Safe to say, I'm not the biggest Captain America fan. Blame it on my exposure at an early age to the woefully misguided 1992 movie starring J.D. Salinger's son in the title role (maybe my favorite bit of pop-culture trivia), blame it on my fandom for another of Marvel's high-flying heroes, Spider-Man (I'd argue he's far more complex than Cap), or blame on my dirty Commie pinko socialist beliefs. Whatever it is, I just have never really responded well to Cap on the page. The MCU has a lot of issues, to be sure, but one area in which it's excelled is in rehabbing Cap's image as a "square-jawed super-patriot" by having Chris Evans give him levels of complexity and pain that had been missing from earlier iterations. So when Penguin started doing these nice collections of comic-book legends, I decided to check out the Spidey one last year, and I loved it. I decided to check out this one about Cap, and...it's good. But it doesn't make me care more for Cap than I did previously.
Something to be said for anything like this that runs through the early years of a character's run in the comics: you can see the growing pains pretty well, and I actually like that a lot. Because we live in the hyper-serious, arguably pretentious MCU films (which I honestly lost interest in a while back, though I'm likely to see the new Spider-Man asap, and I don't necessarily think the MCU is the "death of cinema" because I'm old enough to remember other supposed "deaths of cinema" that did not in fact kill cinema), it's easy to forget how clunky and awkward the early comic books were. And Cap goes back to the Timely era, specifically even predating America's entrance into the Second World War by a year. Be like Cap, and punch Hitler every chance you get. From the beginning, Captain America was a defender of the American way, but this doesn't mean that his early stories were landmarks of literary greatness. None of the stories here feature some of the obvious racism of the era, when the Japanese were painted in broad stereotypes, but you know there were some of those floating around at the time. We move quickly from the war-time exploits to the rebirth of Captain, after a period of hibernation (he actually had some postwar adventures as a "Commie smasher," but like Indiana Jones, Cap is at his best squaring off against the Third Reich), when he awakens into a new world that has passed him by.
Grieving the death of Bucky Barnes (before his eventual resurrection as the Winter Soldier, of course), Steve Rogers must decide how to live in the Sixties, an era that frightens and confuses him. He stumbles along the way, and even retires for a spell, but as the collection ends, he's once again taking up the shield and navigating his "man out of time" existence. It's quite an arc, but I'd argue it was done better in the films (the Chris Evans ones, not the Salinger's-kid one). The comics have a really hokey quality where characters talk over their movements as they fight, which is of course necessary: comics don't have the ability to show quite like cinema, where you can hear the dialogue, so comics have to spell it out. It's charming, though, and I think it's fun to go back and see where Cap (and Marvel) got started. Bringing him back from the dead was a wise move on Stan Lee's part, and Jack Kirby did a lot of his best work with Cap in the lead.
So, while not converting me to Cap's fan base, this collection did a good job of providing context for his adventures (both in real time and in the revisionist "war-time stories" that were published in the Sixties, after Cap was thawed out). And it made me consider that he's not as cut and dry as his name ("Captain America") would suggest. As America changes, so has Cap. And what he means continues to change as well. This is a good look at where he got started, and where he's going is anyone's guess.