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{{short description|Comic album by Belgian cartoonist HergĂ©}} {{good article}} {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} {{Use British English|date=August 2013}} {{Infobox graphic novel |title=Explorers on the Moon |foreigntitle=On a marchĂ© sur la Lune |image=The Adventures of Tintin - 17 - Explorers on the Moon.jpg |alt=Wearing space suits, Tintin, Snowy, and Haddock are exploring the surface of the moon, with their rocket ship in the background. |caption=Cover of the English edition |publisher=[[Casterman]] |date=1954 |series=''[[The Adventures of Tintin]]'' |creator=[[HergĂ©]] |origlanguage=French |origpublication=''[[Tintin (magazine)|Tintin]]'' magazine |origdate=29 Oct 1952 â 29 Dec 1953 |origisbn=<!-- ISBN was not created until 1965 --> |transpublisher=[[Methuen Publishing|Methuen]] |transdate=1959 |transisbn=<!-- ISBN was not created until 1965 --> |translator={{plainlist| *Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper *Michael Turner}} |previous=''[[Destination Moon (comics)|Destination Moon]]'' |previous-date=1953 |next=''[[The Calculus Affair]]'' |next-date=1956 }} '''''Explorers on the Moon''''' ({{langx|fr|link=no|'''On a marchĂ© sur la Lune'''}}; literally: ''We walked on the Moon'') is the seventeenth volume of ''[[The Adventures of Tintin]]'', the comics series by Belgian cartoonist [[HergĂ©]]. The story was [[Serial (literature)|serialised]] weekly in Belgium's ''[[Tintin (magazine)|Tintin]]'' magazine from October 1952 to December 1953 before being published in a collected volume by [[Casterman]] in 1954. Completing a story arc begun in the preceding volume, ''[[Destination Moon (comics)|Destination Moon]]'' (1953), the narrative tells of the young reporter [[Tintin (character)|Tintin]], his dog [[Snowy (character)|Snowy]], and friends [[Captain Haddock]], [[Professor Calculus]], and [[Thomson and Thompson]] who are aboard humanity's first crewed rocket mission to the Moon. Developed in part through the suggestions of HergĂ©'s friends [[Bernard Heuvelmans]] and [[Jacques Van Melkebeke]], ''Explorers on the Moon'' was produced following HergĂ©'s extensive research into the possibility of human space travel â a feat that had yet to be achieved â with the cartoonist seeking for the work to be as realistic as possible. HergĂ© continued ''The Adventures of Tintin'' with ''[[The Calculus Affair]]'', while the series itself became a defining part of the [[Franco-Belgian comics|Franco-Belgian comics tradition]]. Critics have held the illustrative detail of the book in high regard, but have expressed divided opinions of the story; some consider it to be among the most mature and emotionally resonant entries in the series, while others fault it for downplaying the humour seen in previous volumes in favour of the scientific focus of the narrative. The story was adapted for the 1957 [[Belvision Studios|Belvision]] animated series ''[[HergĂ©'s Adventures of Tintin]]'', the 1989 computer game ''[[Tintin on the Moon]]'', the 1991 [[Ellipse ProgrammĂ©|Ellipse]]/[[Nelvana]] animated series ''[[The Adventures of Tintin (TV series)|The Adventures of Tintin]]'', and the 1992-3 [[BBC Radio 5 (former)|BBC Radio 5]] dramatisation of the ''Adventures''. ==Synopsis== :''The synopsis continues a plot begun in ''[[Destination Moon (comics)|Destination Moon]]''.'' [[Professor Calculus]], [[Tintin (character)|Tintin]], [[Snowy (character)|Snowy]], [[Captain Haddock]], and Calculus's assistant [[Frank Wolff (comics)|Frank Wolff]] are aboard an atomic rocket-powered [[spacecraft]] leaving the [[Earth]] bound for the [[Moon]]. Soon after takeoff they discover that the detectives [[Thomson and Thompson]] have accidentally stowed away on board, thinking the launch was set for 1:34 P.M., and not A.M., putting a strain on the oxygen supply. The detectives accidentally turn off the [[Nuclear thermal rocket|nuclear motor]], disrupting the [[artificial gravity]] and sending everyone [[Weightlessness#Weightlessness in a spacecraft|floating]] until Tintin corrects the problem. They then suffer a relapse of the Formula 14 drug (seen in ''[[Land of Black Gold]]''), resulting in their hair growing rapidly in multiple colours, until Calculus subsequently administers a cure. {{anchor|AnchorAlcohol}}Haddock, who has smuggled whisky aboard the rocket, [[Captain_Haddock#AnchorAlcohol|gets drunk]] and takes an impromptu [[Extra-vehicular activity|spacewalk]], during which he briefly becomes a [[satellite]] of the [[asteroid]] [[2101 Adonis|Adonis]], but Tintin is able to rescue him.{{sfn|HergĂ©|2003|pp=1-11}} The rocket lands in the [[Hipparchus (lunar crater)|Hipparchus Crater]], with Tintin being the first human to step on the Moon. Next day, Calculus and Wolff set up optical instruments to begin observational work on the Moon while Tintin and Haddock build the Moon tank. Two days later, Haddock, Wolff and Tintin take the Moon tank to explore some [[stalactite]] caves in the direction of the [[Ptolemaeus (lunar crater)|Ptolemaeus Crater]]; inside a cave Snowy slips into an ice-covered chasm, but Tintin rescues him. Later aboard the ship, Tintin is ambushed and left bound in the hold by a third stowaway, [[Colonel Jorgen]], a spy who had been smuggled aboard by Wolff, who has been blackmailed by a foreign power for which Jorgen works and Snowy's leg gets injured while being ambushed by Jorgen. Tintin finally places the bandages around Snowy's injured leg to heal completely. With Wolff's help, Jorgen seeks to hijack the ship and return it to Earth, but Tintin escapes and foils him through emergency sabotage that cuts power to the engine.{{sfn|HergĂ©|2003|pp=12-48}} Due to the strain on the oxygen supplies, the crew decides to abandon the Moon tank and the optical instruments and to cut short the lunar stay. The repair work is completed slightly ahead of schedule, and the rocket is cleared for lift-off. After launch, Jorgen escapes his bonds due to the detectives' bungling and tries to kill Tintin and the others with a gun; Wolff seeks to prevent him, and in their struggle over the gun, Jorgen is shot through his heart, killing him. When it is revealed that there will not be enough oxygen aboard for the crew to survive the journey, Wolff sacrifices himself by opening the [[airlock]] and [[space exposure|floating out into space]] to his death. Upon approaching Earth, the crew falls unconscious, but Tintin wakes long enough to set the rocket to auto-pilot and it arrives back in [[Syldavia]] safely. After landing, the crew is rescued in the nick of time. During the heroes' welcome home party, Calculus hopes they may return to the Moon someday, but Haddock refuses, revealing that the expedition has taught him that "Man's proper place is on dear old Earth".{{sfn|HergĂ©|2003|pp=49-62}} ==History== ===Background=== HergĂ© first devised the idea of sending Tintin on a mission to the Moon while he was working on ''[[Prisoners of the Sun]]'' (1949).{{sfn|Farr|2001|p=135}} His decision to move into the field of [[science fiction]] might have been influenced by his friendly rivalry with his colleague [[Edgar P. Jacobs]], who had recently had success with his own science fiction comic, ''[[The Secret of the Swordfish]]'' (1950â53).{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=218}} He decided that it would be a two-volume story arc, as had proved successful with his earlier arcs, ''[[Cigars of the Pharaoh]]'' (1934) and ''[[The Blue Lotus]]'' (1936), ''[[The Secret of the Unicorn]]'' (1943) and ''[[Red Rackham's Treasure]]'' (1944), and ''[[The Seven Crystal Balls]]'' (1948) and ''Prisoners of the Sun''.{{sfn|Farr|2001|p=135}} He had initially intended on beginning this story after the culmination of ''Prisoners of the Sun'', but both his wife Germaine Remi and his close friend Marcel Dehaye convinced him to proceed with ''[[Land of Black Gold]]'' (1950), a story that he had previously left unfinished, instead.