17 in Phénix, no. 4 (3e Trimestre 1967). -- Describes the first 22 Tintin albums. -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6745.P47no.4 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin i Paris / Callico, Huart. -- Stockholm : RSR Epix, 1991. -- 46 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Parodi ; nr. 8) -- "En Parodi på Tintin". -- "Endast för vuxna" -- Kuifje in Parijs, in Swedish. -- Call no.: PN6748.T483Z519 1991 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin i Schweiz / Efde. -- Stockholm : RSR Epix, 1991. -- 48 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Parodi ; nr. 4) -- Dutch parody "Kuifje in Zwitserland," in Swedish. -- Call no.: PN6748.T483 Z5419 1991 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin i Snömannens Grotta" (Tintin : Äventyr i Tibet ; 8) 9 p. in Pelle Svanslös, nr. 2 (1971) -- Title from cover. -- Call no.: PN6790.S94P38nr.2 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin in AmericaTintin in America / Hergé -- London: Methuen Children's Books, 1978. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (The Adventures of Tintin) -- Translation of: Tintin en Amérique (1932). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T5213 1978Summary:In 1931, Chicago gangsters are alarmed that Tintin is coming to "clean up." Tintin and Snowy are kidnapped by a cab driver as they arrive in Chicago. They escape but Tintin is injured in a chase. Days later they emerge from the hospital into the fresh air of rush hour, and while trying to figure out how to cross the street they are kidnapped again, falling through a trap door that opens in the sidewalk. The two kidnappers, one named Pietro with an Italian accent, take Tintin to Al Capone, but they don't notice Snowy. With Snowy's help Tintin captures all three gangsters, but when he reports this to the police he is arrested as a nutcase. Escaping from the police, Tintin finally gets to his hotel, where they've been holding his reservation for days. A threatening letter from Al Capone is waiting in his room. The next morning a masked hood with a gun sneaks into Tintin's room, and Tintin gets the drop on him by going out one window and coming in another (on the 37th floor). When he calls the police, impersonators come and he is kidnapped again, and taken to the office of the G.S.C. (Gangsters' Syndicate of Chicago). Bobby Smiles of the G.S.C., a rival to Al Capone, tries to hire Tintin to bring Capone down. When Tintin refuses and tries to arrest him, Smiles triggers a trap door. Tintin lands in a chamber of O.X2Z gas and is knocked out by it, and the gangsters throw his body in Lake Michigan. Returning to Bobby Smiles, the henchmen find out they used Z4 sleeping gas by mistake. They rush back to Lake Michigan but Tintin is already awake, and captures them. The next morning Smiles hires a sniper with a tommy gun to shoot Tintin and Snowy, but he shoots dummies instead. And the next morning Smiles' gang falls into a trap set by Tintin as they try to hijack a load of whiskey from the Coconut Mob. Bobby Smiles himself escapes. Several days later Tintin arrives in Redskin City, in Indian country, on the trail of Smiles. Tintin buys a cowboy outfit and a horse, and begins a chase. Smiles comes upon a village of Blackfoot Indians, and convinces them that Tintin is a threat. They believe him, but can't find their tomahawk because they buried it. Eventually they find the tomahawk and capture Tintin. Tintin tricks the tribe into a brawl over a catapult (slingshot) and escapes in the confusion, but Smiles sees him and chases him and Snowy over a cliff. Safe on a ledge partway down, boy and dog find a cave leading back up to where Smiles is camping. When Tintin appears, Smiles thinks he has seen a ghost and runs back to the Indians. The Indians know what has happened and go into the cave to capture Tintin, but come out dragging one of their own number. They leave, putting a big rock over the entrance and posting a guard. Trying to dig his way out, Tintin strikes oil and the geyser frees him. Within 10 minutes half a dozen oilmen are there with contracts for Tintin to sign, and he refers them to the Blackfoot Indians who own the land. By the next morning, the