Land of Black Gold

Land of Black Gold
(Tintin au pays de l'or noir)
Tintin and Snowy are driving Dr. Müller and Thomson and Thompson in a jeep across the desert.
Cover of the English edition
Date
  • 1950
  • 1971 (remake)
SeriesThe Adventures of Tintin
PublisherCasterman
Creative team
CreatorHergé
Original publication
Published in
Date of publication28 September 1939 – 8 May 1940 (unfinished) / 16 September 1948 – 23 February 1950
LanguageFrench
Translation
PublisherMethuen
Date1972
Translator
  • Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper
  • Michael Turner
Chronology
Preceded byKing Ottokar's Sceptre (1939) (original) Prisoners of the Sun (1949)
Followed byDestination Moon (1953)

Land of Black Gold (French: Tintin au pays de l'or noir) is the fifteenth volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé. The story was commissioned by the conservative Belgian newspaper Le Vingtième Siècle for its children's supplement Le Petit Vingtième, in which it was initially serialised from September 1939 until the German invasion of Belgium in May 1940, at which the newspaper was shut down and the story interrupted. After eight years, Hergé returned to Land of Black Gold, completing its serialisation in Belgium's Tintin magazine from September 1948 to February 1950, after which it was published in a collected volume by Casterman in 1950. Set on the eve of a European war, the plot revolves around the attempts of young Belgian reporter Tintin to uncover a militant group responsible for sabotaging oil supplies in the Middle East.

At the request of Hergé's British publisher, Methuen, in 1971 he made a range of alterations to the Land of Black Gold, transferring the setting from the British Mandate for Palestine to the fictional state of Khemed. As with the revised edition of The Black Island, most of the changes to this third version of the volume were carried out by Hergé's assistant, Bob de Moor. Hergé followed Land of Black Gold with Destination Moon, while The Adventures of Tintin itself became a defining part of the Franco-Belgian comics tradition. Critical approaches to the story have been mixed, with differing opinions expressed as to the competing merits of the volume's three versions. The story was adapted for the 1991 animated series The Adventures of Tintin by Ellipse and Nelvana.


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