{{sfn|Goddin|2009|p=189}} [[File:Bundesarchiv RH8II Bild-B0788-42 BSM, PeenemĂŒnde, Startvorbereitungen V2.jpg|thumb|left|A German V-2 rocket being tested in 1942. The V-2 would serve as a major inspiration for HergĂ© in his work on both ''Destination Moon'' and ''Explorers on the Moon''.]] Seeking advice on the story, HergĂ© consulted his friend [[Bernard Heuvelmans]], who had authored the non-fiction book ''L'Homme parmi les Ă©toiles'' ("Man Among the Stars") (1944).{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=218}} In autumn 1947, Heuvelmans and [[Jacques Van Melkebeke]] developed a script for the story, which they gave to HergĂ©. This version based Calculus' lunar expedition in a fictional location, Radio City, in the United States. It featured a return of Professor Decimus Phostle, a character who had previously appeared in ''[[The Shooting Star]]'' (1942), but this time as an antagonist; Phostle had sold the secrets of the mission in order to attain funds to buy a diamond for the actress [[Rita Hayworth]].{{sfnm|1a1=Thompson|1y=1991|1pp=138â139|2a1=Farr|2y=2001|2p=138|3a1=Lofficier|3a2=Lofficier|3y=2002|3p=65|4a1=Peeters|4y=2012|4p=218}} In early 1948, HergĂ© produced two black-and-white pages of this version of the story before abandoning it.{{sfnm|1a1=Peeters|1y=1989|1p=94|2a1=Thompson|2y=1991|2p=139|3a1=Peeters|3y=2012|3p=218}} HergĂ© retained some elements of this original script in his finished version, namely the scenes in which Haddock drinks whiskey in a gravity-free environment and that in which Haddock goes for a space walk and nearly becomes a satellite of Adonis, which appear on pages 5 and 8 of ''Explorers on the Moon''.{{sfnm|1a1=Thompson|1y=1991|1p=139|2a1=Peeters|2y=2012|2pp=220â221}} [[File:Tintin Moon Rocket 20180505 102451.jpg|thumb|left|A model of the rocket at Brussels Airport]] Nevertheless, Heuvelmans thought his influence on the story to be more significant, stating that "in going through the two books we [he and Van Melkebeke] really had the impression that it was what we had originally done at the beginning. In broad outline, that was it".{{sfn|Assouline|2009|p=172}} HergĂ© hoped for the story to be as realistic as possible, and sought to eschew fantastical elements.{{sfnm|1a1=Peeters|1y=1989|1p=94|2a1=Farr|2y=2001|2p=135}} In his own words, it contained "no moonmen, no monsters, no incredible surprises".{{sfn|Peeters|1989|p=94}} To ensure this realism, he collected a wide range of documents about [[rocket]]s and space travel with which to conduct research.{{Sfn|Farr|2001|p=136}} In this he was aided by Heuvelmans, who collected pictures of rockets and atomic research facilities for him.{{sfnm|1a1=Assouline|1y=2009|1p=172|2a1=Peeters|2y=2012|2p=222}} HergĂ©'s research archive included [[Man Will Conquer Space Soon!|an article]] from the American magazine ''[[Collier's]]'' which discussed how humanity could reach the Moon,{{sfn|Farr|2001|p=136}} as well as books by [[Pierre Rousseau]] and [[Auguste Piccard]].{{sfn|Assouline|2009|p=170}} A further work that he used was ''L'Astronautique'' (1950), a book on putative space travel by the physicist [[Alexander Ananoff]],{{sfnm|1a1=Lofficier|1a2=Lofficier|1y=2002|1p=65|2a1=Goddin|2y=2011|2p=8}} with whom HergĂ© began a correspondence in April 1950.{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=225}} He also visited the [[Ateliers de Constructions Electriques de Charleroi]]'s Center for Atomic Research, striking up a subsequent correspondence with its director, [[Max Hoyaux]].{{sfnm|1a1=Assouline|1y=2009|1pp=170â171|2a1=Peeters|2y=2012|2p=225}} HergĂ© incorporated much of this technical information into the story, but juxtaposed it with moments of humour to make it more accessible to his young readership.{{sfn|Thompson|1991|p=143}} According to literary critics [[Jean-Marc Lofficier]] and Randy Lofficier, possible fictional influences on HergĂ©'s story include [[Jules Verne]]'s 1870 novel ''[[Around the Moon]]'' and the 1950 American film ''[[Destination Moon (film)|Destination Moon]]''.