Indians have been forcibly relocated, a city has been built on the spot, and cowboy suits like Tintin is wearing are forbidden. Bobby Smiles leaves town on the train. Tintin steals a locomotive to chase him, and wrecks the locomotive. Tintin and Snowy start out on foot across the desert, and during a nap a bank robber named Pedro Ramirez (with a thick accent) switches boots with him. Tintin is arrested by the police who are following the robber's distinctive footprints, and when they bring him back to town a lynch mob tries to hang both him and Snowy. The sheriff figures out the truth but gets too drunk to stop the mob. The mob is incompetent, so Tintin escapes, takes one of their horses, and camps for the night to wake up in the path of a prairie fire. Tintin and Snowy save themselves by jumping in a river, then set out to follow the railroad when they are captured by Bobby Smiles, who ties Tintin to the rails as a train approaches. The train stops because a passenger saw a puma attack a deer, and as a member of the American Association of Animal Admirers wanted something done about it. The next morning Tintin captures Smiles, whom he finds alone in a mountain cabin, and three days later Smiles arrives in a crate at the office of the Chicago Chief of Police. Back in Chicago, Tintin is an American celebrity and has offers from vaudeville, radio, movies, and a new religion. Also a dog food company. Then Snowy is kidnapped for ransom. The hotel's house detective, Mike MacAdam, finds an array of dogs, none of them Snowy. After signalling his willingness to pay the ransom, Tintin starts his own detective work, makes mistakes, and gets himself arrested. Released because of his fame, Tintin then trails the dognapper to a suburb called Silvermount. Here in an old-looking castle with a dungeon, a group called Kidnap Inc. is holding Snowy and other victims. Tintin rescues Snowy and rounds up most of the gang, but the mastermind gets away. Next morning Tintin visites the Grynde Corp. cannery, where scrap cars are recycled into corned-beef cans, and cattle (also dogs, cats and rats) are converted to "corned beef, or sausages, or cooking fat or whatever" by a huge machine. Tintin and Snowy are thrown into the machine by the manager, Maurice Oyle, who is working for the mastermind of the former Kidnap Inc. Just then the workers go on strike and the machine stops. Tintin captures both Oyle and the mastermind. The Distressed Gangsters Association holds a mass meeting about the Tintin problem, and then kidnaps Tintin from a banquet being held in his honor. Mike MacAdam is again on the job, and lets Snowy get kidnapped as well. Tintin is tied to a dumbbell and dumped in Lake Michigan. The dumbbell turns out to be made of wood, and Tintin is rescued by a police boat. The crew of the police boat turns out to be gangsters, but Tintin defeats them. Three Hundred Fifty Five suspects are arrested in "a major clean-up for the city of Chicago," and after a ticker-tape parade Tintin and Snowy leave for Europe. This summary is from European Comics in English
Translation (Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Company, 2002).
Used with permission. Other English-language editions:
Bibliography:
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Tintin in the CongoThe Adventures of Tintin, Reporter for Le Petit Vingtième, in the Congo / by Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Casterman, 1982.-- 109 p. : ill. ; 32 cm. -- Translation of: Les aventures de Tintin reporter du 'Petit Vingtieme' au Congo. -- This is the second Tintin story, first published 1930/1931 in Le Petit Vingtième. