Superman, in a bid to ground himself, to walk across America, visit reader-submitted locales
Published Wednesday June 23rd, 2010
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA – The Man of Steel will walk across America to reconnect with everyday people in a story that will feature actual cities, towns and neighbourhoods submitted by readers.
Shown is a copy of the 700th issue of the Superman comic displayed at Fat Jack’s Comicrypt in Philadelphia, Wednesday, June 23, 2010. Dan DiDio, DC’s co-publisher told The Associated Press on Wednesday The Man of Steel will hoof it across America in future issues as he tries to reconnect with everyday people in a story that will feature actual towns and locations submitted by readers. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke
Superman, one of DC Comics’ flagship fictional heroes, begins his journey next month in Philadelphia, where he’ll embark on a 12-issue, cross-country walk — no flying, thank you — through Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, Oregon and Washington. Not on the travel itinerary is a swing through the Deep South.
Dan DiDio, DC’s co-publisher, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the Krypton-born, Kansas-bred hero had lost touch “with the people he grew up with, his adopted home on earth” and he’ll “take a walk across America to reconnect.”
In a bid to keep the story arc fresh in the age of instant communication and social media, readers of the comic who live within 50 miles (80 kilometres) of the cities of Chicago, Des Moines, Denver, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Portland and Seattle can submit essays of up 1,000 words touting why their city or neighbourhood should be included in the story titled “Grounded.” DC will select nine winners.
DiDio said DC is “looking to hear what people have to say, how the character affected their lives” and, he added, “more importantly, what the character means to them.”
Superman, created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, first appeared in 1938 in Action Comics No. 1.
The story, scripted by veteran film, television and comic writer J. Michael Straczynski, whose previous work includes DC’s “The Red Circle” books and Marvel’s Thor and Fantastic Four, has its roots in the current issue, No. 700.
In it, Superman asks The Flash whether he actually sees the people he’s protecting as he barrels across the country at supersonic speeds.
“When I’m running flat-out, I see what I figure you see when you’re flying up there at several bazillion times the speed of sound,” the speedster replies. “I see a blur. Unless I make an effort to see the details.”
Superman’s decidedly slower-than-a-speeding-bullet walkabout officially starts with issue 701, which goes on sale next month, and lasts through issue 712.
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