Particularize Books As Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14)
Original Title: | Le temple du soleil |
ISBN: | 140520625X (ISBN13: 9781405206259) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Tintin #14 |
Characters: | Tintin, Captain Archibald Haddock, Zorrino, Thomson & Thompson, Snowy, Professor Calculus |
Setting: | Peru (Perú)(Peru) |

Hergé
Paperback | Pages: 62 pages Rating: 4.22 | 12110 Users | 239 Reviews
Present Regarding Books Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14)
Title | : | Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14) |
Author | : | Hergé |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 62 pages |
Published | : | 2002 by Egmont (first published 1946) |
Categories | : | Sequential Art. Comics. Graphic Novels. Bande Dessinée. Adventure. Fiction |
Commentary Toward Books Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14)
After The Seven Crystal Balls set the eerie stage, Tintin and his friends continue their adventures in Peru. There Tintin rescues an orange-seller named Zorrino from being bullied, and the young man becomes their guide in their quest to find the Temple of the Sun. But they find more than they bargained for and end up in a hot spot. The perils of this engaging two-part adventure are especially harrowing in their combination of the supernatural and the real, although the resolution is a little too deus ex machina. Calculus and the Thompsons provide their usual comic relief.Rating Regarding Books Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14)
Ratings: 4.22 From 12110 Users | 239 ReviewsCritique Regarding Books Prisoners of the Sun (Tintin #14)
Or: Captain Haddock and the llamas. What confused me is that sometimes haddock and Tintin adresses each other with "Tu " and in other times with "vous". Same goes for Tintin and the Inca.This is the concluding part of Tintin's adventure in Peru and the Inca.I would have liked this book more if there were an elaboration on how the Inca made the expedition members sick (see The Seven Crystal Balls). The plot seems rushed, and the foolishness of the Thompson twins does not amuse and serves only as an annoying irrelevance. In essence, "The Seven Crystal Balls" and "The Prisoners of The Sun" can be seen as prototypes of arguably the best Tintin book, "Tintin in Tibet". Tintin and
The Inca curse takes Tintin and Haddock to Peru17 February 2012 It took me a while to get around to reading this one (okay, it was a week, but then again I am re-reading all of my Tintin comics, and getting my hands on the ones that I don't have, though I have found that getting a copy of Tintin in the Congo is going to be an expensive endeavour) but I finally read it this morning and I must say that I absolutely loved it. This is an adventure story in the truest sense of the word. It pretty

Le Temple du Soleil is the sequel to The Seven Crystal Balls (which I have unfortunately never managed to fully read) and while it is definitely a tale of both engaging high spirited adventure and often even rather majorly hilarious and funny in scope, especially with regard to Captain Haddock's antics and general attitudes (like the repeated times he gets spit in the face by llamas, for considering that llamas tend to only engage in this type of behaviour when and if they are seriously annoyed
Wow... I loved the art in this one! Best art work so far! The story was good but not great although I have to recognize that Hergé had to study a lot in order to write this comic book. The surroundings are well portraited, names are correct and most Peruvian concepts are almost correct. (At the beginning there is a South American map... 0/10 in geography). I don't give this issue a 5 stars just because of the unnecessary animal killing, also there is a part where Captain Haddock killed the "bad
Le Temple du Soleil is the sequel to The Seven Crystal Balls (which I have unfortunately never managed to fully read) and while it is definitely a tale of both engaging high spirited adventure and often even rather majorly hilarious and funny in scope, especially with regard to Captain Haddock's antics and general attitudes (like the repeated times he gets spit in the face by llamas, for considering that llamas tend to only engage in this type of behaviour when and if they are seriously annoyed
Tintin, Snowy, and Captain Haddock go in search of Professor Calculus and end up in Peru.
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