Tembo Tabou

Tembo Tabou, written by Franquin and Greg, drawn by Franquin and Jean Roba, is the twenty-fourth album of the Spirou et Fantasio series, and the twentieth under Franquin's authorship. The story was initially serialised in Le Parisien Libéré in 1959, and later in Spirou magazine, before it was published, along with the Marsupilami story La Cage, as a hardcover album in 1974.

Spirou et Fantasio #24
Tembo Tabou
Cover of the Belgian edition
Date1974
SeriesSpirou et Fantasio
PublisherDupuis
Creative team
WritersFranquin
with Greg
ArtistsFranquin
with Jean Roba
Original publication
Published inLe Parisien Libéré,
Spirou magazine
IssuesUnknown,
#1721 - #1723, #1420
Date of publication1959, 1971
LanguageFrench
ISBN2-8001-0351-5
Chronology
Preceded byTora Torapa, 1973
Followed byLe gri-gri du Niokolo-Koba, 1974

Story

In Tembo Tabou, Spirou and Fantasio find themselves on another expedition travelling upstream an African river, in search of vanished American author Oliver Gurgling Thirstywell. Events become increasingly more strange when they discover red elephants, befriend a pygmy tribe, learn of Marsupilami's love of eating warrior ants, and confront a gang of "protection racket" thugs who cultivate meat-eating plants.

The story The Cage cronicles an awful day at work for intrepid poacher Bring M. Backalive, obsessed with capturing a living sample of a baby Marsupilami, who learns the cost of angering a Marsupilami father.

Background

The title story of this album was produced in the period between the making of Spirou et les hommes-bulles and QRN sur Bretzelburg.

Trivia

In the 1970s, Swedish publishing house Carlsen Comics deemed the story's contents to be racially offensive, and the album was never published in Sweden. However, it was published in Denmark by Interpresse.[1] The story was later published in Sweden in book form, included in the collected series of Franquin's Spirou.

gollark: I mean, every other metabolic process runs at 37 degrees C fine.
gollark: I'm sure some other animals make it work.
gollark: It should simply be better designed.
gollark: Well, "decisions".
gollark: The human body is simultaneously thousands of engineering miracles and blatantly insane design decisions.

References

Footnotes

  1. Daniel Andréason, Kirk Reichmann. "Spirou enligt Franquin" (in Swedish).


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.