Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Men of Tomorrow

Full title: Men of Tomorrow: Geeks, Gangsters, and the Birth of the Comic Book
Author: Gerard Jones
Year: 2004
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.4
Genres/categories: Non Fiction, History, Biographies, Graphic Novels, Art

Purchase/research links:
Animated by the stories of some of the last century's most charismatic and conniving artists, writers, and businessmen, Men of Tomorrow brilliantly demonstrates how the creators of the superheroes gained their cultural power and established a crucial place in the modern imagination. "This history of the birth of superhero comics highlights three pivotal figures. The story begins early in the last century, on the Lower East Side, where Harry Donenfeld rises from the streets to become the king of the 'smooshes'-soft-core magazines with titles like French Humor and Hot Tales. Later, two high school friends in Cleveland, Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, become avid fans of 'scientifiction,' the new kind of literature promoted by their favorite pulp magazines. The disparate worlds of the wise guy and the geeks collide in 1938, and the result is Action Comics #1, the debut of Superman. For Donenfeld, the comics were a way to sidestep the censors. For Shuster and Siegel, they were both a calling and an eventual source of misery: the pair waged a lifelong campaign for credit and appropriate compensation." -The New Yorker
Similar books:

Marvel Comics: The Untold Story
by Sean Howe

The Ten-Cent Plague
by David Hajdu

A History of Underground Comics
by Mark James Estren

Reading Comics
by Douglas Wolk

Supergods
by Grant Morrison

The Frank Book
by Jim Woodring

Breakdowns
by Art Spiegelman

King-Cat Classix
by John Porcellino

Megahex
by Simon Hanselmann

The Big Book of Scandal
by Jonathan Vankin

Never Learn Anything from History
by Kate Beaton

Mail-Order Mysteries
by Kirk Demarais

The Big Book of Weirdos
by Carl A. Posey

Krazy Kat
by George Herriman

Skin Deep
by Charles Burns

Kirby
by Mark Evanier

Artists, Writers, Thinkers, Dreamers
by James Gulliver Hancock

Kafka
by David Zane Mairowitz

Van Gogh
by Steven Naifeh

Vincent and Theo
by Deborah Heiligman