The Nikopol Trilogy

by Enki Bilal

La trilogie Nikopol (Collections and Selections — Intégrale)

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For thirty years, Herakles Nikopol has floated alone in space, sentenced to cryopreservation. When he finally returns to Earth, the year is 2023, and the world has been ravaged by two nuclear wars! But the strangest change in the world floats above Paris a giant pyramid, home to the recently returned Egyptian Gods, who would like to reclaim humanity as theirs, if only they could all agree ...

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6 reviews
The art is amazing, very similar to some 2000ad art. I think it's because of the art this book has such a high rating, because the story is a bit meh. There's no real over arching plot, outside of one gods refusal to pay nice with others. But the little "mini" plots of each section are entertaining enough I never felt bored.
The Bedlam of Immortals

https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/the-bedlam-of-immortals-by-enki-bilal/

Another of the science fiction books set in 2023, this is the best known work of the French comics writer and artist Enki Bilal, born in Belgrade to Czech and Bosnian parents. It’s the first volume of a trilogy, the other two parts being set in 2025 (so I’ll get to them two years from now).

Published as La Foire aux immortels in 1980, this is set in a near-future Paris which is basically independent, France having collapsed as a state, and run by the fascist mayor Choublanc (Bunglieri in my translation) who is now facing re-election. The suburbs are decaying and run by local gangs. Everyone reads their own preferred news bulletins and show more information is therefore politically fragmented – an accurate anticipation in some ways.

Less accurately (probably – but who knows?), a giant floating pyramid inhabited by the gods of ancient Egypt has materialised over central Paris, and won’t go away unless supplied with fuel. Meanwhile Alcide Nikopol, a former astronaut who has spent thirty years frozen in suspended animation in orbit, returns to the city. His leg breaks off but is repaired in a rush job by the god Horus, who allies with him against his fellow deities to shake up the politics of Paris in 2023.

It’s political and passionate, and fits in with the other lefty French-language 1980s comics which I read a few years back, Les Chroniques du Fin du Siècle by Santi-Bucquoy (Autonomes, Mourir à Creys-Malville, Chooz). It’s less ideological, but similar in the sense of the corruption and decay of the ruling classes, and the need for revolutionary action to bring about a better state of affairs. And the art is riveting.

Though also worth noting that the ice hockey team from Bratislava all speak Russian and their uniforms carry the initials ЧССР – not only did Czechoslovakia stay together in this version of 2023, it was also apparently annexed by the Soviet Union, which is still going strong. Bilal’s mother was Czech, so he knows perfectly well that Russian is not spoken much in Bratislava, nor is the Cyrillic alphabet used much there. (There would have been more of it in 1980 than now, but that’s not saying a lot.)

The Woman Trap
The Cold Equator


https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/set-in-2025-14-the-nikopol-trilogy-by-enkibilal/

The Woman Trap introduces the iconic character of Jill Bioskop, who is much more interesting than either Nikopol or his son (who looks conveniently identical to him). The art is great but the plot kinda weird, as Jill encounters various men, including the god Horus and the two Nikopols, and finds a fax machine that sends her reports back in time to 1993. (It’s difficult to judge whether a time-bending fax machine is less or more realistic than a fax machine that actually still works in 2024.)

The third part, Cold Equator (Froid Équateur), rather lost me; it’s mostly set in an African city under the rules of the sinister KKDZO, Nikopol gets into a tremendously violent chess-boxing match, and a new woman character, Yéléna the geneticist, forms a rather unexplained connection with Jill. This seems to be all about Stuff Happening with not much clue as to why. Maybe I was just tired.
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The art is gorgeous in its dilapidation. The story is bizarre and yet touching in so many ways. HIGHLY recommended (if you can find a copy for under $100).
Every so often I read a European science fantasy graphic novel to remind myself that I should never read European science fantasy graphic novels. Does anyone actually read this garbage for anything other than the naked women?
pretty sure I read this before and skimmed it. Was into it more this time but wasn't overly impressed

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Nikopol Trilogy
Original title
La trilogie Nikopol
Original publication date
1980, 1986, 1992
People/Characters
Alcide Nikopol; Horus of Hierakonopolis; Jill Bioskop
Original language
French

Classifications

Genre
Graphic Novels & Comics
DDC/MDS
741.5Arts & recreationDrawing & decorative artsDrawingComic books, graphic novels, fotonovelas, cartoons, caricatures, comic strips
LCC
PN6747 .B54 .A6Language and LiteratureLiterature (General)Literature (General)Collections of general literatureComic books, strips, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
363
Popularity
86,341
Reviews
5
Rating
(4.01)
Languages
8 — Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil)
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
24
ASINs
3