| he Italian press frequently
devotes articles to the Detective of the |
|
Impossible. In most of these, Martin is treated like a person in flesh and blood:
readers and journalists have fun believing that he's a person who really exists,
and that Alfredo Castelli - the author of the series - is simply his biographer.
Washington Mews, the New York street where Martin "lives" at the non-existent |
|
 |
| Nr. 3/a, has become a veritable place of pilgrimage for readers,
a bit like Nr. 221/b Baker Street in London, the imaginary residence of Sherlock
Holmes. In the Martin Mystère stories, the reality we know is never "modified":
there are never any epoch-making changes (an earthquake destroying New York,
invasion of extra-terrestrials, or anything like that). The Martin Mystère mysteries
take place in our own time and all over the world, and although they are the product
of imagination they are set against a rigorously real background. To enhance the
realism of the series, great attention is paid to the documentary aspects.
The stories often actually constitute a pretext to investigate and shed light on
some little known historical episode, or to focus on places from all over the world,
talk about other civilizations, folklore, legends, curiosities. Furthermore,
there's always an |
|
undercurrent of conservationism and pacifism in all the stories. In particular,
if you follow the Mystèrian saga you can learn about events that science and
historiography have sought in vain to elucidate (the cause of the explosion that
destroyed a vast area of the Tunguska basin in 1908; the mysterious origin of the
Etruscan civilization, the truth about the discovery of America). Also, you can learn
about the real origin of all sorts of nightmarish
|
 |
| (Frankenstein's monster, the Werewolf, The Vampire, the Golem),
the secret of the Graal and the nature of the "Sacred Lance"; you can also visit
the caves of alchemists and witches, the fantastic kingdom of the Little People
and the fabled "lost worlds" (Agarthi, the impenetrable underground headquarters
of the "King of the World"; the legendary Avalon and the fable-like Never-Never-Land,
the inaccessible "City of Ethereal Shades", the mythical "Kingdom of Prester John", the vanished continents of Atlantis and Mu).
And this is not all: you can evoke demons and ghosts, you may come face to face with legendary heroes |
 |
such as King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table as well as the heroes of the
mythology and religions of all times. You get a chance to break impossible secret
codes, decipher ancient writing systems, learn about unknown alphabets; you can grasp
the magic sword Excalibur, clash with the grim powers of the "Skull of Destiny",
or penetrate into the hiding place of the Ark of the Covenant, learn unknown details
about the lives of Moses and Christopher Columbus, William Shakespeare and Leonardo
da Vinci; |
| you may also encounter literary figures such as Sherlock Holmes, Peter Pan,
Alice in Wonderland; you will explore the incredible and unknown powers that are
concealed within the human mind, or you may clash with the invisible powers that
are plotting secretly in the wings and which, step by step, are influencing the
evolution of the world; alternatively, |
| as Martin's
followers, you may ibe witness to close encounters of the second and third type;
you may become acquainted with the most amazing forms of life and travel with them
through the immensity |
 |
of space; you may discover the unsuspected influence of alien Mpresences on the history of mankind.
Both in the comics and also in the commentaries that often accompany them, Martin
Mystère's attitude towards the unexplained and the inexplicable is never fanatically
oriented in one direction or another. This objective approach has made the character
particularly appealing to the world of education and culture: Martin Mystère often
functions as a testimonial for the general public in exhibitions and cultural events
organized by public and private associations.
|
THE REDISCOVERED CONTINENTS |
 |
Twelve thousand years ago, a catastrophe destroyed the civilizations of Atlantis
and Mu. But their "vestiges" are still with us! |
|
 |
|
|