This volume collects the first four issues of Captain America. The real, original, first Captain America from 1941 by Simon and Kirby with some two-page prose "novelettes" by Stan Lee. This isn't the Cap you're used to... heck, it probably isn't even your father's Captain America, you may have to go back another generation or two. The stories are simple, implausible, and obviously kid-targeted, the art is rougher than you might expect, and the characters are either all good or all bad with no middle ground. It's closer in feel to newspaper comic strips than modern comic books ('scuse me; graphic novels), but once you get into the spirit of the book it's a wonderful thing. It's 1941 and Cap and Bucky are fighting the Nazis -before- the U.S. entered World War Two, Jack Kirby is directing a committee of un-credited artists, and for a single thin dime you got three Cap adventures, a prose story, and two other features, Tuk the Caveboy and Hurricaine, the son of Thor(!?). Steve Rogers, who smokes a pipe is every issue, somehow is able to slip away from Camp Lehigh to defeat spies and saboteurs whenever necessary, and in the first issue's stories his shield isn't round yet. Despite the differences, though, it's remarkable how some things are still the same; the costume, the optimism, the patriotism, the positive attitude and good humor, even The Red Skull. It's a great book for fans, nostalgia buffs, and historians. Hooray for the red, white, and blue.