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T4913 1982Summary: Tintin sails from Antwerp for the Congo, and right away Snowy has a fight with a parrot and his tail gets infected. The ship's doctor does a little surgery and bandages the tail. Chasing the parrot again, Snowy comes across a stowaway (later identified as "Tom"), and, struggling with him, falls overboard. In the sea, his tail is shocked by an electric ray, and a crewman knocks him unconscious with a life preserver. Diving to save Snowy, Tintin loses a shoe to a shark. Arriving in the Congo, people cheer at the dock and carry them on their shoulders to the hotel. That night Snowy battles mosquitos and is bitten all over. Next morning newspapermen from New York, London and Lisbon try to buy Tintin away from Le Petit Vingtième, without success. Then Tintin gets a "boy" (Coco) and a car, and sets off to explore. Snowy soon gets in a fight with a crocodile. Then their car is stolen by the stowaway from the ship, Tom, and they retrieve it and tie up the thief. For supper Tintin kills fifteen antelope, and on the way back to camp a monkey steals Snowy. Tintin kills and skins another monkey "from the same family as the first one," and wears the skin to get close enough to get Snowy back. Their prisoner escapes in the night, but they continue and the car is soon stuck on a railroad track. A train comes and hits the car, which wrecks the train without harming the car. Tintin shames the Africans into helping set the train back on the track, then pulls the train to the next station with the car. Tintin gets a audience with the king of Ba Baoru'm, and is invited on a lion hunt the next day. A lion catches Tintin instead, and Snowy frees his master by biting off the Lion's tail. The lion then gets angry and attacks people, but Snowy intimidates him and Tintin leads him on a string. A jealous "top juju man" and Tom plot to get rid of Tintin. Tintin is framed on a charge of stealing and damaging a sacred fetish (statuette), and condemned to death. Coco frees Tintin, and with a movie camera Tintin photographs the conspirators together and records them talking with his phonograph. Showing the film and playing the record for the villagers has the desired effect of banishing the plotters, and Tintin becomes Chief. Touring his village, Tintin dispenses some justice and some quinine. The disgruntled thief and witch doctor then provoke a war with a neighboring tribe, which Tintin wins singlehandedly using a "powerful electro-magnet" to divert arrows and spears. Tintin then decides to hunt leopards. We learn about a secret society, the "Aniota," devoted to stopping "civilisation by white men." These people wear leopard costumes. That night the witch doctor dresses in Aniota costume to attack Tintin, but is himself attacked by a boa constrictor before he can make his move. Tintin saves him, but his partner Tom captures both Snowy and Tintin, ties them up and leaves Tintin for crocodiles. A white priest comes along and shoots the crocodiles, but by the time Tintin finds Snowy he has been eaten by a boa constrictor. Snowy is still alive, though, and after he's freed Tintin feeds the snake to itself, tail first. Tintin visits the mission station and is soon teaching a geography class when a leopard walks in. Tintin feeds the leopard a sponge and a bucket of water, and the leopard leaves with a stomach ache. The leopard's owner demands a cure, and Tintin says to feed a blackboard to it. Next day Tintin goes elephant hunting, and after tracking an elephant all day a monkey steals his gun while Tintin is sleeping and kills the elephant. Returning to the mission with the tusks, Tintin meets Tom disguised as a priest, who knocks Tintin out and puts him in a canoe heading for a waterfall. Tintin gets caught on a limb over the cataract, and the real priest, brought by Snowy, begins a rescue that is almost sabotaged by the phony priest. After a struggle Tintin and the miscreant plunge over a cliff towards a river. Tintin bounces off a hippopotamus to safety, while the other man seems to be eaten by crocodiles. Meanwhile at the top of the cliff Snowy is kidnapped by pygmies, who make him their king. Somehow Snowy has gotten Tom's letter of instructions to do away with Tintin. Following the further instructions in the letter, Tintin discovers a plot by Al Capone to control diamond production in the Belgian Congo, and the gangsters are rounded up. In a coda to the story, Tintin frightens a leopard, photographs some giraffes, blows up a rhinoceros, and harasses a wild buffalo. A search plane from Belgium comes to take him home, and "the news of Tintin's departure echoes all over Africa" by "Tom-Tom Special." This summary is from European Comics in English
Translation (Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Company, 2002).
