The Black Island
Author: Hergé
Author: Hergé
Author: Hergé
Book 7 in the Adventures of Tintin series
Pages: 62
Published: 1937
Age: 9+
Tintin hopes for a brief rest following his escapades in Latin America (The Broken Ear), but his hopes are quickly dashed. As he comes to the aid of an aircraft that has made a forced landing, one of the pilots shoots at him. This is the beginning of an adventure that takes Tintin to Great Britain, where certain people are determined to make him disappear once and for all. Framed for theft, Tintin is arrested by Thomson & Thompson, who are on the trail of a gang of counterfeiters.
Tintin discovers that the head of the organisation is the sinister Doctor J.W. Müller, and that the printing press used to create the false money is hidden on the terrifying Black Island, off the coast of Scotland. According to local folklore, the island is haunted by a wild beast. Will Tintin discover the truth behind these stories?
About the Adventures of Tintin Series
Books in series order
- 1.Tintin in the Land of the Soviets(1929)
- 2.Tintin in the Congo(1930)
- 3.Tintin in America(1932)
- 4.Cigars of the Pharaoh(1934)
- 5.The Blue Lotus(1935)
- 6.The Broken Ear(1937)
- 7.The Black Island(1937)
- 8.King Ottokar's Sceptre(1939)
- 9.The Crab with the Golden Claws(1941)
- 10.The Shooting Star(1942)
- 11.The Secret of the Unicorn(1943)
- 12.Red Rackham's Treasure(1945)
- 13.The Seven Crystal Balls(1948)
- 14.Prisoners of the Sun(1949)
- 15.Land of Black Gold(1950)
- 16.Destination Moon(1953)
- 17.Explorers of the Moon(1954)
- 18.The Calculus Affair(1956)
- 19.The Red Sea Sharks(1958)
- 20.Tintin in Tibet(1960)
- 21.The Castafiore Emerald(1963)
- 22.Flight 714(1968)
- 23.Tintin and the Picaros(1976)
- 24.Tintin and Alph-Art(1986)
Reading age: 8+ years
Clever and ever-curious, Tintin is a reporter-turned-detective whose pursuit of villains, criminals, treasure and the occasional hostorical artefact takes him all over the world. Join Tintin and a colorful cast of friends, including his faithful dog Snowy, Captain Haddock, absent-minded Professor Calculus and the Twins, as they embark on an extraordinary adventures spanning historical and political events, fantasy and science-fiction adventures and thrilling mysteries. These full-color graphic novels broke new ground when they were first released and became the inspiration for countless modern-day comic artists. . Belgian-artist Hergé based his stories on real-world events and cultures that had caught the Belgian national attention—from space exploration to Arab oil wars—and brought them to life for his readers in inspiring and exciting ways.
The series was one of the most popular European comics of the 20th century, and it remains popular today. By the time of the centenary of Hergé's birth in 2007, Tintin had been published in more than 70 languages with sales of more than 200 million copies worldwide.

