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Superman From

Superman: From the '30s to the '70s

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A nostalgic tour through the world of the superhuman hero covers the entire range of his career fighting crime and corruption

386 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1971

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106 people want to read

About the author

E. Nelson Bridwell

286 books8 followers
Edward Nelson Bridwell was a writer for Mad magazine (writing the now-famous catchphrase, "What you mean...we?" in a 1958 parody of The Lone Ranger in Mad) and various comic books published by DC Comics. One of the writers for the Batman comic strip and Super Friends, he also wrote The Inferior Five, among other comics. He has been called "DC's self-appointed continuity cop."

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5 stars
63 (49%)
4 stars
42 (32%)
3 stars
16 (12%)
2 stars
7 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Jason.
242 reviews24 followers
January 13, 2011
When I was in 2nd or 3rd grade, I had a friend named Alan Davis who lived a block and a half away from me. I used to sleep over at his house all the time and, although I liked Alan and enjoyed hanging out with him for that reason alone, one of the main reasons I wanted to stay over so much was to get to read two books he had lying around in the huge communal bedroom he shared with his many siblings. They had these awesome floor to ceiling 3 tiered bunk beds, and I remember vividly grabbing one or both of these particular books and climbing to the top bunk to read them.
One of the books was the one listed above, the other was the companion volume dedicated to Batman.

I must have read the both of them 500 times.
Yesterday I went to the used bookstore, and in accordance with my habitual search pattern of WWII section, Music BIo, Fiction, and Comics, I eventually walked into the comics section and was momentarily paralyzed when I saw this book on the shelf.
For many years, beginning in the late 90's, I have tried to search these two books out. The problem is I don't remember the titles, Alan's books didn't have the dust jackets and the only information I recalled about them was the Superman volume was bound in red cloth, and the Batman was bound in blue.
So I saw this book and almost immediately I knew what it was. Picking it up and looking under the dust jacket confirmed it.
What a moment that was. I found I still remembered every page, every character, the nuances of the illustrations.

So now that I know the title, I've got to get a copy of the Batman volume.
Profile Image for Fraser Sherman.
Author 10 books33 followers
June 10, 2016
This stretches from Superman's debut in 1938 through the late-sixties turning point where Clark switches from print to TV (he'd stay in TV until John Byrne rebooted the character in the 1980s), with a heavy emphasis on the 1940s and Siegel & Shuster's old stories. That works pretty well, if only for Lois, who is amazingly competent as a reporter (she was much less so in the Silver Age stuff I grew up with). Villains include Luthor, Toyman, Prankster, Mxyzptlk, Bizarro and the Archer (surprisingly no Brainiac). While no longer capturing the full scope of Supes' history the way it did when it first came out (it covers around 33 years, and that was 40 years ago), it's a lot of fun if you're a Superman fan or want to see what his early years were like.
Profile Image for Liedzeit Liedzeit.
Author 1 book108 followers
April 2, 2022
Maybe it is not much of a surprise that I liked the stories best that were written at a time when I was reading Superman. Actually there is only one story that is really quite good The Girl in Superman’s Past. I never liked Lois Lane and Lana Lang. But Lena Lamaris! The woman Superman wanted to marry.

Interesting at least the Bizarro stories. A world were things are different. Okay, Bizarro dustman puts garbage on the street. But what does the Bizarro mailman do? What happens when you get to the edge of the cube world? Hm, and they make spelling mistakes! That is bizarre.
Profile Image for Nicholas.
289 reviews2 followers
August 14, 2017
Interesting for the history but the stories are terrible. Nice to know the Superman has been all "Sovereign national borders? Screw that noise!" from the start.
Profile Image for Hannah Belyea.
2,777 reviews40 followers
November 9, 2020
Bolstered by an introduction from MAD Magazine writer E. Nelson Bridwell, this selection of tales from the 1930's-70's takes readers on the ride of a lifetime as they follow Superman through dangers abounding, from earth criminals to travels beyond the sun! Bridwell offers readers new and old a vast and exciting collection of adventures that will keep eyes glued to every panel. You'll be reading these stories fasting than a speeding bullet!
Profile Image for Bob.
165 reviews5 followers
September 8, 2016
A "super" collection that, unlike many more contemporary comics, stands the test of time. Although Superman has changed. For example he tends to threaten physical harm to women a lot less than in the '40s!
6 reviews
November 29, 2014
Another book from my childhood. I wonder how many times I read this one.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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