Used with permission. |
----------------------------------------------------- Tintin in the Congo--Miscellanea. The Rabbi's Cat. 2 / Joann Sfar ; color by Brigitte Findakly. -- New York : Pantheon Books, 2008. -- 130 p. : col. ill. ; 27 cm. -- Originally published in France by Dargaud, Paris, in two volumes: 'Le Chat du Rabbin. 4, Le paradis terrestre' in 2005 and 'Le Chat du Rabbin. 5, Jérusalem d'Afrique' in 2006. -- Summary (from dust jacket): "Joann Sfar's beloved, humorous, and wise talking cat is back for more beautifully illustrated adventures in Algiers and across Africa in the 1930s. While the rabbi is away, his cat tags along with Malka of the Lions (the rabbi's enigmatic cousin), who roams the desert with his ferocious-on-demand lion. Some believe Malka to be a pious Jew, others think he's a shrewd womanizer, but the cat will be the one to discover the surprising truth." "Back in Algiers, the rabbi's daughter, Zlabya, and her new husband fill the house with their fighting, while the city around them fills with a rising tide of anti-Semitism. On a whim, the rabbi's cat, the rabbi, a sheik (also a cousin of the rabbi), and a very misplaced Russian painter set out on a fantastic journey (even encountering a young reporter named Tintin in the Congo) in search of an African Jerusalem. It turns out to be very fortuitous that the rabbi's cat is not just a talking cat, but a multilingual talking cat." -- Call no.: PN6747.S49C47413 2008 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin in the Land of the SovietsThe Adventures of Tintin, Reporter for Le Petit Vingtième, in the Land of the Soviets / by Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Sundancer, 1989. -- 137 p. : ill. ; 32 cm. -- Translation of: Les aventures de Tintin, Reporter du Petit Vingtième au pays des Soviets. -- The first Tintin adventure, from 1929. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T4813 1989Summary: Tintin and Snowy (Snowy is Tintin's dog) leave on the train to report on Soviet Russia. A Russian man blows up the train to prevent the report but Tintin is sleeping and doesn't notice. In Berlin Tintin is arrested for the bombing, then escapes jail and leads the police on a chase with a stolen motorcycle, then with a police car. A police airplane tries to stop him with bombs. Tintin and Snowy finally escape by being hit by a train and riding the locomotive to the Soviet border. While Tintin is buying new clothes, a secret policeman plots to trip him with a banana peel, but Snowy saves him by putting the peeling under the policeman's feet. They miss the train and try to catch it with a handcar, which falls apart. From a scrap heap Tintin takes a gasoline engine and makes a motorized rail car. The Soviets derail his car while trying to kill him, and Tintin continues on foot. Tintin comes upon "English communists being shown the beauties of Bolshevism," and looking closer at the factories finds they're only "stage effects." They give an old beggar a meal, and Snowy figures out that he's the same secret policeman (OGPU agent) of the banana peel incident. Tintin next comes upon an election, where people are being forced to vote a gunpoint for the Communist Party. He writes his report and goes to bed. In the night three men try to break into his room, and Tintin sends them on their way by putting a sheet over his head to look like a ghost. The sheet interferes with his vision and he falls into a sewer, and in the morning is arrested for bathing illegally. He escapes in a boat, is chased by a police boat, and ends up fleeing in a stolen car with a leaky gas tank. The owner of the car sets the gasoline trail on fire and Tintin has to outrun the flames. Luckily he runs out of gas before the flame catches him. The car breaks down and Tintin does some repairs. The police lock him up again, in a cell near a river, and he is taken to a torture chamber where he tortures his Chinese torturers. Next he finds a diving suit and escapes across the river. Arriving in Moscow, Tintin finds the city a slum and interferes with a beating in a breadline. He hears of a Soviet plan to steal wheat from peasants, and warns the peasants. For trying to stop the soldiers from torturing the peasants, he is put before a firing squad, but he has previously sabotaged their guns. That night, traveling on foot in the snow, OGPU agents chase him, a bear tries to eat Snowy, and Tintin falls through ice into the water and freezes stiff. A Bolshevik Cossack drags him away. Snowy salts the ice around Tintin and they escape, and come upon a house full of spooky skeletons and voices. It is the disguised entrance to the hideout where Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin store their stolen wealth. They escape in an airplane, which crashes, and Tintin has to carve a new propellor. He is received in Berlin as a hero, though it's a case of mistaken identity. OGPU agents disguised as German police capture Tintin again and Snowy disguises himself as a Tiger to save his master. Once free Tintin has a meal and gets a room, and an OGPU agent named Borschtisov tries to capture him. Turning him over to the German police, Tintin finds he has foiled a plot to "blow up all the capitals of Europe with dynamite." With the reward Tintin buys a new car and wrecks it right away. The crash throws him onto a train towards Brussels, where he returns to another hero's welcome. This summary is from European Comics in English
Translation (Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Company, 2002).