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=65}} HergĂ© was certainly inspired by a number of photographic stills from the ''Destination Moon'' film which had been published.{{sfn|Goddin|2011|p=10}} The computer system at the Sprodj space centre was visually based upon the [[UNIVAC I]], the first computer to be created for non-military purposes.{{sfn|Goddin|2011|p=22}} HergĂ© based his Moon rocket on the designs of the [[V-2 rocket]] which had been developed by German scientists during [[World War II]].{{sfn|Farr|2001|p=136}} The red-and-white checker pattern on HergĂ©'s rocket was based upon an illustration of a V-2 which HergĂ© had come upon in [[Leslie Simon]]'s 1947 book ''German Research in World War II''.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=65}} He commissioned the construction of a model rocket with detachable parts from his assistant Arthur Van Noeyen. He took the model to [[Paris]] where he showed it to Ananoff, asking him if it was a realistic representation of what a Moon rocket might look like. He and his assistants then used the model from which to accurately sketch when producing the comic.{{sfnm|1a1=Peeters|1y=1989|1p=95|2a1=Thompson|2y=1991|2pp=142â143|3a1=Farr|3y=2001|3p=136|4a1=Assouline|4y=2009|4p=171|5a1=Peeters|5y=2012|5p=227}} HergĂ© introduced into the story the character of Boris Jorgen, who had previously appeared as an antagonist in ''[[King Ottokar's Sceptre]]'' (1939).{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=64}} He added evidence for [[water on the Moon]] on the advice of Heuvelmans.{{sfnm|1a1=Thompson|1y=1991|1p=146|2a1=Farr|2y=2001|2p=138}} ===Publication=== On 7 September 1950, HergĂ© broke off the story with the statement "end of part one".{{sfnm|1a1=Peeters|1y=2012|1p=227|2a1=Goddin|2y=2011|2p=13}} He felt the need for a break from work, having fallen back into clinical depression. He and his wife Germaine went on holiday to [[Gland, Switzerland|Gland]] in Switzerland, before returning to Brussels in late September.{{sfn|Peeters|2012|pp=227â228}} Many readers sent letters to ''Tintin'' magazine asking why ''Explorers on the Moon'' was no longer being serialised, with a rumour emerging that HergĂ© had died.{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=230}} On 18 April 1951, he published an open letter in the magazine explaining his absence as a result of illness caused by exhaustion and included an illustration of himself sprawled out on an armchair.{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=230}} As HergĂ© planned his return to work, covers of ''Tintin'' magazine announced the imminent return of the story.{{sfn|Goddin|2011|p=17}} ''Explorers on the Moon'' would resume after an eighteen-month hiatus,{{sfnm|1a1=Thompson|1y=1991|1p=149|2a1=Farr|2y=2001|2p=141}} returning in the 9 April 1952 issue, accompanied with a summary of the story so far.{{Sfn|Peeters|2012|p=232}} Its final installment appeared on 31 December 1953.{{sfn|Assouline|2009|p=172}} ===Republication=== Upon the serial's publication, HergĂ© faced criticism for including Wolff's suicide in the story; suicide was widely viewed as a sin in Catholic-dominated Belgium. In deference to these critics, for the published book version he added Wolff's line of "perhaps by some miracle I shall escape too", to make the scene seem a less obvious suicide. Years later, HergĂ© expressed regret that he had capitulated on this issue.{{sfnm|1a1=Peeters|1y=1989|1p=97|2a1=Thompson|2y=1991|2p=148|3a1=Assouline|3y=2009|3p=74}} The story was collected together and published by Editions Casterman as ''On a MarchĂ© Sur La Lune'' in 1954.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=63}} Casterman were unhappy with this title, which translates as "We Walked on the Moon", but HergĂ© resolutely refused to make a change.