Superman: Secret Identity

by Kurt Busiek

Paperback, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

741.5973

Publication

DC Comics (2005), Paperback

Description

Kurt Busiek (Astro City), Carlos Pacheco (Superman/Batman), and Jes�s Merino's (Action Comics) legendary Superman run returns to print in deluxe format. All seems well in Superman's world: he's happily married, Intergang is on the run, and Metropolis stands as a shining example of a modern-day Camelot. But not even the Man of Steel may be powerful enough to avert disaster when an ancient sorcerer prophesizes that Camelot will fall! This volume collects Superman #654-658, #662-664, #667, and Superman Annual #13 and features a brand-new introduction from Busiek!.

User reviews

LibraryThing member zzamboni
My all-time favorite Superman story. The story of a regular kid named Clark Kent, mercilessly teased for his name, who one day discovers he actually has Superman's powers. The story follows him through his life from teenage through old age. No supervillains, rather trying to live a "normal" life
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while helping people on the side, trying to keep his powers a secret, keeping the government off his back, having a wife and raising a family. A story with a nice human touch and beautifully drawn.
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LibraryThing member Stevil2001
Imagine your parents' surname was "Kent", you were born in Kansas, and they gave you the first name "Clark". Wouldn't that be terrible? But then imagine that one day you discovered that you really were Superman. That is the premise of Secret Identity, which follows this boy named Clark up into
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adulthood. I'd known the fundamentals of the premise, but not much more, before reading it-- enough to know it took him up until he was old enough to hold a newspaper job, at least, but I didn't know quite how far along the story went. 206 pages to cover a man's entire life. The book is narrated by Clark, in the form of extracts from a typed diary he keeps and doesn't share with anyone.

Given Superman action figures he doesn't particularly enjoy by his family and the constant butt of jokes from his cruel classmates, Clark is pretty much a typical teenager until he discovers he can fly. It's a magnificent moment, as you might imagine, and he soon discovers he has all Superman's powers: super-strength, x-ray vision, super-hearing, laser eyes, super-breath, and so on. He spends the rest of the book figuring out what he ought to do with these powers: should he used them for good? Should he go public? Should he hide them from everyone he knows? In the end, events convince him that he can't afford to go public-- the risk is too great.

In the first chapter, when Clark is still in high school, his powers are pretty obviously a metaphor for the need all teenagers feel to hide themselves and fit in with others, yet at the same time be recognized for who one really is. There's a girl Clark wants to impress, of course. But dare he go out on that limb? Of course he doesn't, but he gains some small recognition from her all the same. The end of the chapter, though, introduces this notion that there are darker forces at work: there are people out there who want what Clark is. Only he himself doesn't know who he is-- where did he come from? He's not adopted, so how did he gain these powers?

At first, I was tepid about these plots. Surely the point of the story was how did a boy deal with these things? Explaining where they came from, or introducing a group of evil folks trying to take advantage of him seemed like it would just derail that. That wasn't going to be the interesting part. It's like in Ken Grimwood's Replay-- the powers the main characters have can never be explained because any answer would be boring. But as the story unfolded, I realized that I was wrong: just as Clark's powers stand for the true identities we all carry within us and reveal only to a few others, the government officials trying to uncover him stand for the forces of the world constantly trying to push us out into the world where everyone sees us. It's interesting to have a story that argues we ought to keep parts of ourselves hidden from the world, whereas most fiction tells us "to be who we really are" but it works here-- and truth be told, it's how things actually work in the real world.

Unfortunately, Busiek seems really worried that the reader can't figure out this subtext on their own, and there's a few panels where this is ham-handedly narrated by Clark. "THIS IS WHAT THE STORY MEANS." Ugh. Thank you, I am capable of interpreting literature myself.

Clark's friends delight in setting him up on dates with women named "Lois" and "Lana" (and even "Cat Grant"), but one of these dates introduces him to the woman he eventually marries, one Lois Chaudhari. (Though I was amused by this element, I found it hard to buy the story's claim that Lois was constantly set up on dates with men named Clark-- is "Lois" really so uncommon?) It's a very real romance, and the moment where Clark reveals his secret identity to her is fantastic.

Stuart Immomen's art is a little odd. It's often glorious, especially in his big wide vistas and such, but often times his faces look a little stiff-- and stuck on an emotion that doesn't actually fit with the dialogue depicted. But his action shots are great, as is his use of color. It would be a very different and somewhat inferior book with a different artist on the case. Possibly the best sequence is when Clark is captured by the government and makes his escape: there's no dialogue, no narration, yet it's utterly harrowing.

As I said, Secret Identity covers quite a span of time, the last chapter taking place when Clark and Lois's own daughters are grown. Some aspects of this I found improbable, but the last few pages of the story, as he goes on one last mission, declares his retirement, and celebrates Christmas... well, I think I must have had something in my eye while reading it, because the alternative is untenable for me. The emotion that Busiek and Immonen drew together at the end was potent and powerful.

