Continuing DC COMICS MONTH we come to the second popular superhero with the Man of Tomorrow - which back when I started reading comics was reversed because at that time Superman was the most popular with Batman coming in as a close second - and since I have so many posts on so many different versions of Superman we are going all the way back to the iconic John Byrne version as this is only my second solo post for him .
Speaking of which, since we already talked about all of the trouble the elimination of Superboy from Superman's history caused - especially with Superboy being the inspiration for the formation of the Legion of Super - Heroes - in said post I won't get into the whole history of the relaunch.
Because I am sure I have already covered that in a previous post. What I wanted to add is that I finally managed to get a copy of the SUPERMAN - THE EXILE AND OTHER STORIES omnibus which I used to have back in Germany and which I wanted to rebuy after coming to Spain but which was out of print and then for the longest time it sold at ridiculous prices.
But now I have my copy and I didn't have to pay an arm and a leg for it.
This period in Superman's publication history has a special place in my heart although I won't pretend that this was MY Superman. That would be just ridiculous. As ridiculous as claiming John Byrne's Superman was MY Superman. Because as longtime followers of the blog know my history with Superman started long before that. Even long before the Bronze Age. Well, technically around the Bronze Age but the first stories with Superman that I read included some Silver Age Superman stories as well.
I am not clear what came first for me - the SUPERMAN / BATMAN comics, SUPERMAN pocket books and SUPERMAN SUPERBAND by Ehapa Verlag or the MV Comics but both of them included stories from the Silver Age and the Bronze Age of Superman. So with a sparkling of Silver Age superbness for the most part what could be considered MY Superman was the Bronze Age Superman which in most cases meant the Superman drawn by Curt Swan although on some occasions it was the super muscular Superman by Bob Oksner and Ernie Chan plus a steady diet of Ross Andru, Neal Adams, Gil Kane, Jim Starlin, Kurt Schaffenberger and Jose Luis Garcia - Lopez.
So yes, I would be hard pressed to narrow it down to one artist's vision while on the character side it was always the same guy. The Superman who could move planets, lived in a fortress of solitude at the north pole with special rooms with statues of his friends, an entire cruise ship and an intergalactic zoo, could travel to the Phantom Zone and through time to visit his dead parents on Krypton before it exploded and basically do anything the writers came up with. Although they had already dialed that down considerably before John Byrne decided to limit his powers.
There was the famous KRYPTONITE NO MORE story where the writers at DC Comics decided that enough was enough and that everybody and his dog could knock out Superman with a tiny piece of green rock and some radiation from space converted all Kryptonite into something harmless.
This story also created the Sand - Superman and while the first part was published by Ehapa the follow up went unpublished for decades and to this day I have no idea how the end played out. But there were other times where the DC writers came up with ways to make Superman less powerful. Longtime DC Comics afficionados may remember that in THE NEW TEEN TITANS Superman saves the team from dying in space but can't go after the bad guys because he has only half of his super powers. That was because of a story during Gil Kane's tenure on the Superman books in which Lord Satanis split Superman in two and each Superman gets half of his super powers. For those interested in the full story you can read more about THE SPLIT SUPERMAN on GONE & FORGOTTEN .
faster than a speeding bullet


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