{{sfn|Thompson|1991|p=149}} ==Critical analysis== Jean-Marc Lofficier and Randy Lofficier believed that the two-part story "belongs" to Calculus as his "cosmic vision moves the story forward".{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=64}} They further expressed the opinion that Wolff was a unique character in the ''Adventures of Tintin'', suggesting that he is akin to a character from a [[John le CarrĂ©]] novel.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=64}} Referring specifically to ''Explorers on the Moon'', they opined that it was "a true epic of the human imagination", believing that its depiction of the Moon has "withstood the test of time" more than other "proto-space exploration novels".{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=66}} They felt that the Moon adventure was "HergĂ© at his best... a triumphant achievement on every level", awarding both halves of the story five stars out of five.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=66}} [[File:Benoit Peeters 20100329 Salon du livre de Paris 3.jpg|thumb|right|HergĂ© biographer [[BenoĂźt Peeters]] ''(pictured, 2010)'' felt that Wolff's character brought "a tragic note" to the story.{{sfn|Peeters|2012|p=97}}]] HergĂ© biographer [[Pierre Assouline]] felt that the two Moon adventures "mark a stage in the development of HergĂ©'s work".{{Sfn|Assouline|2009|p=174}} HergĂ© biographer [[BenoĂźt Peeters]] praised the "gradual introduction into the story of a real dimension of evil" as being something particularly effective.{{sfn|Peeters|1989|p=97}} He also expressed the view that Wolff brings "a tragic note" to the story, comparing him to the characters in the stories of [[Graham Greene]].{{sfn|Peeters|1989|p=97}} He was critical of the two-part story arc, stating that they had "neither the liveliness and dynamism" of ''The Secret of the Unicorn'' and ''Red Rackham's Treasure'', "nor the supernatural quality" of ''The Seven Crystal Balls''-''Prisoners of the Sun''.{{sfn|Peeters|1989|p=97}} [[Harry Thompson]] noted that ''Explorers on the Moon'' was widely regarded as HergĂ©'s "greatest artistic achievement",{{sfn|Thompson|1991|p=144}} describing the entire Moon adventure as "a technical masterpiece" as a result of its "uncannily accurate" depiction of the Moon.{{sfn|Thompson|1991|p=138}} Thompson expressed his opinion that ''Explorers'' could be compared to the work of science-fiction writers [[Jules Verne]] and [[H. G. Wells]].{{sfn|Thompson|1991|p=146}} Focusing on the scene in which the Thom(p)sons' hair grows rapidly in bright colours, he stated that it provides an abrupt contrast with "the almost scholastic nature of the rest of the story", and that it "injects a few bright splashes" into an otherwise "carefully restrained colour scheme".{{sfn|Thompson|1991|pp=146â147}} Philippe Goddin praised the depiction of the rocket's landing as "a magnificent spectacle, well worth the double space spread given by HergĂ©",{{sfn|Goddin|2011|p=29}} also highlighting what he perceived as the ending's "unprecedented dramatic tension".{{sfn|Goddin|2011|p=36}} In his [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalytical]] study of the ''Adventures of Tintin'', the [[literary criticism|literary critic]] Jean-Marie ApostolidĂšs praised the ''Destination Moon''-''Explorers on the Moon'' story arc for its "meticulous attention to scientific facts", but added that this had also resulted in the story's "rather pedagogical tone".{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=179}} He added that in these stories, the main division was "no longer Good and Evil" as it had been in previous ''Adventures'', but "Truth and Error".{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=179}} ApostolidĂšs opined that despite being a "fussy and somewhat ridiculous character", through his scientific achievements Calculus grows to the "stature of a giant" in this arc, eclipsing Sir Francis Haddock (from ''The Secret of the Unicorn'') as the series' "founding ancestor".