The Adventures of Tintin The Blue Lotus(丁丁历险记:蓝莲花)

分类: 图书,进口原版,Children's Book 儿童书,Ages 9-12 9~12岁少儿,
基本信息·出版社:Little Brown and Company
·页码:62 页
·出版日期:1984年
·ISBN:0316358568
·条形码:9780316358569
·包装版本:1984-06-01
·装帧:平装
·开本:16开
·外文书名:丁丁历险记:蓝莲花
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内容简介在线阅读本书
Picking up where he left off in the Egyptian adventure Cigars of the Pharaoh, Tintin travels to China in The Blue Lotus, a tale which is generally considered Herges first masterpiece. Its also Tintins only foray into actual history, specifically the Sino-Japanese conflicts of the early 1930s. The political tensions combined with the chilling threats of drugs give the story an especially high and realistic sense of danger. Herges interest in China was spurred by a friendship with a young Chinese student named Chang Chong-chen, a relationship that Tintin mirrors with a Chinese boy also named Chang Chong-chen. Herge paints a vivid picture of China and takes the opportunity to denounce ethnic prejudices (though ironically his artistic depiction of the Japanese businessman Mitsuhirato is quite grotesque). Years later, Tintins relationship with Chang would become the basis of Tintin in Tibet.--This text refers to theHardcoveredition.
作者简介Herge was born in Belgium in 1907. The first Tintin story appeared in 1929 in the childrens magazine Le Petit Vingtieme. The Adventures of Tintin in the Land of the Soviets followed shortly thereafter. It was the first book in a series of 23 full length Tintin adventures. Herge died in 1983.--This text refers to theHardcoveredition.
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Amazon.com
Picking up where he left off in the Egyptian adventureCigars of the Pharaoh, Tintin travels to China inThe Blue Lotus, a tale which is generally considered Herge''s first masterpiece. It''s also Tintin''s only foray into actual history, specifically the Sino-Japanese conflicts of the early 1930s. The political tensions combined with the chilling threats of drugs give the story an especially high and realistic sense of danger. Herge''s interest in China was spurred by a friendship with a young Chinese student named Chang Chong-chen, a relationship that Tintin mirrors with a Chinese boy also named Chang Chong-chen. Herge paints a vivid picture of China and takes the opportunity to denounce ethnic prejudices (though ironically his artistic depiction of the Japanese businessman Mitsuhirato is quite grotesque). Years later, Tintin''s relationship with Chang would become the basis ofTintin in Tibet.--David Horiuchi