#clarkkent

Behold! The Ultimate Man! (Superman Special #1)

Behold! The Ultimate Man! (Superman Special #1)

Superman once again proves himself incorruptible. He could enslave humanity with his power but instead seeks to protect it and even serve it. Superman’s power never gets to his head and that’s what makes him so special. The Ultimate Man is wrong in his assessment that we need more Supermen because as Wayland and Ultimate Man prove, power corrupts.

Keeping Up With the Supermen! (The Adventures of Superman #501)

Keeping Up With the Supermen! (The Adventures of Superman #501)

The clone of Superman was Superman with a 90s attitude, basically if the Image guys created Superman. Young, brash, trendy haircut and a leather jacket instead of a cape. Oh, and he had belts everywhere.

Doomsday! (Superman #75)

Doomsday! (Superman #75)

For those too young to remember, “The Death of Superman” was a huge storyline with major mainstream news coverage and it was possibly the first storyline where the main character actually died. Sure, characters died, you lost Uncle Ben, Gwen Stacy and Bucky but you never lost Spider-Man, Captain America and certainly not Superman, the greatest hero of them all!

Superman's Lost Love (Superman #12)

Superman's Lost Love (Superman #12)

This book felt like a throwback to comics past. The kooky idea of Superman dating a mermaid felt like a Silver Age story where the premise was always insane. In fact, the story of Lori Lemaris was originally told in Superman #129 from 1959!

Toyman In The Attic (Superman #85)

Toyman In The Attic (Superman #85)

What I really liked was how Jurgens told the story. He broke from the linear narration and  flashed back and forth between Cat going to confront Schott and Superman trying to capture him and then finally in the last panel they are seen togethe