The Trigan Empire [Anthology, 1978]
by Mike Butterworth (Author), Don Lawrence (Illustrator)
The Trigan Empire [In English] (The Trigan Empire [Omnibus] [Hamlyn, Chartwell] — 1)
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Contains 7 stories following the adventures of Trigo, leader of the people of Vorg who inhabit the distant planet of Elekton. Here is science fiction at its most exciting.Tags
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Sylak More battles on alien planets to reinstate rightful rule to cities attacked from the sky by evil dictators in flying machines armed with disintegrator rays. Wonderful stuff!
Member Reviews
I was forbidden comics as a child - maybe one of the reasons I'm so hooked on them now - but I was allowed the occassional education magazine, and when I was nine I was given a year's subscription to Look & Learn.
It was a great mag but the highlight was The Trigan Empire, a DPS, a fantasy adventure graphic featuring a Roman-style civilization of Aryan warriors plus men with blue skins and strange animals on the planet Elekton.
The Trigans transpormed from primitve nomads to space travellers with a magnificent city and a huge empire within a few decades, led by Trigo, and displaying an incongruous mix of high and low technology where men wearing Grecian-style shirts wield swords in one hand and laser guns in the other, as much at home on show more horseback as they are in atmospheric craft.
The primitive nomadic warriors dream of a great city is made real by Peric, a scientist and engineer, who plays Merlin to Trigo's Arthur. Although parallels are drawn between the stories and The Roman Empire, I am reminded more of Camelot - despite the flimsy clothes, where the Trigan Empire , like Britain, is under threat for the Hericons and Lokans - or warring tribes of Britons.
The stories are great, the colours vibrant and the drawing dynamic: people are not that well rendered and the artist cannot draw women at all - but the buildings, landscape and artifacts make up for all defects.
This is dick fic, pure and simple - very pure actually, sex never rears it's head, there are no romances and, other than Peric's daughter, women seldom grace the pages. I loved the Trigan Empire and was delighted to find the Hamlyn collection, featuring the early stories, on a visit to England. show less
It was a great mag but the highlight was The Trigan Empire, a DPS, a fantasy adventure graphic featuring a Roman-style civilization of Aryan warriors plus men with blue skins and strange animals on the planet Elekton.
The Trigans transpormed from primitve nomads to space travellers with a magnificent city and a huge empire within a few decades, led by Trigo, and displaying an incongruous mix of high and low technology where men wearing Grecian-style shirts wield swords in one hand and laser guns in the other, as much at home on show more horseback as they are in atmospheric craft.
The primitive nomadic warriors dream of a great city is made real by Peric, a scientist and engineer, who plays Merlin to Trigo's Arthur. Although parallels are drawn between the stories and The Roman Empire, I am reminded more of Camelot - despite the flimsy clothes, where the Trigan Empire , like Britain, is under threat for the Hericons and Lokans - or warring tribes of Britons.
The stories are great, the colours vibrant and the drawing dynamic: people are not that well rendered and the artist cannot draw women at all - but the buildings, landscape and artifacts make up for all defects.
This is dick fic, pure and simple - very pure actually, sex never rears it's head, there are no romances and, other than Peric's daughter, women seldom grace the pages. I loved the Trigan Empire and was delighted to find the Hamlyn collection, featuring the early stories, on a visit to England. show less
I have mentioned in an earlier review I wrote, how Batman: Year One was my Ground Zero for graphic novels. This preceded it in my life by about 20 years, but it's an altogether different animal.
I wasn't a fan of Look and Learn. However, this arrived in my Christmas stocking when I was six, priced £2.95. I still have it. I still occasionally read it. It remains on my shelf as a reflection of simpler times in my life, and its content - without much in the way of sex or gore - is a reflection of when good story-telling didn't need high stakes of death and destruction that we look for now. It's very much "Boys Own" stuff, but still beautifully-drawn, with (what certainly were when I was six) engaging stories for a youngster.
This isn't a show more review per se - more a reflection of a little piece of my life. But still worth the read again, for all of you who have a dusty copy in your garage or roofspace. show less
I wasn't a fan of Look and Learn. However, this arrived in my Christmas stocking when I was six, priced £2.95. I still have it. I still occasionally read it. It remains on my shelf as a reflection of simpler times in my life, and its content - without much in the way of sex or gore - is a reflection of when good story-telling didn't need high stakes of death and destruction that we look for now. It's very much "Boys Own" stuff, but still beautifully-drawn, with (what certainly were when I was six) engaging stories for a youngster.
This isn't a show more review per se - more a reflection of a little piece of my life. But still worth the read again, for all of you who have a dusty copy in your garage or roofspace. show less
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- Canonical title
- The Trigan Empire [Anthology, 1978]
- Original publication date
- 1978
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- Graphic Novels & Comics, Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 741.5 — Arts & recreation Drawing & decorative arts Drawing Comic books, graphic novels, fotonovelas, cartoons, caricatures, comic strips
- LCC
- PN6738 .T73 — Language and Literature Literature (General) Literature (General) Collections of general literature Comic books, strips, etc.
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- 56
- Popularity
- 548,262
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.42)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 1




























































