The Man, the Myth, the Metaphor: A Review of Superman: The High-Flying History of America’s Most Enduring Hero by Larry Tye
Superman is, at once, the simplest and most complicated superhero ever created.
On the surface, his story is almost childishly straightforward—an orphan from a doomed world, raised with Midwestern decency, blessed with powers that make him a god among mortals, and yet unfailingly devoted to truth, justice, and (depending on the era) the American Way.
But beneath that primary-colored clarity lies a character who has evolved, adapted, and been endlessly reinterpreted—a symbol of American optimism and paranoia, immigrant dreams and assimilationist pressures, unshakable moral certitude and the creeping anxieties of modernity.
In Superman: The High-Flying History of America’s Most Enduring Hero, journalist Larry Tye undertakes the Herculean task of chronicling Superman’s cultural, artistic, and commercial evolution. The result is a fascinating, deeply researched, and beautifully written history of not just a fictional character, but the shifting tides of American identity itself.
Because Superman is not merely a comic book character.
He is a lens through which America has seen itself for nearly a century.
And that, as Tye proves, makes him far more than just a superhero.
The Origin Story: Mythmaking in Cleveland
Every great myth has a creation story, and Superman’s is as American as they come—a tale of young ambition, creative genius, corporate exploitation, and, ultimately, redemption.
In 1933, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster—two sons of Jewish immigrants living in Depression-era Cleveland—dreamed up a character unlike anything seen before.
Where pulp heroes like The Shadow and Doc Savage were still bound by human limitations, Superman was a god in a cape, a being who could leap over the Great Depression in a single bound.
Yet when Siegel and Shuster sold Superman’s rights to DC Comics (then National Allied Publications) for a paltry $130, they unknowingly created one of the first cautionary tales in entertainment history.
Tye excels in detailing the tragedy of Superman’s creators—their legal battles, their decades of obscurity, and their eventual recognition in the 1970s, when public outcry forced DC to finally acknowledge their contributions.
Superman, the ultimate protector of the weak, had ironically been stolen from the very men who needed him most.
Superman as a Literary and Cultural Force
What separates Superman: The High-Flying History from a standard biography is Tye’s deep dive into the literary and cultural significance of the character.
Superman, as Tye argues, is not just a superhero but a metaphor—a Rorschach test for America’s fears, hopes, and contradictions.
The Great Depression and the New Deal Superman (1938–1950s) – The early Superman was a socialist strongman, battling slumlords, corrupt politicians, and corporate greed. He was not yet the messianic figure of later decades, but a New Deal populist in tights, a hero of the downtrodden.
The Cold War Superman (1950s–1960s) – As America embraced suburban conservatism, Superman’s radical edges were sanded down. He became a paragon of authority, a father figure, a defender of the status quo rather than a disruptor.
The Existential Superman (1970s–1980s) – With the Vietnam War, Watergate, and a more cynical America, Superman became a character in search of relevance. Comics like Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? (Alan Moore) and Superman: For the Man Who Has Everything (Moore again) wrestled with Superman’s role in a world that no longer believed in absolutes.
The Postmodern and Corporate Superman (1990s–Present) – Superman dies and is resurrected. He is reimagined, rebooted, and reinterpreted endlessly. He becomes both a global brand and an increasingly complex, philosophical character, struggling with what it means to be Superman in an age of cynicism, moral ambiguity, and declining cultural dominance.
Tye’s greatest insight?
That Superman is always shifting because America is always shifting.
Superman as Art: The Evolution of a Visual Icon
A biography of Superman is also a biography of comic book art itself, and here Tye does an excellent job of tracing the visual evolution of the character.
Joe Shuster’s earliest Superman was raw, powerful, almost crude—a figure of strength rather than refinement.
Wayne Boring’s Superman (1940s–1950s) was stoic, broad-shouldered, a man who looked like he could bench-press America itself.
Curt Swan’s Superman (1950s–1970s) was so clean-cut and all-American that he looked like he belonged on the side of a Wheaties box.
John Byrne’s Superman (1980s–1990s) modernized him for the Reagan era, making him more muscular, more fallible, and—crucially—more human.
The cinematic Superman (1978–present), from Christopher Reeve to Henry Cavill, has further shaped the character’s image, reflecting Hollywood’s shifting perceptions of heroism.
What Tye makes clear is that Superman is an artist’s character—a symbol whose meaning is defined by the pen, the brush, and the imagination of each new generation.
The Business of Superman: A Brand, A Commodity, A Legacy
One of the more fascinating sections of the book details Superman’s role as one of the first true transmedia properties.
The radio show (1940s)—which popularized “Look! Up in the sky!” and introduced Kryptonite.
The Fleischer cartoons (1941–1943)—which gave Superman the ability to fly (originally, he could only “leap tall buildings”).
The George Reeves TV series (1950s)—which made Superman a household name for an entire generation.
The Richard Donner films (1978–1987)—which defined the superhero movie genre decades before Marvel Studios existed.
The decline and rebirth (1990s–present)—with Superman shifting from corporate mascot to philosophical puzzle, struggling for relevance in an era dominated by Batman, Spider-Man, and morally ambiguous antiheroes.
Tye skillfully dissects how Superman’s status as a brand has often conflicted with his identity as a character—a tension that continues to this day.
Final Verdict: A Biography of America’s Greatest Fictional Son
If Superman is, in many ways, America’s mythological ideal, then Larry Tye has written the definitive biography of that myth.
This is not merely a book about Superman.
It is a book about the evolution of heroism, about America’s shifting self-image, about how a Depression-era fantasy became a global icon, both timeless and endlessly reinvented.
For those who love Superman, The High-Flying History of America’s Most Enduring Hero is essential reading.
For those who don’t love Superman—read it anyway. Because by the time you’re finished, you’ll understand why the character still matters, still endures, and still inspires.
Because some stories are fleeting.
But Superman?
Superman flies.
As well he should.