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Tintin in America
Tintin in America | Herge
11 posts | 25 read
The classic graphic novel. Tintin comes to the U.S.A. to clean up the mean streets of Chicago but ends up in the wild west! Will Tintin make it back home?
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
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The_Book_Ninja
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Pickpick

Reading Tintins in order for the 1st time. Had some hardbacks from when I was a kid and collected all the ones I read in the library or never read at all so I now have the full collection. After reading the very basic “In the Land of the Soviets” & the religious propaganda & vile racism of “In the Congo” this feels like the first real fun adventure. Redrawn & coloured 15 years after original print, there‘s still some racism but the art is glorious

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Afzyaly
Pickpick

Better storyline. Colourful. Enjoyable.

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Mitch
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Had a great day in Brussels today - waffles, moules, beer and chocolate! And of course lots and lots of Herge!

mcctrish We have been there ❤️ it was my youngest‘s number one place to visit 5y
JamieArc J‘adore Tintin! 5y
fleeting Ahhh my favorite of all time! 5y
Mitch @mcctrish wer had a great time - lots to eat, see and do! 5y
Mitch @JamieArc The Tintin shop was pretty cool - i might just have bought a few little things...!! 5y
82 likes5 comments
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BruceWalken
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Just started reading Tintin and man I did not know how brutal it is! Tintin and Snowy get lynched for goodness sake!

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GondorGirl
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I don't normally take pictures of cosplayers, but this is the first Tintin I've seen!

#AwesomeCon

LauraJ I would‘ve taken a pic too. He nailed it 🖤 6y
LibrarianRyan I love it. 6y
tournevis Ha! 6y
66 likes3 comments
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Gitanjali
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Appreciated that Hergé called out the erasure of Native Americans in this comic.

5 likes1 stack add
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Gitanjali
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Gina
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Danish Palle Huld, 15 years old entered a contest in 1928 to reenact Jules Verne book "Around the world in 80 days" and possibly was the influence for the comic book Tintin.

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lifeless1
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While the scene is improved (mildly) in the later edition, it's not a whole hell of a lot better. The original even managed to add social commentary to what's otherwise a rather ignorant tableau.

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lifeless1
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Pickpick

I love Tintin comics, overtop storylines and period racism et al. I've decided to casually reread the core twenty-one books (Tintin in America through Tintin and the Picaros) and I'm finding it amusing to count how many times the plot is dependent on either blind luck or people being knocked unconscious easily.

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nandana
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My almost 2 year old "reading" Tintin, by which I mean she exclaims "Oh Nooo" wherever someone's falling down and points out the people she thinks are crying. Heartwarming to see her gravitate to books so much.