If you grew up reading primarily DC Comics during the Silver Age (National Periodical Publications in those days, rather than DC; I’m focusing on the 1960s when I say Silver Age), you were accustomed to a far different sort of comic book storytelling than we’re seeing nowadays in what I’ll call, for simplicity’s sake, the Graphic Novel era. (I’ll posit that this era has many overlapping names and motifs, but the lowest common denominator seems to be long-form storytelling, thus graphic novel.)
In most cases those days a complete story would’ve been published in a single issue. Likewise, a single issue might’ve included a primary, cover-featured story plus a back-up story: a shorter tale and likely starring a second-string hero. Detective Comics is a good example, because many issues used Batman in the lead and usually Elongated Man—but sometimes Batgirl—in the back up.
You would’ve been familiar with the 80-page Giant issues, which were priced 25 cents and compiled stories from the past and typically focused on a single theme. For example, I recall a Superman Giant issue whose stories focused on the different colors of kryptonite; a Jimmy Olsen Giant issue featured several of the strange transformations Superman’s pal had undergone over the years. (I won’t go into those changes, but you can click here for an article that describes 15 of those stories—and it’s absolutely appropriate that the word bonkers is in the essay title. Gregor Samsa never had so much fun, but Jimmy Olsen never experienced much existential angst before the reader reached the letters column.)
This rambling preamble boils down to a simple statement:
These Silver Age comics were intended to be fun and had little to do with the
real world (except occasionally: Jimmy Olsen infiltrated a gang of juvenile
delinquents and learned Perry White’s son was a member in "Jimmy Olsen,
Juvenile Delinquent!"; it appeared in the October 1959 issue of Jimmy’s
comic). The superhero stories were diverting tales focused on good guys
battling bad guys and often incorporated elements lifted from pulp science
fiction magazines.
If the sharp swerve into noirish (nightmarish?) superheroics
initiated by Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight in 1986 was preceded
by a long transition period launched with Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams’ grittier
takes on Batman and the socially conscious/relative Green Lantern/Green Arrow
team-up starting in 1970, we can perhaps describe the Silver Age DC era as a
pastoral superhero age.
This latter world is the sort of setting that anchors Dwight
Decker’s novel The Arsenal of Wonders. (It’s worth noting the book’s
title echoes that of The Arsenal of Miracles, a 1964 SF novel by Gardner
F. Fox, one of DC’s most prolific scripters during both the Golden Age and the
Silver Age.) Using tropes familiar to fans of the Silver Age, Decker builds a
universe about a superhero who is displaced in time and in space.
Decker introduced Astroman, the hero of this book, in a
prior novel, The Secret Citadel. Matt Dawson was thrown into a parallel
Earth thanks to a lab experiment gone awry. This new Earth is very like Matt’s
own except that it’s 1967 and superheroes and supervillains are among those who
populate the world. Matt gains some powers of his own because of his
dimensional transition.
In this novel, Matt and Astrogirl travel through space and
time to visit Helionn, the planet from which Astrogirl and Astroman came to Earth.
They must go back in time to visit the planet because it exploded years ago.
They travel to Helionn to find a legendary arsenal that will
help them battle an arch foe, Garth Bolton, whose crime spree is expanding as
it exploits the disappearance of Astroman.
If this sounds familiar—like the origin story of Superman
and the fodder for many Silver Age tales in which Kal El visited Krypton or
viewed scenes from its past—then understand that Decker is writing homage. This
novel is an extended letter of thanks and loving respect to all those creators
who built, story by story, the remarkably rich universe the Silver Age heroes
inhabited before it was exploded—quite literally—by the Crisis on Infinite
Earths (presented in a 12-issue series published in 1985 and ’86) and
subsequent Crises and . . . assorted other continuity-busting reboots (by
whatever names) that successively dilute the iconic legends established during
the Silver Age and based on the Golden Age versions of those heroes and stories.
As homage, this is not an explosion-illuminated tale cuing
up life-or-death battles in every other scene: in other words, this is not
comparable in any way to a movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Just as it
took decades for the details of Superman’s canon to accrete to the Man of
Steel—Smallville, Krypto, the many colors of kryptonite and its multifarious
radiations, the Fortress of Solitude, Kandor the bottled city, Lori Lemaris,
Jimmy Olsen’s signal watch, Supergirl, the Legion of Super-Heroes, and on and on—Decker’s
tale is a more leisurely stroll through the inventories of SF tropes used in
countless sword-and-planet and space opera novels and stories from the time of
Edgar Rice Burroughs’ A Princess of Mars (1912) through the 1960s—and
beyond, really, if you consider how Star Wars was influenced by pulp
fiction and Hollywood serials.
If you occasionally are swept by nostalgia for a simpler era of comic book storytelling, for heroes untainted by shades of gray and who knew good from bad—for heroes who were heroic—you may enjoy The Arsenal of Wonders. Reading it is an experience much like that of Matt Dawson: a trip through time and space.
It's available from Amazon at this link.