Loin d'Aquablue, où il a grandi, Nao découvre une autre planète bleue : la Terre.C'est ici que le jeune orphelin compte défendre les droits de son peuple, menacé par l'activité industrielle de la Texec.Ce but, il ne l'atteindra que s'il obtient l'héritage légitime qui fera de lui un homme puissant.Mais ce poisson hors de l'eau devra affronter plus d'un piège tendu par les civilisés, alors que, peu à peu, sa planète adoptive se transforme en une vaste banquise.
You'd think solar energy from a single star would be a great deal more efficient than a single planet's ocean heat, speaking from the 21st century retrospective. But that's a small quibble - otherwise the comic continues to be good.
Better than the first so why didn't they continue!
It's smart and exciting the whole way through. I especially loved the end with the goofy Italian and the nod to the Millennium Falcon.
The art is so blurry but it's good for what you can see. Being a naturist, I loved that she never was forced to be clothed completely when she changed planets.
Didn't know this was the second volume when I picked it up off the discount rack at Coast City Comics in Portland (ME), but I found it to be pretty easy to catch up on what was going on. The plot is based on the outdated trope of the noble (alien) savage whose land is being taken by the white man and whose only hope is a another white man who was raised on their planet, but the characters and plot are still interesting and appealing. The artwork is luscious, the inking in particular providing depth and contrast. I'd like to keep reading to see what happens (as well as what HAS happened!)