Super-Hero Prose:

It’s About Damn Time

Marvel is branching out into legitimate publishing and I couldn’t be more excited. See, I’ve always been a super-hero fan, but I’ve never really liked comic books. Super-heroes are an essential part of our American mythology. They represent our best qualities and are symbols for ideas that we should strive for. The idea that there could be people out there who will never give up on us no matter how flawed and horrible mankind can be is a very beautiful and powerful idea – one that is so beautiful and powerful that it could never properly be conveyed in comic book format.

At first it may seem silly for a comic to be turned into a novel. After all, as Fresh Fiction’s Greg Pichon writes, “what is the point of a novelization of a comic book? It’s like a text-only version of Playboy. It misses most – if not all – of the point.” The flaw in Pichon’s logic is two-fold:

1) Some readers don’t need to have ideas explained to them through pictures.

2) Some people read Playboy for the articles.

There’s nothing wrong with comics, per se, but average people just simply can’t understand them. Marvel recognizes that there are people out there that can’t comprehend the synthesis of art and words, so thankfully, this series of novels will finally be the answer to my prayers – an easy way to read famous Marvel stories without the hassle of all those pictures to confuse the action.

Maybe my problem is that I just don’t know where to start when I pick up a comic. Panels confuse me and I never can seem to read the dialogue order correctly. Now, Marvel can finally prove that comics are a legitimate art form by stripping away everything that has been holding them back – the art.

Let’s call a spade a spade – comics are nothing but over-glorified picture books and there is nothing that comics can do that other mediums can’t do better. Great works of Art are more complex and masterful than the scribbles found in comics. Novels are more complex and intricately crafted. Movies are better able to convey action. As the famous poet once said, “Anything you can do, I can do better. I can do anything better than you.”

I’ve had numerous people try to cite the works of Alan Moore and Grant Morrison as examples of the best the medium has to offer. These “masters” of the form, these people argue, could only properly convey their “complex” “story-telling” through “sequential art.” That may very well be, but the fact that their narratives are exclusive to one medium doesn’t make their work on par with the finest novelists in the world. Hell, farts can only truly be experienced in person and that doesn’t make them Art.

The most commonly cited example of the advantage of comics is the “Fearful Symmetry” issue of Watchmen. In this issue, the first panel is similar to the final panel. The second panel is similar to the second to last, and so on until the two middle pages mirror one another. While this may seem like an accomplishment, even Patrick Meaney admits in his essay “Some different sort of time: Watchmen as cinema” from Minutes to Midnight that, “The symmetry adds little to the narrative” (158). One could even argue that it would have been a great accomplishment in prose. Think of it; a perfectly symmetrical chapter of a book. Now THAT would be a work of Art.

People say Alex Ross is talented. Well, if he’s so great, then how come nobody has ever heard of him? If we lived in a just world, Alex Ross would be a footnote in the back of an art book that read “Not as good as Norman Rockwell” and we could  all move on with our lives.

It doesn’t matter which artist’s name is thrown out to me (whether it be J. H. Williams III, John Cassaday, or even Rob Liefeld), none of them compare to the greatest artist of them all – the human imagination. Our brains are powerful and complex machines that can construct ideas far more masterful than any artist’s pen.

For proof of our brains being mightier than the pen, let’s look to Superman: Doomsday & Beyond which is, of course, the novelization of the Death of Superman, Reign of Supermen, and Return of Superman. The Death and Return of Superman Omnibus collects every issue and is over 700 pages – which is fine if you want to read forever. Meanwhile, the novelization by Louise Simonson cuts out the fat to 190 pages. Let’s compare the prose to the comic.

Toe-to-toe, the behemoths fought, the force of their blows shattering windows in the surrounding buildings. Superman realized that to stop Doomsday he would have to be as ferocious and unrelenting as the monster himself.

Superman knew that he had enough strength left for one final blow. With every ounce of his remaining energy, he slammed Doomsday, even as Doomsday raked him with an uppercut that snapped his head back.

Wait . . . are they in a snow globe or something?

As Jimmy snapped the final photos, Lois Lane clung to Superman, begging him to hang on until the paramedics arrived.

“Doomsday . . . is he . . . is he . . .?” Superman whispered hoarsely.

“He’s down. You stopped him!” Lois clutched Superman to her. “You saved us all.”

Metropolis was saved. The victory, Superman thought, had been worth the sacrifice. With a sigh he closed his eyes. then the last spark of a life that had burned bright with heroism flickered and died.