{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=182}} He goes on to claim that in becoming the "sacred ancestor", the voyage to the Moon becomes "a mystical quest" with science as its guiding religion.{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=184}} Drawing comparisons between this arc and the ''Prisoners of the Sun'' story, he drew symbolic links between the scientific centre and the Inca Temple of the Sun, but noted that here Calculus was the "high priest" rather than the sacrificial victim as he had been in the previous story.{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|pp=184â185}} Moving on to discuss the Moon rocket in these stories, ApostolidĂšs described it as a phallic object which penetrated the "virgin territory" of the Moon.{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=186}} At the same time, he described the rocket as a "maternal belly" in which the space explorers slept.{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|p=186}} Commenting specifically on ''Explorers on the Moon'' he commented that the protagonists of the story reverted to childhood when exploring the Moon, believing that they had treated it like a [[theme park]].{{sfn|ApostolidĂšs|2010|pp=187â188}} Literary critic [[Tom McCarthy (novelist)|Tom McCarthy]] stated that in the ''Destination Moon''-''Explorers of the Moon'' story arc, Calculus "embodies HergĂ©'s... own wartime position, spun out into a post-war environment", representing a genius driven by his work whose activities are coincidental to national and political causes.{{sfn|McCarthy|2006|p=42}} He suggested that ''Explorers on the Moon'' was "perhaps both the most wildly adventurous and the most contemplative" instalment in the series.{{sfn|McCarthy|2006|p=172}} He felt that the inclusion of Jorgen being smuggled aboard the rocket as a stowaway reflected the idea of the "stranger" penetrating the "home", something which he thought was present in other ''Adventures''.{{sfn|McCarthy|2006|p=79}} Commenting on the scene in which Haddock smuggles a whisky bottle inside the ''Guide to Astronomy'', he states "the text, in this case, is hollow, smuggling something else", which he believed was a reversal of the appearance of a parchment hidden within a model ship in ''The Secret of the Unicorn''.{{sfn|McCarthy|2006|p=17}} ==Adaptation== In 1957, the animation company [[Belvision Studios]] produced [[HergĂ©'s Adventures of Tintin|a string of colour adaptations]] based on HergĂ©'s original comics, adapting eight of the ''Adventures'' into a series of daily five-minute episodes. ''Explorers on the Moon'' was the second to be adapted in the second animated series; it was directed by Ray Goossens and written by [[Greg (cartoonist)|Greg]], a well-known cartoonist who was to become editor-in-chief of ''[[Tintin (magazine)|Tintin]]'' magazine.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|pp=87â88}} In 1991, a [[The Adventures of Tintin (TV series)|second animated series]] based upon ''The Adventures of Tintin'' was produced, this time as a collaboration between the French studio [[Ellipse Programme|Ellipse]] and the Canadian animation company [[Nelvana]]. ''Explorers on the Moon'' was the fifteenth story to be adapted and was divided into two twenty-minute episodes. Directed by StĂ©phane Bernasconi, the series has been praised for being "generally faithful" to the original comics, to the extent that the animation was directly adopted from HergĂ©'s original panels.