The Asterix Project

Asterix and the Griffin (French: Astérix et le griffon) is the 39th book in the Asterix series, and the fifth to be written by Jean-Yves Ferri and illustrated by Didier Conrad. It was released on October 21, 2021. While it is the first album to be released following the death of Albert Uderzo, it is also the last book to be written by Ferri before he was replaced the following year by Fabrice Caro.

Plot[]

In Rome, the geographer Cartographus informs Julius Caesar of the reported existence of the griffin, a beast that is half-eagle and half-lion with horse's ears, located in Sarmatian territory in the remote eastern lands of Barbaricum. The Romans have captured a Sarmatian Amazon woman, Kalashnikova, who cautions against attempting to capture the griffin. Her warning is deliberately misinterpreted by Cartographus and goes unheeded. Caesar deploys an expedition of Roman soldiers to locate and capture the griffin, which he intends to display at the circus in Rome in an effort to boost his popularity.

Later, the Gaulish druid Getafix, accompanied by Asterix, Obelix and Dogmatix, arrives in the snow-covered land of Sarmatia to visit his old friend, a shaman named Fanciacuppov. The Gauls have brought with them a small keg of Getafix's magic potion, which imbues those who drink it with superhuman strength. Fanciacuppov tells the Gauls he had a vision that the Romans would invade to capture the griffin, which is his people's sacred animal, so he appeared to Getafix in a dream to request help. The Sarmatian village is a matriarchal society, in which the women are nomadic warriors, while the men stay at home to look after the children. The Sarmatian women announce the arrival of the Romans, who still have Kalashnikova as their hostage and reluctant guide. The Gauls cannot share their magic potion among the Sarmatians to defeat the Romans because the potion has frozen, rendering it useless. Fanciacuppov agrees to lead the Romans to the griffin in exchange for the release of Kalashnikova, his niece, although she continues to be held captive by the Romans. Asterix, Obelix and the Sarmatian women then follow the Romans, who are eventually led to a frozen lake, beneath which is a frozen Styracosaurus, which looks nothing like in the artistic depictions of the griffin.

A scuffle breaks out between the Roman leaders, into which Dogmatix brings a pack of ravenous wolves, forcing the Romans to flee. After visiting the Roman camp, to find that Kalashnikova has effected a cunning escape, the Gauls return to the Sarmatian village and then to their own village. Back in Rome, Caesar orders a giraffe be displayed, as there is no news of his expeditionary force.

Reception[]

The book was met with mixed reviews from critics, with Writing in Le Figaro, Olivier Delcroix describing the album as disappointing and boring, as "even the magic potion and the gentle irony of Goscinny and Uderzo are frozen".

French news magazine Marianne's reviewer Myriam Perfetti complained that Asterix himself had faded from the action in favor of secondary characters. She said the book is "entirely sung to the politically correct tune of the times" and is a "a sort of Tintin in Tibetwithout a yeti, and the minimum amount of fights".

French online cultural journal Diakritik's reviewer, Dominique Bry, was more complimentary, praising the book for its puns, as well as its commentary on current affairs: fake news, conspiracy theories including flat earth, shallow media and the condition of women. "Conrad and Ferri prove with good reason that even without a magic potion and against all odds, the journey continues," wrote Bry.

A review by The Indian Express complained about the "puzzling" omission of the teaser page, saying that part of the story starts "rather abruptly, with no real context", leaving readers confused. The same review also noted the Sarmatian cheesemaker initially named Wottastinkov is subsequently referred to as Viraloadov.