Autoren-Bilder

Gwen de Bonneval

Autor von Last Days of an Immortal

20 Werke 201 Mitglieder 14 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet die Namen: Gwen De Bonneval, Gwen de Bonneval

Reihen

Werke von Gwen de Bonneval

Last Days of an Immortal (2012) — Illustrator — 68 Exemplare
William and the Lost Spirit (2013) 39 Exemplare
Gilgamesj (2006) 20 Exemplare
Last of the Atlases, Chapter 1 (2019) — Autor — 18 Exemplare
Le dernier Atlas - Tome 2 (2020) — Autor — 10 Exemplare
Gilgamesh, Tome 2 : Le Sage (2005) 5 Exemplare
Varulf, tome 1 : La meute (2013) 4 Exemplare
Samedi et Dimanche, tome 1: Le paradis des cailloux (2001) — Illustrator — 4 Exemplare
L' insoumis (2012) 2 Exemplare
Le renégat (2012) 2 Exemplare
Verloren Ziel (2022) 2 Exemplare
Adam et Elle, Tome 1 : (2013) 2 Exemplare

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Ok read, ended oddly. Actually it just ended, abruptly...
 
Gekennzeichnet
davisfamily | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 11, 2022 |
Note: I received a digital review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
 
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fernandie | Sep 15, 2022 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3749388.html

I read the first volume in this series a couple of months ago, and enjoyed it; the second keeps up the pace, with a well-realised set of characters stealing a giant nuclear-powered battle robot from its resting place in Bombay and bringing it towards its destiny in the Algerian desert; meanwhile the baby born at the end of the previous volume has a very mysterious mark on its forehead which seems linked with the mysterious intrusion into our reality from another world. This volume is a little middle book-y as we travel from start to conclusion of the trilogy (in a giant killer robot floating westward over the Indian Ocean), but the pace is kept up very well. The third and final volume comes out next month, and I'm looking forward to it.… (mehr)
 
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nwhyte | Aug 27, 2021 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3673857.html

I'm always trying to broaden my reading of bande dessinées, and this won the Prix René Goscinny 2020 so I thought I would give it a go. The setting is a really interesting alternate history (uchronie as the French put it), in which France won the Algerian war by developing giant nuclear powered robots to stomp out the resistance; but in the end, Algeria gained independence after all after the 1976 Batna disaster (which everyone mutters about but has not yet been described) and the robots were all dismantled apart from one which is quietly rusting away in India. Our protagonist, a hoodlum from Nantes in roughly the present day (2020 ish, in the alternate timeline), is given the task of retrieving it for his crime boss. Meanwhile in the Algerian desert, something very strange is happening.

This is really good, and you don't need to be an expert in the history of France and Algeria to appreciate it. The characters are all well drawn and well depicted, and the scenes of France, Algeria and India are convincing, with the legacy of colonialism a major subtheme. Giant nuclear-powered robots are a silly idea, of course, but the point is that they and their crew became cult figures for kids in the 1970s like our protagonist, who still has his sticker book. Gloriously, the robot he is sent to India to retrieve is named after George Sand, the embodiment of French culture stomping out the natives.
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
nwhyte | 1 weitere Rezension | May 17, 2021 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
20
Mitglieder
201
Beliebtheit
#109,507
Bewertung
½ 3.5
Rezensionen
14
ISBNs
31
Sprachen
3

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