Previously, I posted Tintin Covers 1 – The Realty, about the sale of original Hergé artwork in Paris. Now I want to show you some fan-made covers that are strictly non- canon . I have been a fan of H. P. Lovecraft since I was young, although not as long as having been a TinTin fan. But my enjoyment of both goes way back, nonetheless.





Fans have produced their own covers for nonexistent books, supposing a Lovecraft – Hergé connection that never was. Fan art is a mainstay of fandom and no less than in Tintin and Lovecraft fandom , so mashups were inevitable.





These covers don’t undermine either genre, but rather show support for existing works. Enjoy these covers in the playful spirit they were created. It’s a pity that the complete books never really existed, but it’s nice to think they might in a parallel universe.





We no long have H. P. Lovecraft or Hergé producing stories, but their corpus of works have been influential for a good portion of the 20th century and into the 21st. I hope that in presenting these fan-made covers that people will be influenced to read the original works of both H. P. Lovecraft and Georges Remi a.k.a. Hergé.





One of the most prolific of the fan Tintin/Lovecraft mashup artists is Muzski, who is actually Murray Groat. You can see more of his works at DeviantArt.





This post is a follow up to the one I made previously about the same subject, Lovecraft Tintin Books – Two Great Tastes That Taste Great Together, February 25, 2011, and I felt there was so much good material out there, that I had to expand on the idea.





TINTIN COVERS 1 – The Reality





TINTIN COVERS 2 – The Lovecraft Connection





TINTIN COVERS 3 – Weird Science









TINTIN COVERS 5 -- GREAT SNAKES! MORE TINTIN COVERS



I had to post this Peanuts/Lovecraft cover, although it is dangerously close to Cutethulu. I always thought there was something eldritch about the Great Pumpkin.



TINTIN COVERS 4 – Politics, Parody, Pastiches, and Irony TINTIN COVERS 5 --I had to post this Peanuts/Lovecraft cover, although it is dangerously close to Cutethulu. I always thought there was somethingabout the Great Pumpkin.