
Pierre Christin
Writing
Born July 27, 1938 · Saint-Mandé, Val-de-Marne, France
Died October 2, 2024
Biography
Pierre Christin (born 27 July 1938) is a French comics creator and writer. Christin was born at Saint-Mandé in 1938. After graduating from the Sorbonne, Christin pursued graduate studies in political science at SciencesPo and became a professor of French literature at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. His first comics story, Le Rhum du Punch, illustrated by his childhood friend Jean-Claude Mézières, was published in 1966 in Pilote magazine. Christin returned to France the following year to join the faculty of the University of Bordeaux. That year he again collaborated with Mézières to create the science-fiction series Valérian and Laureline for Pilote. The first episode was Les Mauvais Rêves (Bad Dreams). In addition to the ongoing Valerian, Christin has written several other comics one-shots, including The City That Didn't Exist (La Ville qui n'existe pas), The Black Order Brigade (Les Phalanges de l'ordre noir) and The Hunting Party (Partie de chasse) (all illustrated by Enki Bilal). Among the many European comics artist he has collaborated with are Enki Bilal, Jacques Tardi, Alexis, Raymond Poïvet, Jijé, Annie Goetzinger, Daniel Ceppi, and François Boucq. He has also written screenplays and science-fiction novels. Source: Article "Pierre Christin" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Awards & recognition
- Angoulême International Comics Festival René Goscinny award · 2019
- Officer of Arts and Letters · 2015
- Adamson Awards · 2014
- Prix Tournesol · 1997
- Prix France Info · 1995
Show all 8 awards →
- prix Jacques-Lob · 1995
- Knight of the French Order of Academic Palms
- Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire — Best French-Language Novel · 1977 · nominated


