![]() And his travels always lead him to what he truly loves: adventure. ![]() He took this to mean that his fate was his to choose, and carved his own fate line with a razor.įew of us would go to such extremes (he is a comic book character, after all), but it certainly is a strong reminder to follow your heart and do what you love.įor Maltese, his choices sometimes lead him into trouble – it was only a phone call to Joseph Stalin that saved him from execution on the border between Turkey an Armenia – but his journeys bring him respect from the real-life characters he meets, such as Ernest Hemingway, Butch Cassidy, James Joyce and Joseph Conrad. Growing up in the Jewish quarter of Córdoba, Maltese discovered that he had no fate line on his palm. Kirk magazine.īut though the “rogue with a heart of gold” is fictional, he would say that no one but himself set the course for his life.īorn in Malta in 1887, his father was an English sailor, his mother a gypsy from Seville. ![]() Taking your fate (literally) in your own hands.Ĭorto Maltese is a comic book sailor and adventurer created by Hugo Pratt in 1967, and premiered in the serial “Ballad of the Salt Sea” in the first edition of Sgt. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |