Monday, September 10, 2012

Book Review - Superman by Larry Tye



Here is a fine example of a perfectly good book that is basically unnecessary.
 
It’s 400 pages of (according to the subtitle) “The High-Flying History of America’s Most Enduring Hero.”  If Tye had spent his 400 pages on THAT topic -- an examination of WHY Superman is American, and Enduring, and a Hero -- then this book would have more of a distinctive niche.  But as it is, it is more of an explication of a broad Superman history, for the under-initiated.
 
In my case, for instance, I already have 164 books that I have classified in my database as “Super”;  this book doesn’t have enough “distinctiveness” to make me want to add it to my “collective.” (STAR TREK reference)
 
This book is kind of like a lot of the books in any well-defined category:  Nothing really wrong with them, and fine as a kind of overview, but not really special enough to warrant purchase by the true aficionado.
 
There are a few indications that the book was NOT written or proofread by one of us “Super Aficionados”:   In the photo section, a staged publicity photo of Noel Neill and George Reeves (in their Kent and Lane wardrobe) contains the statement that “off the set George Reeves could relax with Noel Neill, who played Lois Lane …”.  First off, the fact that the actors are dressed in their filming wardrobe (complete with pillbox hat for Neill and buttoned double-breasted suit for Reeves) indicates that they are NOT relaxing, but WORKING by POSING for publicity shots.  Secondly, it is well-known by fans that Reeves did NOT “relax with” other cast members offset.  They were a friendly “family” at work, but Reeves went his own way socially offcamera.
 
Another small error is on page 170, in Tye’s discussion of the Silver Age “Weisinger Explosion” of characters that survived Krypton’s destruction.  He mentions Kal-el’s dog Krypto, and  then says, “Beppo the Super-Monkey and Titano the Super-Ape took similar paths to Earth.”  Umm, wrong!
 
 
The first part of Tye’s statement is correct.  First introduced in Superboy #76 (cover-dated October 1959) and given his cute name later, Beppo was an experimental Kryptonian lab monkey sent  into space in another of Jor-El’s rocket trials.  Beppo later became a member of the Legion of Super-Pets.
 
 
The second part of Tye’s statement is an incorrect conflation of two characters.  The character Titano is indeed called “Super-Ape” in the story title, but he is NOT from Krypton.  As told in the Silver Age, the Filmation cartoon series, and the Byrne refit, Titano is an American space research chimp launched into orbit.  His capsule underwent irradiation from a passing Kryptonite meteor and on his return, Titano became a giant, rampaging beast with Green-K vision -- but who still remembered his kind treatment by Lois Lane, which was a key to his eventual neutralization and capture.
 
 
 

Now, THIS character came from Krypton, and he is *kind of* a Super-Ape as told in the February, 1958 issue #238 of Action Comics.  He’s actually a Kryptonian guy zapped by a devolution ray, which turned him into a gorilla, and then sent into space long ago.  Later he crash-lands on Earth, and Hilarity Ensues.  After “King Krypton” (the name given him by Jimmy Olsen -- sounds like a “wrassler” to me!) has gone several rounds with Superman and eventually ends up beaten to a pulp, he sort of re-evolves and groans a mea culpa before expiring due to Green K exposure.

 
So, thanks to all of this erudite commentary by Yours Truly, you know know that, contrary to Tye’s statement, “Titano the Super-Ape” did not take a similar path to Earth as Krypto and Beppo.  King Krypton the Super-Ape DID, however.

 
Anyway, with that super-obsessive correction out of the way, let me again state that this book was a lot of work for Tye.  It’s not bad at all.  But it’s not a feverish, inspired book with anything in it to make it really exceptional among the other many books that chronicle Superman’s development from origin to icon.

 
I am glad I could read it as a library book, and did not buy it, because it really didn’t tell me anything new.  I think any Superman fan would enjoy it, but if you can read it without buying it, your wallet will say Thank You when you are finished.


 
 

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

On Neil Armstrong and the Moon

 
When the first Man on the Moon, Neil Armstrong, died on August 25, 2012, I was reminded of that summer in 1969, and my feelings and actions.
 
I was twelve years old, the youngest child of a couple very much in love, who believed in the American dreams of achievement and boundless opportunity available to those who dare.
 
I probably had it too easy, with my own room and a stereo on which I blasted the soundtrack to 2001, along with “Snoopy vs the Red Baron.”  I was a child of the Sixties in a GOOD way, born in 1956 and growing up with a respect for rules and authority that was NEVER shown as unfounded in my personal life.  Even when I disagreed with my parents (over stupid things like my hair length or the Beatles’ White Album), I never doubted, or had cause to doubt, that my parents loved me and placed my upkeep and growth over their own.
 
As a white-bread American kid, I saw those news reports about a war in Viet Nam through the dislocated point-of-view of a youngster viewing the activities of the adult world from afar.  Along with my best friend Tommy Hefner and other neighborhood kids, I played Army and Civil War (we pronounced it “Silver War”) knowing from our own parents’ lives that the good guys would win.
 
