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Title:The Broken Ear (Tintin #6)
Author:Hergé
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:American Edition
Pages:Pages: 62 pages
Published:May 30th 1978 by Little, Brown and Co. (first published 1937)
Categories:Sequential Art. Comics. Graphic Novels. Bande Dessinée. Adventure. Fiction
Download Books Online The Broken Ear (Tintin #6)
The Broken Ear (Tintin #6) Paperback | Pages: 62 pages
Rating: 3.88 | 8538 Users | 220 Reviews

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The Broken Ear is probably the adventure of Tintin that I know the least well. What for? Probably because this is the last album I had in my possession and so it could not dethrone my favourites of the series... So here is an adventure, which, for once, begins in Belgium. A fetish has been stolen from the ethnographic museum and Tintin will soon embark on the trail of the alleged thieves. I couldn't help but smile when I took this album when I saw the parrot! Hergé likes these birds and besides, they are always very characteristic!! As our young reporter is a great traveller, we'll meet him at the San Theodoros. He'll find himself helping the current general's camp as the revolutions and civil war reigns there. General Alcazar, who will be found in other albums, is for the moment quite imbued with himself and quite stuffed ... It's not yet the friendly guerrillas, (finally Picaro ), found in the last album of the series. For now, he is above all a tyrant, who is quite receptive to the attempts of the arms dealer Basil Bazaroff ... Tintin will have to overcome many dangers and especially avoid the duo who swore his loss before succeeding in elucidating the mystery of the fetish with a broken ear...

Particularize Books During The Broken Ear (Tintin #6)

Original Title: L'Oreille cassée
ISBN: 0316358509 (ISBN13: 9780316358507)
Edition Language: English
Series: Tintin #6
Characters: Tintin, Thomson & Thompson, Snowy, General Alcazar
Setting: San Theodoros, South America,1937 Amazon Rainforest


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Ratings: 3.88 From 8538 Users | 220 Reviews

Critique About Books The Broken Ear (Tintin #6)


I have a vivid memory of this being the first Tintin I ever watched (in the cartoon series made in the early 90s), long before I was able to get my hands on a copy of it. So, I'm pretty sure this review is a nostalgic tribute more than anything else. Although, I must admit, that the story goes into a long strange tangent around the middle of the book, which derails the main plot. It seems that Tintin would never get any work done (or even stay alive) if it weren't for the kindness of strangers,

When you read these comics by the French Herge it is easy to see how the influence of these comics have had on the likes of Spielberg and Lucas. These adventures can easily be projected upon the Indiana Jones adventures which also concern a globetrotting hero who gets involved in cases that steer clear of the normal human. In this one Tintin gets involved in the theft of a South American fetish or statue with a broken ear. It involves a parrot who knows the perpetrator of the murder of a

When you read these comics by the French Herge it is easy to see how the influence of these comics have had on the likes of Spielberg and Lucas. These adventures can easily be projected upon the Indiana Jones adventures which also concern a globetrotting hero who gets involved in cases that steer clear of the normal human. In this one Tintin gets involved in the theft of a South American fetish or statue with a broken ear. It involves a parrot who knows the perpetrator of the murder of a

This volume sees Tintin on the trail of a stolen idol from a South American native tribe. There he arrives in the middle of an ongoing revolution not to mention potential war with a neighbouring country with this agenda being pushed by oil companies. This was actually based on a real conflict between Bolivia and Paraguay and involving Shell and Standard Oil.Tintin eventually meets members of the tribe who the idol was made by. There are some slight racist shades similar to Tintin in the Congo

An interesting read, but without the captain it was a little dry and bland.

Another funny adventure by Tin-tin and Milu! The scenes in Latin America are really funny, especially when Alcazar takes Tin-tin for an admirer and decides to nominate him his Aide de Camp! Very funny and witty, as always. The relentless persecution by dutiful Dupond and Dupont continues, much for their own aggravation - in fact, they LIKE Tin-tin, and are still trying to detain him out of a sense of duty...Maria Carmo,Lisbon 6 January 2015.

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