My all time favorite comic book by René Goscinny & Albert Uderzo, especially books # 2 - 24.
Goscinny also did a great western comic,
Lucky Luke, with the artist Morris, which had 20 good years from 1957 to 1977, and he did the wonderfully silly Arabian Nights-type Spoof
Iznoogood with the artist Jean Tabary.
The Asterix and Lucky Luke stories Goscinny wrote are the comics that will always be closest to my heart. Asterix was wonderfully anachronistic, and though Goscinny had done some research on the period, he never let historical accuracy get in the way of a good gag. The character's were hilarious, with the chieftain being my favorite. Lucky Luke got me interested in the western genre, and its mythology. With both series it seems to me that Goscinny even affected his two artist. He made them perform better. Morris was never as good neither before or after working with Goscinny, and Uderzo, who was once a master of his craft, has chosen to self destruct and to take his life's work with him in the procces. Asterix and Lucky Luke are today but pale shadows of the former selves (1960 - 1979/1957 - 1977), and it's a shame. The last Asterix book was so painful to read that I had to put it down, never to read it again. However, in their prime they were the best and second best comics of all time to me.
Goscinny was a great loss.
Glad to see that
Spirou & Fantasio and
the Smurfs are also here.
Other Franco-Belgian Bande Desinee comics of note, besides these and
Tintin:
Gil Jourdan by Maurice Tilleux.
Gaston Lagaffe by André Franquin, who also created the
Marsupial during his Spirou & Fantasio run.
Blueberry (western comic)by Jean 'Moebius' Giraud
Jerry Spring (western comic), by Moebius'/Giraud's mentor Jijé
Valerian, a sci-fi comic by Mezieres & Christin.
Buddy Longway (western) by Derib
Thorgal (Sci-Fi meeting with vikings) by Rozinski & Van Hamme.
And there are many more good ones.
Moebius and Mezieres were among the prime movers in the french sci-fi
Metal Hurlant experiment, which in turn inspired the American
Heavy Metal magazine.
Nice also to see the picture of Gladstone Gander. Donald Duck is perhaps the most human character in comics (!), able to expres any human emotion. As a kid I didn't like Gladstone, because he often got the better of Donald, but when, as an adult, I re-read a Carl Barks story where he, deeply ashamed, is forced to admit that he once performed one day of honest work. This was an experience so traumatizing that he has tried ever since to block it from his memory, I couldn't help but like him a bit for that. That was brilliant.