It was with that profoundly optimistic (nowadays some would say hopelessly naïve) view that I watched TV (Walter Cronkite on CBS) on Sunday night, July 20, 1969.  There were mostly talking heads and people waving plastic models around in front of a globe of the Moon.  There was little in the way of “live” anything -- video or audio -- but there was TONS of excitement and suspense.

 

The First Step took place July 21, 02:56 UTC -- luckily for me in Oklahoma, that placed it at just before 9PM -- not too late at all for a school night.



Believe it or not, this photo is about as good as it got, as far as the quality of the video image.  And you’ve also heard the staticky audio.  But that didn’t matter, because this was real, this was NOW, and this was the state of the art in 1969.

 
I cut out and glued down a whole lot of news articles and ads relating to the Apollo 11 moonshot.  That scrapbook is somewhere up in my attic.  One day I will think about it in cooler weather and drag it down and scan some of it.

 

 
 
When the heroes of Apollo 11 came home, they got some justly deserved parades and acclaims.  They were an example of American know-how, courage, and grit.  I personally wish that more people could summon up similar pride in America’s achievements nowadays.  As adults, I have come to learn that, sadly, the dreams of America -- achievement, self-determination, teamwork, fair play -- are in the hands of none-too-perfect human beings with (sadly personal and petty) goals of their own.

 

But I still smile in remembered pride at the thoughts of Apollo 11 and its achievements, and I thank Neil Armstrong for carrying the dreams of so many American kids down that ladder.

 
One last thing I want to share with you is this:  Some time after the Moonwalk and before I went to bed that night of July 20, 1969, I went outside.

 
 
From Bartlesville, OK, the moon was about one-third full.  I looked up and pointed to it and said in pride, “We got you!”
 
See you next week.


Monday, July 23, 2012

See You in September!

I'm taking time off from this blog until September.  You can still find new LPs and compilations every week at my music blog, Spock's Record Round-Up.

Maybe by September we will find the camera and I can share some of the treasures in the Fortress of Markitude!

Monday, July 16, 2012

Odd Things Are Reported

While fun to read, these compilation of gosh-wow things should be read with a jaundiced eye -- or at least a skeptical one.

Oftentimes the stories are embellished and expanded.

And many times, the strange incidents are passed around from book to book, cited by one guy from a previous fellow's book, while an original source may be indetectable!


But hey, they're fun to read.  I think a big part of their popularity lies in their ability to kind of broaden somebody's conceptual horizons.  That's probably why I have several hundred books on souch outre topics!

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Super Cups (5)

These are more of the 7-11 DC Super-Cups that I bought from a dealer a few years ago at SoonerCon.


 Here we have Curt Swan art, an edit from the wonderful Superman Family portrait that glorified the back of a Superman Annual.  Here's a Dial B for Blog linkthat shows the art.

Ma and Pa Kent, featured below, are as drawn by regular Superboy artist George Papp.  Here's some of Papp's art for the momentous tale in Superboy 90 where Pete Ross learned Clark's identity as Superboy.




See you next week!

Monday, July 02, 2012

MA-18 - Goin' Fission!: Pop & Rock with a Long Half-Life

Here we are with another collection of radioactive songs.

From the earnest (track 1 or track 21) to the humorous (tracks 8 or 14) to the satirical (tracks 6 or 22), the idea ofatomic power has been 'spodin' (to quote Ricky Ricardo) for years.

Here are a few of the more interesting aural experiences:


1 Jesus Is the First Line of Defense Pilgrim Travellers 1951

2 Atomic Kisses Earney Vandagriff 1955

3 Hydrogen Bomb The Laurels 1961

4 The War Drags On Mick Softley 1965

5 Atom and Evil General Electric 1966

6 Please Don't Drop That H- Bomb on Me Country Joe & The Fish 1967

7 Wooden Ships Jefferson Airplane 1969

8 Political Science Randy Newman 1972

9 Nuclear Babies Oingo Boingo 1980

10 Let's All Make a Bomb Heaven 17 1981

11 Run Like a Villain Iggy Pop 1982

12 World Suicide Defuser 1983

13 Uranium Rock The Cramps 1983

14 Surfin' USSR Ray Stevens 1988

15 The Bomb Lifesavers Underground 1992

16 Atomic Power Uncle Tupelo 1994

17 The Bomb Inside the Bomb We Are Scientists 2002

18 Nuclear Blues Frances Plante-Scott 2004

19 Bomb.Repeat.Bomb.1954 Ted Leo and the Pharmacists 2007

20 Atomic Bomb Brian Butler 2008

21 Atom and Evil Heaven and Hell 2009

22 Atom Bomb Blues The Naptown Jug Busters 2009

And here is the link: http://www.mediafire.com/?3y5up1b4hbvqba1

See you next time!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Gerald Fried, Composer of Miracles

In my view, Gerald Fried is a genius of TV composion.  He produced great scores for Star Trek and The Man from U.N.C.L.E., as well as many other "low-budget" films and other TV shows.  His score for The Return of Dracula is the best part of that film, as he wrenches around the "Dies Irae" theme to make the orchestra wail and moan.

Here is an article on Fried from Starlog #169, August 1991.




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