From School Library Journal
Grade 8 Up–In this arbitrary but riveting survey, Muir sandwiches entries on 71 superheroic individuals or teams from the past 50-plus years of broadcast media between a pithy historical overview and back matter that includes a compendium of plot clichés and several "Best/Worst" lists. Each main entry opens with a briskly opinionated introduction, then goes on to extensive cast lists, (usually) comments from other critics, and, for nearly all, plot summaries for every episode, released or not. Though the bibliography is barely adequate and the black-and-white publicity stills are disappointingly sparse, the sheer quantity of information, much of it difficult or impossible to find elsewhere, more than compensates for the book's limitations. Where else are readers going to find such depth of detail, not only on such major figures as Superman or Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but the likes of Captain Nice, Isis, and
Saturday Night Live's Ambiguously Gay Duo? That being said, Muir has left major gaps in his discourse: he discounts the influence of
The Matrix, slights most children's cartoons, gives women their due but has little to say about race or ethnicity in superherodom, and, perhaps in service to his argument that modern superheroes are a distinctively American phenomenon, passes over Hercules and Xena, heroes derived from folklore or invented in other countries, and anime characters. Still, this is a browser's delight, and a long-overdue update for Jeff Rovin's
Encyclopedia of Superheroes (Facts On File, 1985; o.p.); but to keep their pop-culture resources balanced, libraries will also need at least one comprehensive movie guide, and such resources as Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy's
The Anime Encyclopedia (Stone Bridge, 2001).
–John Peters, New York Public Library Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
This updated edition chronicles superheroes in film and on TV. Changes from the first edition include completion of shows like Angel and Mutant X and the addition of new films and shows like Hellboy and Heroes. A superhero is defined as “a character of extraordinary capabilities or powers who has a propensity to fight evil in all its forms, whether criminal, terrorist or demonic.” Although coverage is extensive for the superheroes who are included—from well-known characters like Batman or Wonder Woman to the lesser-known, like Automan—inclusion criteria seem uneven. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is here, but the Highlander is not. Extraterrestrial world-saver Superman is in, but extraterrestrial world-saver Dr. Who is out. Entries start with description and background of the hero. Live-action films are presented with reviewer comments and cast and crew. TV series also present reviewer comments and a description of the series. Episode guides include title, writer and director credits, and air dates as well as episode descriptions and guest casts. The audience for this work is TV, film, and comics fans. Annotations are readable, even humorous. A good addition to the pop-culture collection. --Jack O'Gorman
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
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