Used with permission. |
----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin in the New World: Révision d'un Mythe" / Daniela Carpi ; traduction de Angela Manes. p. 137-150 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Article on the novel by Frederic Tut en, titled Tintin in the New World. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin in the World of the Inca. The Making of Tintin in the World of the Inca / Hergé. -- London : Methuen Children's Books, 1985. -- 155 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- Contents: The Seven Crystal Balls ; Prisoners of the Sun. -- Full-colour section on how these two adventures came into being / by Benoît Peeters, English version by Leslie Lonsdale Cooper. -- Translations of: Les 7 boules de cristal, and Le temple du soleil. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53213 1985 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintin in TibetTintin in Tibet / Hergé. -- Boston : Little, Brown, 1975. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (The Adventures of Tintin) -- Translation of: Tintin au Tibet (1960). -- Copy 1: An Atlantic Monthly Press Book. -- Copy 2: Joy Street Books. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53913 1975Summary: At a mountain resort Tintin has a dream about his old friend Chang Chong-chen being in trouble, and the next day learns that Chang was en route to Europe when his plane crashed in Nepal. All the passengers are supposedly dead, but Tintin believes his dream and heads for Katmandu. On the way in New Delhi they do some sightseeing and Haddock has a wild ride on a sacred cow. In Nepal they hire porters and a Sherpa named Tharkey to take them to the wreck. Two nights before they arrive at the wreck they hear a Yeti howling, and Haddock's last bottle of whiskey is mysteriously stolen. The next day the empty bottle turns up near some giant footprints and the porters desert. The next morning, Tintin, Haddock and Tharkey reach the wreck. Tintin finds evidence that Chang has survived the crash, but before he can investigate further he gets lost in a snowstorm and falls into a crevasse. Before he falls he sees a mysterious figure walking by. After a rescue, and as they are giving up on Chang the next day, Tintin spots a yellow scarf on a rock up the mountain and Haddock spots the Yeti. Tharkey leaves, but Tintin and Haddock stay to keep looking for Chang. Soon they're in a tight place trying to climb the mountain, and Tharkey has a change of heart and comes back to rescue them. After a few difficult days they spot a monastery but are too exhausted to proceed. Snowy brings help from the monks. As they are about to leave the monastery, a monk has a vision of Chang, feverish and a prisoner of the abominable snowman. Following the clues from the monk's vision, Tintin, Haddock and Tharkey climb a mountain called the Horn of the Yak. They find Chang in a cave, guarded by a large hostile gorilla-like creature. Chang explains that the Yeti actually saved his life and nurtured him back to health after the plane crash, then took him up the mountain when the rescuers came because he thought they were a danger. They take Chang back to Europe, leaving the snowman, who seems lonely. This summary is from European Comics in English
Translation (Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Company, 2002).
