Superman: Secret Identity #1
By Koppy McFad
January 19, 2004 - 14:49
DC Comics
Writer(s): Kurt Busiek
Penciller(s): Stuart Immonen
Cover Artist(s): Stuart Immonen
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Readers expecting another "Watchmen" story about how superbeings can change the world, will feel cheated. Although the lead character does engage in a few feats of heroism, he tries to maintain a low profile and is constantly torn between the urge to show-off his new powers and his fears of being considered a freak. Busiek and Immonen are more concerned with the personal story of a boy who finds himself blessed with super-powers rather on the larger tale of how the world would react if Superman ever became a real person. Comic fans will find the hero of this tale easy to identify with. (Or at least, those comic book fans who don't fantasize about destroying New Jersey or vaporizing their high school.) It is the ordinary setting of this tale that makes it so affecting. In fact, the sudden appearance of mysterious "men in black" at the end of the story, seems to spoil the satisying simplicity of the tale itself. This is just the first part of a longer story but it stands very well on its own.
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Superman: Secret Identity #1