Man of Steel: The Early
Years—Junior Novel. Adapted by Frank Whitman. HarperFestival. $5.99.
Man of Steel: The Fate of
Krypton; Superman Saves Smallville. By John Sazaklis. Illustrated by Jeremy
Roberts. HarperFestival. $3.99 each.
Man of Steel: Reusable Sticker
Book. Adapted by John Sazaklis. HarperFestival. $6.99.
Man of Steel: Superman’s
Superpowers; Friends and Foes. Adapted by Lucy Rosen. Illustrated by Andie
Tong (Superpowers); pictures by
Steven E. Gordon (Friends). Harper.
$3.99 each.
Batman: Who Is Clayface? By
Donald Lemke. Pictures by Steven E. Gordon. Harper. $3.99.
Flat Stanley Goes Camping. By
Lori Haskins Houran. Pictures by Macky Pamintuan. Harper. $16.99.
The return, reinvention and
repackaging of comic-book superheroes for the big screen continues apace, with
Superman, the original DC Comics action hero, the latest to get a makeover as a
highly chiseled, prototypically square-jawed and almost-grotesquely-muscled
good guy with a form-fitting uniform and a cape. The film Man of Steel revisits Superman’s origin on the doomed planet
Krypton, his journey to Earth, his adoption by the perfectly parental Kents of
Smallville, and his gradual discovery of his unearthly powers. To create a
modest degree of angst, young Clark Kent has to decide on his own to make use
of his powers rather than conceal them; but at the same time, he must conceal them, even to the point of
allowing himself to be bullied, lest he seriously damage those who do him
wrong. Superman is a creation of the 1930s, but his one-dimensional life seems
to fit pretty well into the largely flat and surface-level moviemaking that has
become the norm in recent years – and generated considerable profits despite
the abject failure of occasional would-be spectaculars, such as John Carter. In any case, Man of Steel is ripe for book tie-ins,
and it is getting plenty of them. For ages 8-12, there is an easy-to-read
paperback novel that essentially tells the story of the entire movie, and
includes eight pages of stills from the film. For younger kids, ages 4-8, there
is a lot of choice. The Fate of Krypton and Superman Saves Smallville pick up
portions of the movie’s plot, the first focusing on the doomed planet and baby
Kal-El’s escape from it, the latter being about a trio of equally super bad
guys also arriving on Earth – and somehow managing to be defeated by Superman
even though they have the same powers he does and a three-to-one numerical
advantage. Hey, it’s a superhero comic-book story, you know?
Kids who particularly enjoy
the highly stylized poses incorporated into the film will have fun with the Reusable Sticker Book, which actually
has one page called “Poses of Power” and which invites kids to, among other
things, “stage the smackdown” between the good guy and the baddies. And Man of Steel is even being enlisted to
help early readers through the “I Can Read!” series. Both Superman’s Superpowers and
Friends and Foes are Level 2 books (“high-interest stories for developing
readers”) in this early-reading sequence. The first deals with young Clark’s
eventual decision to use his great powers for good, and the second zips along
from Clark’s school days (friend Lana Lang, bully Pete Ross) to his adult life in
Metropolis (“ace reporter” Lois Lane, bad guy General Zod). Families that enjoy
Man of Steel certainly have plenty of
ways to bring the film home and re-live the experience.
DC Comics’ other
super-famous hero, Batman, has been viewed and re-viewed through many recent
movies, and has shown appeal to a wide variety of movie directors and a number
of different audiences. He continues to show up in short, simple books, too, including
yet another Level 2 entry in the “I Can Read!” series – called Who Is Clayface? The bad guy here is an
“evil mud man” who poses as Batman’s alter ego, Bruce Wayne, in order to make a
million-dollar cash withdrawal from a bank – all of which money he gets without
identification, and all of which money fits in a standard-size briefcase, which
is a little more of a suspension of disbelief than even comic books usually
require. The fact that the bad guy’s skin “started bubbling and bulging through
his suit” might have given the bank personnel pause if they had not apparently
been lobotomized and then hypnotized as a pre-condition for getting hired (that
is how they look, anyway). In any case, Batman catches up to the crook in a wax
museum, where Clayface actually, no kidding, is quoted as saying, “BWAHAHA!”
The good guy wins, of course – with cleverness, which is the attraction of the
non-superpowered Batman character – and eventually gets to “clean up this money
mess at the bank” and restore Bruce Wayne’s good name. And if these silly
heroics help new readers get involved in books, so much the better.
Families seeking a more
down-to-earth hero, who is one-dimensional in a different way from comic-book
stars, will likely prefer Flat Stanley
Goes Camping, the latest Level 2 book based on the character created by
Jeff Brown. The “I Can Read!” books about Flat Stanley have little to do with
Brown’s original works, simply using Stanley’s flatness as a plot device for
small-scale adventures. There is nevertheless something inherently pleasant
about these Stanley stories, and in this one he really does get to be a hero of
sorts, acting as a parachute to help his brother, Arthur, down from a cliff,
then becoming a raft to get himself and Arthur back to the family campsite. The
book starts with Stanley being “sick of being flat” and ends with him deciding
that his flatness is not so bad after all. Brown himself had Stanley (who was originally
flattened by a falling bulletin board back in 1964) returning to normal
boyhood, but neither the origin of the flatness nor the return from it is significant
in Flat Stanley Goes Camping or other
recent books that have followed Stanley through a series of mild but pleasantly
involving tales that in some cases – including this one – have an amusing twist
at the end. Flat Stanley may not have the highly angular appearance of
modern-day versions of Superman and Batman – he is, in fact, rather rounded in
appearance despite being only half an inch thick – but he is heroic in his own
way. And despite being just as unrealistic as DC Comics heroes, Stanley seems
like someone that early readers might meet on the street or in school, not like
a character to be found only in Smallville, Metropolis or Gotham City.
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