How could there be any debate about which is superior? The prose tells us exactly how Superman spoke. Without these words, how could the reader know that his voice was hoarse after battling a bony, killing machine? How can anyone prefer the image of Superman’s death to the line, “With a sigh he closed his eyes. then the last spark of a life that had burned bright with heroism flickered and died” is just beyond me.

In his interview with Newsarama, Axel Alonso says that “the challenge here is to create a prose-reading experience that feels as immersive and immediate as the comic book-reading experience” but it seems like this isn’t any challenge at all. If Marvel can create a massive, cohesive universe with decades of continuity in the comic book medium, then surely they can do so in novel form. After all, without artists to muddle up the depiction of the Marvel super-heroes, all a writer has to do is write “Captain America” and the reader knows what the hero looks like rather than being disappointed or confused by the artist’s rendering.

You may still be wondering why the novelization of comic books is necessary now that the industry has become authentically legitimized.

You may be wondering why Marvel is investing money in retelling stories to a market that won’t appreciate them when they have cancelled their only remaining comic with a female lead and their only comic with a LGBT character as the lead.

You may be wondering what fiscal sense does it make for Marvel to invest money into prose novels of stories that have already been told elsewhere instead of improving their own line of comics that have slipped in sales after the DC Relaunch.

Maybe you’re just wondering, “Why now?”

In the words of Axel Alonso, “Why now? Why not now?”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Miles Prower is a world-class gentleman, philosopher, movie reviewer, and amateur private investigator.

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11 Comments

  1. Miles, I find it interesting that, from my perspective, the example you provide with the Death of Superman so thoroughly undercuts your thesis. The prose comes across as somewhat flat and devoid of the emotion the art so clearly captures and presents to the reader.

    “The prose tells us exactly how Superman spoke. Without these words, how could the reader know that his voice was hoarse after battling a bony, killing machine? How can anyone prefer the image of Superman’s death to the line, “With a sigh he closed his eyes. then the last spark of a life that had burned bright with heroism flickered and died” is just beyond me.”

    While I realize it may be beyond you, I’d much rather be shown something and come to the conclusions on my own as opposed to being told how to interpret something–show versus tell. It’s something I stress with my writing students. In this example, the artwork shows the reader the state that Superman is in and relies upon the viewer to do a little legwork, to use his or her imagination and add those flourishes such as “hearing” the tone and emotion of Superman and Lois’ voices.

    Don’t get me wrong: I respect your opinion of the difference between the written and graphic novel. In my field of English literature, I encounter *many* people who either don’t “get” or appreciate comics and graphic novels. For some, it has to do with the very reasons you mentioned. However, I tend to bristle a little at over-generalizations such “There’s nothing wrong with comics, per se, but average people just simply can’t understand them.” The reality from teaching my developmental (read struggling) English students is that comics ARE a form of reading where they can excel. Many non-developmental students also truly enjoyed the experience of reading comics as well. The benefits are pretty straightforward too: Without the difficulties in comprehending the plot, students are free to explore more critical elements of the work. I never expected students to truly be able to discuss the nuances of the early years of the U.S.-Iraq war, but when placed in the context of Brian K. Vaughan’s “Pride of Baghdad,” these students were able to engage each in higher-level cognitive thinking where they hadn’t been able to do so when they were assigned the previous readings on the subject. There certainly are a number of people who just aren’t “in to” comics, but I’d be very hesitant to say “average” people are unable to understand them.

  2. Miguel Rosa says:

    Now, Marvel can finally prove that comics are a legitimate art form by stripping away everything that has been holding them back – the art.

    Oh, so Marvel is going to prove that comics are a legitimate art form by turning them into another art form? If you strip the art away, you don’t have comics, you have novels. Explain how that’s going to legitimize comics? I’m dying to have that explained to me.

    • Miguel Rosa says:

      <b<After all, without artists to muddle up the depiction of the Marvel super-heroes, all a writer has to do is write “Captain America” and the reader knows what the hero looks like rather than being disappointed or confused by the artist’s rendering.

      This reminds me of Robert Altman’s movie The Player: “I was just thinking what an interesting concept it is to eliminate the writer from the artistic process. If we could just get rid of these actors and directors, maybe we’ve got something here.”

  3. Miles has done it again. A great bit of sarcastic commentary.

    People, check out his Punisher (the movie) piece too. Hilarious.

  4. Luis Mina says:

    Jesus Christ. I feel violated. In the safety of my favorite comics criticism site, I’ve been trolled successfully twice. Thankfully I read the comments.

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