Yoko lentää ystäviensä Ruusun, Vicin ja Polin kanssa Balille "maailman aamu" saarelle, jossa he tutustuvat Yokon ystävään Monyaan. Monyalla on hurjia suunnitelma - hänellä on aikakone, jolla hän haluaa matkustaa Balille vuoteen 1350, jolloin saaren yhden vaiheen sivilisaatio ei ollut vielä tuhoutunut tulivuorenpurkauksessa. Niin käynnistyy matka halki aikojen... eikä seikkailusta puutu vallanahneita pappeja, hirmuliskoja... eikä laavaa!
This Yoko Tsuno story features time travel, dinosaurs, an erupting volcano, human sacrifice, and light aircraft--so much stuffed into one volume. This is one of the more exciting volumes of this series as it features a lot of action.
A great entry in the series, and one for which the less believable elements (time travel, dinosaurs) are at least internally consistent.
The time travel aspect of the series is revisited, and the result is a great adventure. Yoko saves the day true to form, with Monya as her guide into the world of the past, much like Khâny serves as guide in outer space. The other characters, such as Pol, Vic, and now Rosée, are along for the ride without contributing much.
A good mix of stories, more diverse than the last batch. Both 70's Yoko, time-travel Yoko and Space Yoko. The adition of her adoptive daughter was a little bland, but she's cute, so it's fine. Pols sudden 1500-Brugge romance was a bit weird, and all the people they bring from the past to current times have got to be messing with some time-y-whime-y things? But I liked Yoko and her gumption all the way through, and the stories almost lived up to my childhood fantasies.
Another time travel adventure! Murderous priests, a captive dancer, prehistoric beasts and lots of action, although it does seem that the Yoko Tsuno adventures are becoming more about the hi-jinks than about detection.
Pitkästä aikaa Yoko Tsuno! Nautin tästä ihan suunnattomasti, vaikka vakavasti ottaen tarina herättää enemmän kysymyksiä kuin sisältää vastauksia. Tarinankuljetuksessa ja juonenkäänteissä on jotain sellaista korkealentoisista B-leffoista tuttua tyyliä, joka miellyttää minua suuresti. On aikakoneita, hirmuliskoja ja muinaisia tulivuorenpurkauksia, vaikka mitä. Jatkuvasti tapahtuu jotain, eikä koko albumissa ole yhtään luontevaa kohtaa, jossa teoksen voisi laskea käsistä.
Ajattelin laittaa puolison lukemaan tämän seuraavaksi, jotta voin taivastella juonen hulluutta jonkun kanssa spoilaamatta tarinaa.
This is a return of the time machine from "La Spirale du temps" and the overall setting and plot could have been OK. The problem is that Leloup doesn't play as strictly by his world building rules as usual, and the characters end up pulling out all sorts of convenient tech and gadgets when useful. Leloup is usually more disciplined about grounding the science fictional technology in the conceit of the story.
J’ai préféré ce tome ci au précédent, je l’ai trouvé plutôt original. Il y a beaucoup d’action, des choses pas forcément très crédibles, carrément inexpliquées mais ça passe quand même. J’ai bien aimé retrouver Monya et les voyages dans le temps.
In the collection of time travel stories of Yoko Tsuno (Intégrale, tome 3), this story is better than L'astrologue de Bruges, but still not as good as the (earlier) La spirale du temps -- probably because it trades its complexity and mystery for a "flatter", action-oriented script.
The book of morning of the world is basically only about somebody who went back in time to save somebody who died before the volcano erupted and they basically made history because they had the machine at the end so it was made a sculpture of the machine.