{{sfn|Lofficier|Lofficier|2002|p=90}} ==References== ===Footnotes=== {{reflist|30em}} ===Bibliography=== {{refbegin|30em}} * {{cite book |title=The Metamorphoses of Tintin, or Tintin for Adults |last=ApostolidĂšs |first=Jean-Marie |author-link=Jean-Marie ApostolidĂšs |others=Jocelyn Hoy (translator) |year=2010 |orig-year=2006 |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford |isbn=978-0-8047-6031-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GiktoScv17oC }} * {{cite book |title=HergĂ©, the Man Who Created Tintin |last=Assouline |first=Pierre |author-link=Pierre Assouline |others=Charles Ruas (translator) |year=2009 |orig-year=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford and New York |isbn=978-0-19-539759-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YsyEMjvdYJgC }} * {{cite book |title=Tintin: The Complete Companion |last=Farr |first=Michael |author-link=Michael Farr |year=2001 |publisher=John Murray |location=London |isbn=978-0-7195-5522-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DcytngEACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=The Art of HergĂ©, Inventor of Tintin: Volume 2: 1937-1949 |last=Goddin |first=Philippe |author-link=Philippe Goddin |others=Michael Farr (translator) |year=2009 |publisher=Last Gasp |location=San Francisco |isbn=978-0-86719-724-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q3fenQEACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=The Art of HergĂ©, Inventor of Tintin: Volume 3: 1950-1983 |last=Goddin |first=Philippe |author-link=Philippe Goddin |others=Michael Farr (translator) |year=2011 |publisher=Last Gasp |location=San Francisco |isbn=978-0867197631 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Dk4CaAEACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=Explorers on the Moon |last=HergĂ© |author-link=HergĂ© |year=2003 |orig-year=1954 |others=Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner (translators) |publisher=Egmont |location=London |isbn=978-1-4052-0816-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BkEVAAAACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=The Pocket Essential Tintin |last1=Lofficier |first1=Jean-Marc |last2=Lofficier |first2=Randy |author-link1=Jean-Marc Lofficier |year=2002 |publisher=Pocket Essentials |location=Harpenden, Hertfordshire |isbn=978-1-904048-17-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kburngEACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=Tintin and the Secret of Literature |last=McCarthy |first=Tom |author-link=Tom McCarthy (novelist) |year=2006 |publisher=Granta |location=London |isbn=978-1-86207-831-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T-UbAQAAIAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=Tintin and the World of HergĂ© |last=Peeters |first=BenoĂźt |author-link=BenoĂźt Peeters |year=1989 |publisher=Methuen Children's Books |location=London |isbn=978-0-416-14882-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P97GQgAACAAJ }} * {{cite book |title=HergĂ©: Son of Tintin |last=Peeters |first=BenoĂźt |author-link=BenoĂźt Peeters |others=Tina A. Kover (translator) |year=2012 |orig-year=2002 |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore, Maryland |isbn=978-1-4214-0454-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eS5v-F04AoQC }} * {{cite book |title=Tintin: HergĂ© and his Creation |last=Thompson |first=Harry |author-link=Harry Thompson |year=1991 |publisher=Hodder and Stoughton |location=London |isbn=978-0-340-52393-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NDX5TmISfYUC }} {{refend}} ==External links== *[http://en.tintin.com/albums/show/id/41/page/0/0/explorers-on-the-moon ''Explorers on the Moon''] at the Official Tintin Website *[http://www.tintinologist.org/guides/books/17explorers.html ''Explorers on the Moon''] at Tintinologist.org {{Tintin and HergĂ©}} {{Portal bar|Belgium|Comics}} [[Category:1954 graphic novels]] [[Category:Comics set in fictional countries]] [[Category:Comics set in Europe]] [[Category:Comics set in the 1950s]] [[Category:Comics set on the Moon]] [[Category:Fiction about the Apollo asteroids]] [[Category:Literature first published in serial form]] [[Category:Methuen Publishing books]] [[Category:Science fiction comics]] [[Category:Tintin books]] [[Category:Works originally published in Tintin (magazine)]]
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