This is a fantastic story, told fantastically well. I think the appeal of Superman is that he's an ordinary person, just with superpowers-- he'd be trying to do good even if he wasn't from Krypton, and this story drives that idea home. People often complain (wrongly, I think, but also understandably) that Superman is hard to relate to, but this Superman certainly isn't. He really is just like you or me or anyone else you know. He could be you or me or anyone else you know. After all, don't we we all have secret identities?
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LibraryThing member MikeNNN
Nicely done tale of the angst that Clark goes through his entire life. However, the artwork didn't add that much enjoyment to the overall experience. This is one graphic novel that I believe would benefit from a full length novel treatment.
LibraryThing member ShellyS
I've had Secret Identity sitting here for years in one of the stacks on unread graphic novels and collections. I didn't know what it was when I bought it, and I didn't know much about author Kurt Busiek. All I knew was that Stuart Immonen's art was amazing. The cover had caught my eye, so I bought
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the book. And now, over a decade later, I finally read it.

It is nothing short of brilliant. If you haven't read it, you should. It's about what it might be like to develop superpowers in the real world. Our world. It's about a teen named Clark Kent -- for the comic book character, because his parents had a weird sense of humor -- and how he got teased over his name. About how he always felt he was an outsider, not sure who he was or what his place in the world would be. In other words, an average teenager. And then one day, he discovered he could fly.

Everything he knew about himself changed, and part of that was not knowing who or what he was and that having more implications than ever. Finding his way in life got infinitely more complicated as he contemplated becoming a hero. The book -- originally a mini-series -- examines what it means to be a hero, what the ramifications might be if that became public. It looks at privacy and government overreaction, while at its heart, it remains a coming-of-age story, taking Clark from his teen years to a man of sixty, thereabouts. It's about making decisions and trying to live your life and it's about being human and what that means, too. And it's about hope and love and doing what is right. It's a graphic novel for the ages. And I'm very glad I got around to finally reading it.
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LibraryThing member BrynDahlquis
I love love love love this graphic novel. It managed to "reinvent" Superman and yet keep all the great things that make Clark Kent who he is. It's perhaps not as dark as a lot of current comics are, but Superman has always had a lighter, happier tone, so it's okay. I'd say I want more of this
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Superman, but this graphic novel is so complete that I don't.

I highly recommend this to Superman fans, and even the people who have never liked Superman. Because this isn't Superman... Is it?
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LibraryThing member mrgan
Clean and pretty art, and an interesting idea not particularly well developed. Very vanilla.
LibraryThing member rickklaw
Imagine your parents named you Clark Kent. Your reality has no superheroes and DC Comic's character Superman is world famous. You go through school enduring endless teasing and jabs. One day you wake up with superpowers similar to the Clark Kent of comic book fame. You'd be the lead character in
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the entertaining graphic novel Superman: Secret Identity. Masterfully scripted by Busiek with some of the best art of Immomen's career, this potentially hokey story is a thought provoking exploration of identity and humanity.
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LibraryThing member hopeevey
This book is awesome!

The stories are excellent literature, and the art is outstanding. This isn't just an illustrated story - the art and the text are each better for being together.

Yes, it's a superhero book. But it's also a book about being human. I highly recomend this one. It might even
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appeal to folks who don't normally care for graphic novels.
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LibraryThing member bdgamer
Absolutely the best Superman-related series I've read.
LibraryThing member hskey
I've had the motherlode in terms of Superman stories, it seems. Possibly the best one.

I was a little hesitant at first, but the story gets better and better as it goes along. I was worried it was another origin story, but thankfully it's far more than that. This is the least comic booky of the
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Superman stories, in a good way; everything feels very grounded, there's very little unearned drama, it's all very sensible in terms of Clark's worries about family, the US government and others like him.

I really enjoyed how there isn't a big bad, or even a big action section. Now that I think about it, there's barely any action at all and it felt so refreshing. I wasn't sure about the art style but I think it compliments the story nicely. There's a panel about halfway through that references old timey Superman comics that stopped me in my tracks. Incredible graphic novel.
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LibraryThing member mktoronto
Even though this isn't a true Superman book, it has everything that I love (character development, desire to help, balancing privacy, wrestling with major life issues, good writing) and none of that boring action stuff. When I finished, I had to go back and re-read some of my favourite sections.
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And the artwork is gorgeous!
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Language

Original publication date

2004-01-14 (issue #1)
2004-02-18 (issue #2)
2004-03-17 (issue #3)
2004-04-21 (issue #4)

Physical description

208 p.; 10.3 inches

ISBN

1401204511 / 9781401204518
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