Yeah I need more Thorgal in my life. Even though I have only read a couple so far I can say I love that series.
As for Hotel Particulier: It's a one shot by Guillaume Sorel. His art is amazing really. Not in English though at the moment, but you can check some pages in French here --> http://www.bdgest.com/preview-1294-B...136.1351176294
Salammbo Press will publish another work of Guillaume Sorel in English though at the end of this month The Last Days of Stefan Zweig.
Publisher: http://www.salammbopress.com/f/index...iv&livre_id=11
Preview pages (in French): http://www.bdgest.com/preview-1028-B...136.1351176294
The romantic evocation of the Brazilian exile of the Zweigs, from September 1941 to February 1942, becomes a graphic novel magnified by intense watercolours.
A ship slices through the waves of the Atlantic ocean. On board is Stefan Zweig, the renowned Austrian writer, and his second wife, Lotte. They have left New York and are bound for Brazil; President Vargas has just announced that he will welcome European Jews who have been forced into exile. Will they find peace there? Lotte wants to believe they can find happiness again, and enthuses about the beauty of Rio, the tranquility and exoticism of Petropolis. Stefan is working on his latest novel, but the painful memory of book burnings and anti-Semitic atrocities in Europe feed his despair. And the news of the war gets worse. How long can he carry on before sinking? On 22 February 1942, Stefan Zweig and Lotte committed suicide in Petropolis, putting an end to their wanderings. Their lives during these last few months in Brazil are the subject of this graphic novel, an adaptation of the eponymous novel by Laurent Seksik.In short sentences, punchy and incisive, Laurent Seksik conveys Stefan Sweig’s depression, bitterness and sadness, offset against all odds by Lotte's joie de vivre. The elegant, delicate and moving watercolors by Guillaume Sorel give a special momentum and a palpable intensity to the words. With a penetrating alchemy, the perfect balance between the watercolors and the text, the reader is struck by this story that skillfully blends romance, biography and testament.