Douglas Wolk had a really great idea for a book: read all of the superhero comics published by Marvel since FANTASTIC FOUR #1 was published in 1961 (approximately 27,000 comic books through 2017) and then write an overview of them, considering them all to form one single, self-contained story, the largest work of fiction ever published. It’s exactly the sort of thing that a long-time (since Christmas Day, 1963) Marvel Comics fan like me would find fascinating.
The execution of that really great idea? Well, that’s something else again.
Good news first. ALL OF THE MARVELS is about 90% of a great book. When he’s
actually writing about the comics, Wolk is top-notch, summarizing them well and
doing an excellent job of fitting everything together. He fills in the
historical background well and is affectionate and even-handed in his treatment
of the creators of those comics. It doesn’t hurt that he devotes an entire
chapter, and a long one, at that, to MASTER OF KUNG FU, my favorite comic from
the Seventies. He gives a lot of love to FANTASTIC FOUR, my all-time favorite
comic book, and also to THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, which is also very high on my
list. Best of all, when he’s writing about the Sixties and Seventies, the book
makes me feel like I’m there again, walking across the highway to Lester’s
Drugstore to pick up the new issues every week.
Unfortunately, before he gets to that point, Wolk spends a lot of time early on
lecturing the reader and making it clear that he dislikes long-time comics fans
(you know, the ones who plunked down their nickels and dimes and quarters every
week for years so that there would still be a Marvel Comics for him to
write about) and considers any of us who don’t care for Marvel’s current comics
to be horrible people. He comes across as smug, arrogant, and very morally
superior to anybody who disagrees with him.
Luckily, as I said, most of this is very early on. If you’re a long-time fan
and/or have no interest in what Marvel is publishing these days, I’d advise
skimming the first two chapters and skipping Chapter 3 completely. Heck, if
you’re a long-time fan, you can probably just start with Chapter 4, which
focuses on, appropriately enough, the Fantastic Four. There are a few brief
shots at older fans later on, but they’re easy enough to ignore.
Don’t get me wrong. Overall, I enjoyed ALL OF THE MARVELS quite a bit and
consider it well worth reading. Yeah, there were a few times when I felt like
throwing the book against the wall, but mostly I raced through it, flipping the
pages eagerly, having a great time reliving some fifty- and sixty-year-old
memories. Just know what you’re getting into if you were there at or near the
beginning, like I was.
5 comments:
Got it and I'm looking forward to it.
James,
I’ve been reading your blog for more than 15 years and I’m certain this is first time I’ve read a genuinely negative comment about an author here.
You have proven yourself to be such an easy-going, tolerant fellow that all I can think is that this guy must have produced a few chapters that are Truly Profoundly Annoying.
Yet instead of focusing on the negative, you found what was good in the book and shouted it out.
You wear a white hat, James.
John Hocking
Seems like one to look for at the library.
I usually get one Christmas present a year, and this year, this one was it. Am looking forward to reading it, but thanks for the warnings. I started reading Marvel comics back in 1964 or 1965 before gradually drifting away, but on occasion I still sample the recent stuff. I marvel at the artwork and coloring, the stories though seem to be rehash of rehash.
Snark at the Old-Time Comics Fans sounds very much like the stereotypical Comics Fan. Or perhaps, any subcultural fan. Sigh.
It is a good notion, though a Hell of a lot of reading to need to do (and if one wasn't already a stone fan, an expensive proposition in at least one way).
Yours for horror comics being the best, and the best superheroes having a horror aspect to them...
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