Used with permission. Other English-language editions:
|
----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Inc. : Comment les Héritiers d'Hergé vont gérer le Business Tintin" / par Didier Pasamonik. p. 30 in Bachi-Bouzouk, no. 1 (fév. 1999). -- (Le Dossier Tintin) -- Call no.: PN6745.B3no.1 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Italien" / Licia Reggiani. p. 111-123 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Jeux. -- Hautefort : Imagerie Jesco, 1986. -- 64 p. : chiefly ill. ; 19 cm. -- Activity book (puzzles, etc.) -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5J4 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin l'Hebdoptimiste. Tintin. -- Neuilly s/Seine : Dargaud, 1948-1978. -- col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- Parallel numbering begins in 1973 as Tintin l'hebdoptimiste, though the original title and numbering appear to persist. -- Adventure story. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1219-1220, 1225, 1269, 1287, 1291, 1298, 1304, 1307, 1311, 1314,1330, 1342-1348 (1972-1974). -- Call no.: PN6748.T482 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, le Héros d'une Génération. Index entry (p. 198) to Principes des Littératures Dessinées / Harry Morgan (Angoulême : Editions de l'An 2, 2003). -- Call no.: PN6710.M57 2003 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin le Terrible. Hergé : Tintin le Terrible, ou, l'Alphabet des Richesses / Alain Bonfand, Jean-Luc Marion ; suivi d'extraits inédits de la Correspondance de Hergé. -- Paris : Hachette, 1996. -- 139 p. ; 18 cm. -- (Coup Double) -- Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-140). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5B6 1996 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin, les Enfants, la Politique. Mort aux Tyrans! : Tintin, les Enfants, la Politique / Pierre Skilling. -- Québec : Éditions Nota Bene, 2001. -- 191 p. ; 23 cm. -- (Collection Études Culturelles) -- Comprend des réf. bibliogr.: p. 179-187. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5S53 2001 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Lives" p. 16 in The Comics Journal, no. 120 (Mar. 1988). -- Data from Pete Coogan. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.120 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Magazine : The End or the Beginning" p. 22 in The Comics Journal, no. 123 (July 1988). -- Data from Pete Coogan. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.123 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin n' Me" / Robin Bougie. p. 79 in Broken Pencil, no. 22 ("The Comics Issue") (2003?). -- Four 1-tier strips. -- Call no.: Z1033.B7no.22 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Noir Sur Blanc, 1930-1942 / Marcel Wilmet. -- Bruxelles : Casterman, 2004. -- 128 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 23 cm. -- On cover: L'Aventure des Aventures. -- Book about bibliographic aspects of the first nine Tintin albums. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5W5 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin och de Fyrtio Tecknarna : ett hyllningsalbum till Hergé. -- Stockholm : Medusa, 1989. -- 80 p. : ill. ; 30 cm. -- "Originaltitel: (A suivre) Special Hergé." -- Comics or illustrations by: Christina Alvner, Johan Andreasson, Lara Andreasson, Av oine, Ted Benoit, Philippe Bertrand, Enki Bilal, Christian Binet, François Boucq, François Bourgeon, Daniel Ceppi, Didier Comes, Th. Dalby, Jean-C. Denis, Bob De Moor, Derib, Philippe Druillet, Nils Egerbrandt, F'Murr, Jean-Claude Forest, Régis Franc , Frank, Fred, Golo, Ulf Jansson, Tomas Jönsson, Joakim Lindengren, Lon, Jacques de Loustal, Frank Margerin, Jacques Martin, Jean-Claude Mézières, Lars Olsson, René Petillon, Poussin, Charlie Schlingo, François Schuiten, Benoit Sokal, Joost Swarte, J acques Tardi, Daniel Torres, Tronchet, Alex Varenne, Vepy, Marc Wasterlain. -- Articles and interviews: "Tintin, Gåtfull som Belgien" ; "Snöballar på Avenue Delleur" ; "Herges Arvtagare" ; "Den Åttonde Kristallkulan" ; "Demokrati på Moulinsart." -- C all no.: PN6747.H4Z5 A219 1989 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin og Haj-Søen : filmalbum / efter en tegnefil af Raymond Leblanc ; illustrationer og tekst bearbejdet af Studios Hergé ; på dansk ved Jørgen Sonnergaard. -- Copenhagen : Carlsen Comics, 1973. -- 44 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tintins oplevelser ; 20) -- Translation from French to Danish of: Lac aux requins. -- SUMMARY: Tintin aids his old friend the Emir Ben Kalish and fights the ruthless Marquis di Gorgonzola. 