
Part of Series
Voici le tome 5 d'Antarès, une série dans laquelle Leo imagine de nouvelles aventures à Kim, une brillante jeune femme que les amateurs du scénariste connaissent bien... Ce 5e épisode d'Antarès se déroule alors que la fille de Kim a été enlevée par un mystérieux rayon. Pour retrouver son enfant, Kim s'est résolue à rejoindre le projet dirigé par l'intégriste Jedediah. Mais le comportement odieux de ce dernier la déstabilise : elle craque et l'agresse devant plusieurs témoins ! Désormais, la jeune femme a peu de chances de localiser le mystérieux « point X », sur lequel se trouverait sa fille. Elle refuse pourtant de baisser les bras et va bénéficier d'un coup de pouce du destin pour poursuivre cette aventure... 5e et avant-dernier volet d'Antarès, série de BD qui s'inscrit à la suite du deuxième cycle des Mondes d'Aldébaran ; une BD de science-fiction pour les amateurs de grande aventure !
Author

Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira (born on December 13, 1944 in Brazil),[1] more famous under his artist name LEO is a Brazilian comics creator. After having graduated as an engineer in mechanics, Oliveira left Brazil because of the military dictatorship that was in power at the time. He went first to Chile, but the following year saw the Chilean coup of 1973. This led Oliveira to leave, moving to Argentina, from where he finally returned to Brazil in 1974. He found work as an illustrator in the advertising industry of São Paulo, before once more leaving Brazil, in 1981, this time moving to France, hoping to illustrate comics. However as the Franco-Belgian comics industry was in recession at the time, he was forced to work in advertising once again, although he managed to get the occasional piece published in L'Écho des savanes and Pilote. In 1986, with the assistance of Jean-Claude Forest, Oliveira began contributing to the youth dedicated magazines of Bayard Presse. He illustrated true stories for Okapi magazine. He then recounted Mahatma Gandhi's life in the album Gandhi, le pèlerin de la paix, for Astrapi. In 1988, the comics writer Rodolphe asked him to provide the artwork for his stories. Their collaboration proved fruitful, producing 8 albums of material for their Trent series and 5 for their Kenya one. In 1993, Oleveira finally achieved an old dream when Dargaud agreed to publish his first solo series: Aldébaran. In 2000, after 5 volumes of Aldébaran, he launched Bételgeuse, which was nominated for the Prize for a Series at the Angoulême International Comics Festival in 2004.



