The Secret of Superman’s Identity
Clark Kent is not Superman’s identity as a man, but rather his identification with Man, a daily exercise in humility for the individual for whom that virtue is more important than for anyone else.
Clark Kent is not Superman’s identity as a man, but rather his identification with Man, a daily exercise in humility for the individual for whom that virtue is more important than for anyone else.
Superman transfigures into pure light, ascends to the heavens, and makes his dwelling in the Sun until his promised return. He is in this way Ra, Apollo, and, most obviously, Christ.
That’s the solution to everything: Be a good man. All of the good that came about – the promise of a universe where everything lives – is the outcome of one man choosing to always do the right thing.
As the name suggests, The Hub City Review does one thing and one thing only: reviews… Except that’s not really true.
Easily the best Superman story since All-Star… navigating successfully between being reverently referential and refreshingly original
As seemingly broken people cross paths with one another, the heretofore hidden providential plan unfolds, the healing of their hearts begun by the gods made manifest in their meeting one another.
Star Wars #14 constitutes the terrible events which preamble the coming eucatastrophe. Without such tremendous trepidation, the requisite relief would hardly prove a providence.
Vader is ruthless and relentless, the intimidation he exudes punctuated by definitive displays of death and destruction, more so than ever here in Vader Down
Of the All-New, All Different Marvel titles, The Ultimates is far and away the best candidate for becoming a classic run that will be remembered and reread for decades to come.
The name Xavier is never mentioned in Uncanny X-Men #1, but his legacy permeates every page. Once Xavier’s nemesis, Magneto is a man converted, sharing the martyr’s dream, though his methodologies have more of an edge than his former friend’s.