1. Adventure story comics. 2. Belgian comics. 3. Danish comics. I. Hergé, 1907- II. Leblanc, Raymond. III. Sonnergaard, Jørgen. IV. Studios Hergé. V. Series. VI. Lac aux requins. Danish. VII. Carlsen Comics. k. Ben Kalish, Emir. k. Gorgonzola, Marquis di. Call no.: PN6748.T483 L319 1973 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin on Home Video" (Newswatch) p. 29 in The Comics Journal, no. 174 (Feb. 1995) 1. Film and video adaptations of comics. Call no.: PN6700.C62no.174 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin, Paradigme du Héros Colonial Belge?" / Pierre Halen. p. 39-56 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- "A propos de Tintin au Congo." -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- The Tintin Poster Book. -- London : Methuen Children's, 1989. -- 48 leaves : col. ill. ; 39 cm. 1. Posters. I. Hergé, 1907-1983. II. Methuen Children's. Call no.: PN6748f.T483P6 1989 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Poster Book--Reviews. "Festin pour Tintinophiles Affamés" / Nicolas Finet. p. 94 in À Suivre, no. 107 (Dec. 1986). -- (L'Actualité A Suivre) -- Reviews three new books about Tintin: L'Aventure du Journal Tintin ; Hergé et Tintin Reporters (Philippe Goddin) ; and Tintin (poster book from Casterman). -- Call no.: PN6748.A2no.107 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin, Protagoniste au Grand Écran" / Sabrina Zanetti ; traduction de Paraskévi Koklis. p. 281-288 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- The Tintin Saga : a tribute to Hergé / by Dorothea Hayward Scott. -- 1984. -- p. 230-241 : ill. ; 22 x 28 cm. -- Caption title. -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Photocopy from: Horn Book Magazine, Apr. 1984. 1. Hergé, 1907-1983. I. Scott, Dorothea Hayward. II. Horn Book Magazine. Call no.: PN6747.H4S35 1984 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin Saisi par la Guerre Froide" / Michel Pierre. p. 103-109 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Selection. -- Bruxelles : Editions du Lombard, . -- col. ill. ; 19 cm. -- Adventure story genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 13 (1971). -- Call no.: PN6748.T48S4 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Sélection--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 75) in Encyclopédie des bandes dessinées / éd. Marjorie Alessandrini. Nouv. éd. (Paris : A. Michel, 1986) Call no.: PN6707.E5 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Special Aventuriers. -- Bruxelles : Lombard, 1978. -- 82 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm. -- Title from cover. -- "No. 39 bis - 159 bis/II". -- Featuring complete stories of Bernard Prince, Steve Canyon, and other adventure heroes. 1. Adventure story comics. Call no.: PN6746.T5 1978 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin, The Calculus Affair" / selected by Chris Mautner. p. 43 in The Comics Journal, no. 200 (Dec. 1997) -- Review of the Hergé story. Part of a section called "Read this Comic" which includes review recommendations by 37 contributing writers. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.200 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin the Complete Companion--Reviews. "Yet Another Hergé Article" / by Christopher Mautner. p. 31 in The Comics Journal, no. 252 (May 2003). -- (Reviews) -- Review of Tintin the Complete Companion (Michael Farr). -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.252 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin Three-in-One Series. The Adventures of Tintin / Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- Boston, MA : Little, Brown, 1990-1992. -- col. ill. ; 24 cm. -- (Tintin Three-in-One Series) -- Translation of Les Aventures de Tintin. -- CONTENTS: v. 1. Tintin in America. Cigars of the Pharaoh. The Blue Lotus. v. 2. The Broken Ear. The Black Island. King Ottokar's Sceptre. v. 3. The Crab with the Golden Claws. The Shooting Star. The Secret of the Unicorn. v. 4. Red Rackham's Treasure. The Seven Crystal Balls. Prisoners of the Sun. v. 5. Land of Black Gold. Destination Moon. Explorers of the Moon. v. 6. The Calculus Affair. The Red Sea Sharks. Tintin in Tibet. v. 7. The Castafiore Emerald. Flight 714. Tintin and the Picaros. