Fies writes a story of a boy and his father from the dawn to dusk of the space age (from 1939's World's Fair in New York to the end of the Apollo moon missions in 1975). Nevermind that the boy ages about 12 or 14 years in this time; it's comix time, as Fies explains in an intro.
The text exits in three narrative planes: an essay about the nature of collective imagination, the dialogue between the boy and his dad, and a few complete comic books in context, but also stand-alone adventure stories featuring "Captian Crater and the Cosmic Kid," inventions of Fies.
Fies plays tremendous attention to historical detail, including maps and snapshots from the World's Fair, WWII propaganda photos, amazing graphics from a space series from Collier's magazine, and most impressively, from spacewalks themselves. The comic books, too, show progress in their halftone screen process, as Fies draws them from different decades. It's a graphically gorgeous work.
Missing dimension, however, is the philosophical essay. Fies is a little idealistic in asserting the value of the initial vision--put forth by General Motors!--of how highways and the architectural dreams of LeCorbusier and others could benefit society. Ric Burns' excellent documentary on New York puts the lie to how GM's City of Tomorrow (and its execution by Robert Moses and the interstate highway system instituted by Eisenhower) actually had the opposite effect--one under which we continue to suffer today. The space program, too, was mainly driven by war profiteers and nationalistic ambitions... again, hardly progressive notions (see the conflicts in the Middle East SINCE 1979 as Exhibit A).
Nevertheless, perhaps the idealism of Fies is what we need: he talks about the value of story, of imagination, of individual effort and belief in a future. Although I'd prefer a more critically examined past, I can't argue with those things.
WHY I READ THIS BOOK: Originally I was searching for work by Richard McGuire in our local bookstores. I learned a few things, mostly that Elliott Bay Book Company has, by far, the best Graphic Novel section. This book (by Fies) was in Bailey-Coy, and first caught my eye, it including a section about the World's Fair (1939/NYC edition). The cover was torn, however, so I looked elsewhere. Same thing! at University Bookstore, but a nice edition was available at Elliott Bay. I never did find McGuire, though.