<i>'Men of Tomorrow</i> is written with the thrilled verve of the comic book fan, along with a historians concern for scholarly apparatus and a journalist's eye for a good story.'
Daily Telegraph
'The most <b>insightful,</b> <b>engaging </b>and yes, <b>erudite</b> account of how comic books elbowed their way to the very core of mainstream popular culture... For anyone who ever craved (and still does) the next issue of Superman or Mad Magazine or the Fantastic Four, Jones will remind you what that thrill felt like - and why'<b> </b><i>Scotsman</i>
It's a tribute to the vividness with which Jones tells his tale that Siegel and Schuster ultimately become more interesting than Superman...<b> Fascinating</b>... Absorbing' Charles Shaar Murray, <i>Independent</i>
[A] gleeful pop-culture history, told with comic book pacing, deadpan wit and an ear for a telling phrase... It's a Jewish story and it's an American story. It might even be <b>an American classic</b>.'
Glasgow Herald
What a story... <i>Men Of Tomorrow </i>reads like a novel... Very convincing...<b>rich and rewarding</b>.' <i>Scotland on Sunday</i>
The fascinating and heartbreaking true story of the goniffs, shmendricks and shlemiels who gave birth to the superhero comics - written with all the verve and velocity of a golden age comic book
Art Spiegelman
In the depths of the Depression, out of the crowded tenements of New York and Cleveland, the comic book superhero leapt into being. Out of a mix of geekiness, science fiction, and outsider yearning, a crew of young men from working-class Jewish neighbourhoods and shady backgrounds created a series of blue-eyed, chisel-nosed crime fighters and adventurers who quickly captured the imaginations of young and old. Within a few years their creations had spawned a new genre that still dominates youth entertainment seventy years later.
Gerard Jones draws on exhaustive research to portray how the immigrant experience and an outsider mentality shaped the vision of the make-believe hero, while a bizarre melting-pot of left-wing politics, mob money and the worlds of soft-porn and detective magazines contributed to the publishing world that produced the comics and brought them to millions. He chronicles how the success of the comics provoked a backlash that nearly destroyed the industry in the 1950s, and how later they surged back, inspiring a new generation to transmute pre-war fantasies into art, literature, blockbuster movies and graphic novels.
Men of Tomorrow rivetingly demonstrates how the creators of the superheroes established their crucial place in the modern imagination.