Which tintin book to start with




















Mystical visions, freezing weather, and the great mysterious yeti are found throughout the journey. Many believe that this book has the most spectacular art of the Tintin series.

The intense friendships in the book make this book seem like a rescue movie, especially in combination with the incredible artwork. Give this tale of friendship and daring-do a read.

The attending diva, Bianca Castafiore, makes the evening difficult and several days later, begins to find her jewels missing.

Tintin and friends investigate. This is a fairly comedic story, with many red herrings and a great deal of absurdity. Tintin and friends soon find themselves dodging assassination attempts.

As they try to learn what is going on, they become embroiled in an international adventure and an attempt to stop a heinous international slavery ring. This is an intensely thrilling tale. The slavery aspect makes this a darker story than most, but there are plenty of flashes of humor and more than enough action to keep the tale from being depressing.

Buy this great comic of tintin adventure. Our hero begins looking for the killer and starts on a journey across Asia, fighting a secretive opium cartel with a long, powerful reach.

This adventure has a more realistic, international feel since Tintin is dealing with real-world tensions between the Japanese and the Chinese. Give this a read to see one of the interesting books in the Tintin series.

This was one of the three Tintin adventures used to create the computer animated movie and also lent the movie its title in much of the world. This is a story of the search for a map to lost treasure, tangled in old family feuds and the acts of one petty criminal.

Rather than a thrilling adventure, this is more of a traditional detective mystery. In The first comic book: Tintin in the Land of the Soviets.

In Latest Album: Tintin and the Picaros. As of , the Tintin adventures will appear in their own weekly, titled Tintin or Kuifje in the Dutch edition , at the initiative of Raymond Leblanc. Log in or create a Tintin. Tintin must be my favourite comic series of all time, the characters are great, and the adventures are really exciting. I am very proud to be a Syldavian citizen. Create your Tintin account. There is already an account with this email. You are on the official website of Tintin.

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The adventures became more sophisticated over time and new characters were introduced along the way. I find these two books have all the elements that add up to a great Tintin experience Happy reading! Hello To find out about Tintin books and Herge's life you could read 'Tintin the complete companion' by Michael Farr, 'Tintin and the world of Herge' by Benoit Peeters or 'Tintin the pocket essentials', available cheaply on Amazon. I have never read a Tintin book although I've heard of Tintin and seen the books from time to time all my life.

I have however read almost every Asterix book and have been an Asterix fan since a childhood days. Now I'd like to get into Tintin but don't know where to start. Which one book would you recommend as a first buy? Cheers, Cygnet. But all of them are varying levels of great except Soviets, Congo and America. It depends if you like reading series of books in chronological order or not. Mind, even if you do, I'm not sure I'd start off with the very early ones Land of the Soviets, Tintin in the Congo, Tintin in America as they're not as well plotted as later ones and might put you off.

Maybe you should start with the fourth Tintin book, Cigars of the Pharaoh , which is a great Tintin adventure set in Egypt, Arabia and India, and then go through the series in order from there. You can see the order they go in from the laid-out covers on the backs of the books.

Then, once you're fully converted, go back and read those first three early ones I mentioned! But if you don't care about reading them out of order and want to just dive into a book from the middle of the series, I'd just choose one you like the look of from the cover and from flicking through, depending on what genre or locations excite you.

They're all good! If you prefer an adventure without any baddies, Tintin in Tibet might appeal. Many adult Tintin readers seem to like it, as it has more emotional depth than most of the adventures.



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