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1-7. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T513 1990 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintineries" / Harry Swerts. p. 277-280 in Tintin, Hergé et la "Belgité" (Bologna : Editrice CLUEB, 1994). -- Call no.: PN6747.H4 Z5T45 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintinmania" p. 25-26 in The Comics Journal, no. 148 (Feb. 1992) -- (Newswatch : Miscellanea) 1. Hergé, 1907- 2. Adventures of Tintin. Call no.: PN6700.C62no.148 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Äventyr. Månen tur och retur. Del 1 / Hergé ; översättning, Karin och Allan Janzon. -- Stockholm? : Illustrationsförlaget, 1970. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tintins äventyr ; 7) -- Translation of: Objectif lune. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53519 1970 ----------------------------------------------------- "Tintin's America" / Dale Luciano. p. 33-35 in The Comics Journal, no. 66 (Sept. 1981). -- Review of Tintin in America. -- Data from Pete Coogan. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.66 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintin's Last Adventure. Tintin and Alph-Art : Tintin's Last Adventure / Hergé ; translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- London : Egmont, 2004. -- 62 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- Translation of: Tintin et l'Alph-Art. -- Reproductions of the original drawings and text of an unfinished story by Hergé, with English translation and commentary. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T54413 2004 -----------------------------------------------------
Tintins OplevelserTranslations of Tintin stories from French to Danish |
----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Oplevelser. Faraos Cigarer / Hergé ; oversat af Jørgen Sonnergaard ; tekstet af Erik Mosegård Jensen. -- København : Carlsen Comics, 2002. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tintins Oplevelser ; 5) -- Translation of Les Aventures de Tintin: Les Cigares du Pharaon. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T52219 2002 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Oplevelser. Månen Tur-Retur. del 2 / Hergé. -- Copenhagen : Illustrationsforlaget, 1954. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tintins Oplevelser ; 8) -- Tintin: On a Marché sur la Lune, in Danish. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T53619 1954 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Oplevelser. Rackham den Rødes Skat / Hergé. -- Copenhagen : Carlsen, 1947. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Tintins Oplevelser ; 12) -- Translation of: Le trésor de Rackham le Rouge. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T5319 1947 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Oplevelser. Den Sorte Ø : den klassiske version fra 1943 / Hergé ; på dansk ved Jørgen Sonnergaard. -- Copenhagen : Carlsen, 1988. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (Tintins Oplevelser) -- (Carlsen Classics) -- Translation of L'île Noire. -- Call no.: PN6747.H4T52 519 1988 ----------------------------------------------------- Tintins Oplevelser. Tintin og Haj-Søen : filmalbum / efter en tegnefil af Raymond Leblanc ; illustrationer og tekst bearbejdet af Studios Hergé ; på dansk ved Jørgen Sonnergaard. -- Copenhagen : Carlsen Comics, 1973. -- 44 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Tintins oplevelser ; 20) -- Translation from French to Danish of: Lac aux requins. -- SUMMARY: Tintin aids his old friend the Emir Ben Kalish and fights the ruthless Marquis di Gorgonzola. 1. Adventure story comics. 2. Belgian comics. 3. Danish comics. I. Hergé, 1907- II. Leblanc, Raymond. III. Sonnergaard, Jørgen. IV. Studios Hergé. V. Series. VI. Lac aux requins. Danish. VII. Carlsen Comics. k. Ben Kalish, Emir. k. Gorgonzola, Marquis di. Call no.: PN6748.T483 L319 1973 ----------------------------------------------------- Tinus Trotyl. "Speelt met Vuurwerk" (Tinus Trotyl) / tekst, Philip Schier ; tekeningen, Jan van Haasteren. p. 22-25 in Sjors en Sjimmie Extra, nr. 23 (Nov. 4, 1991). -- Call no.: PN6790.N44 S8E9nr.23 1991 -----------------------------------------------------On down the list