June 1938: A Superman for the Underdog

On the newsstands in May 1938, browsers had their choice of Tarzan in Comics on Parade, Popeye in King Comics, daredevil aviator Captai...

Monday, July 7, 2008

July 1968: The Advantages of Being Frozen

“Over the years we had tried to resurrect him, and he never worked,” Stan Lee recalled. “After World War II ended, he was just a guy in a dumb costume running around. I mean, that’s the way a lot of people perceived him.

“So I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be fun to say he had been frozen in the ice for these two decades or whatever it was, and now he’s back?’ I’m always trying to give them a personality hook or a character trait that would make them unique. And I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great?  Here’s a guy who’s been out of it for 20 years, and suddenly everything is changed.’”

That “man out of time” theme was to become the defining dramatic motif in Captain America’s various media incarnations, including his 1968 Bantam paperback novel by science fiction author Ted White — Captain America: The Great Gold Steal.

“Similar to (Otto) Binder in The Avengers Battle The Earth-Wrecker, White also depicts Cap as a man out of his time, struggling to fit into a world drastically different than the one he left behind (the sequence where Cap first sees the New York of the mid-sixties is memorable),” noted the Tain’t the Meat … It’s the Humanity! blog. 

“Probably the biggest difference between White’s interpretation of the character and the Marvel version is Captain America himself. White portrays him as a professional soldier, one matured and tempered by his experiences in battle – the idealistic blue-eyed Boy Scout from the comics is nowhere to be seen.”

“And in a bold move, one very much in keeping with the times, White also has Rogers dosed with a form of LSD that rewires his brain allowing him total control over every aspect of his body, from boosting his adrenalin during a confrontation to increasing anti-bodies to fight off infection. In both body and mind, Rogers truly becomes a superior man.” 

Painting by Mitchell Hooks

6 comments:

  1. Bob Doncaster wrote: I remember anxiously grabbing these two books off the stand but being bothered by Cap being pictured holding a gun. I also thought there would be a series like the Doc Savages I was devouring.

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  2. Michael Poplawski wrote: I had this when it came out and thought it was awesome. I distinctly remember the scene, I think in a collapsed train tunnel, and Cap has survive and dig his way out. It detailed what his body went through to escape. At the end it relates the weight he lost during his exertions in this ordeal and he had to replenish himself.

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  3. I recall seeing these in the paperback section of the store, but because I had not heard anything about them in the Bullpen page, or anywhere else, I was skitish of them. I picked them up and flipped through the pages, noting that it was all text...no comic graphic art at all... so I put them back and never considered buying them, as comics were still 12 cents and these books were...gosh...FIFTY CENTS!

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  4. Hugh Aitken wrote: A blend of Marvel, Lester Dent and Ian Fleming. White was an assistant editor at the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, the editor of both Amazing Stories and Fantastic, and later the editor of Heavy Metal.

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  5. Jon Hall said: Read this, when it came out, loved the character, started buying Avengers and Cap comics even though I was a DC Bat fan for years. Still have it, and am going to have to dig it out and read it again.

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