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  1. Mar 28, 2018 · Descubrí Mort Cinder hace más de una década en la biblioteca de mi barrio, en la estupenda aunque polémica edición de la colección Trazado de Planeta del 2002 (negros muy saturados sobre papel muy satinado, que impiden contemplar el verdadero despliegue técnico de los originales), atraído por ciertos cantos de sirena que me susurraban que ahí se escondía el verdadero oro del inca, un ...

  2. Héctor Germán Oesterheld ( / ˈɒstərhɛld / ), also known as his common abbreviation HGO (born July 23, 1919; disappeared and presumed dead 1977), [1] was an Argentine journalist, comics editor and writer of graphic novels and comics. [2] He is widely celebrated as a master in his field and as one of the pioneering artists in Argentine ...

  3. Due delle migliori storie di Mort Cinder, capolavo…. 1. Ezra Winston, el anticuario2. Los ojos de plomo3. La madre de Charlie4. La torre de Babel5. En la penitenciaria: Marlin6.

  4. Created in collaboration with the Argentine writer Héctor Germán Oesterheld, best known in the U.S. for his politically incendiary sci-fi masterpiece, the Eisner Award-winning The Eternaut, Mort Cinder is a horror story with political overtones. This episodic serial, written and drawn between 1962–1964, is drawn by Breccia in moody chiaroscuro.

  5. Cinder is the 2012 debut young adult science fiction novel of American author Marissa Meyer, published by Macmillan Publishers through their subsidiary Feiwel & Friends. It is the first book in The Lunar Chronicles and is followed by Scarlet. The story is loosely based on the classic fairytale Cinderella. [2]

  6. Dec 9, 2023 · Mort Cinder is an Argentine comic book horrorscience fiction series featuring an eponymous character, created in 1962 by the writer Hctor Germn Oesterheld and artist Alberto Breccia. It is considered one of the best comic strips ever produced in Argentina. The character Mort Cinder appeared for t

  7. Dec 4, 2018 · Mort Cinder, the book, written by Argentinean journalist Hector Oesterheld and drawn by Uruguay-born and Argentine-raised cartoonist Alberto Breccia is probably just as mysterious as the man it is named for. This new Fantagraphics collection brings the Mort Cinder stories together in English for the first time.

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