Wonderful things to read if you enjoy reading about superheroes

Grant Morrison yet again delivers an interview so good and quoteable that it’s sort of a literary masterpiece unto itself. This time he’s talking up his upcoming DC projects, a JLA run and a very ambitious project called Seven Soldiers. In the process he takes potshots at both Identity Crisis and Hush & its “let’s do a greatest-hits album for a story” imitators. (The latter of which, come to think of it, seems as squarely aimed at his protege Mark Millar’s plans for Spider-Man and Wolverine as earlier interviews’ comments on gratuitious badass-isms, paramilitary chic, and the aping of action cinema seemed targeted at Millar’s Authority, Ultimates, and Wanted. (All of which I like, by the way, but I take his point.))

Meanwhile, a blog called simply John and Belle Have a Blog has put together several strong superhero-centric posts. First is an essay on superheroes and time, looking at both the nostalgia factor and superhero stories’ open-endedness before culminating in a rather dismissive assessment of Alan Moore. Second, and much stronger, is an examinaton of the way in which superhero stories can or cannot handle “realism”. There’s also a digression on the way superhero stories accrue moments in the manner of a picaresque but, unlike as in a picaresque, insist on accruing really really big moments. It’s great writing, and includes a link to more great writing in the form of one Timothy Burke’s essay on the perils of continuity. To go the whole hog and force the fictional world to incorporate superpower-created advances and setbacks (a la Watchmen or Squadron Supreme), to ignore such advances and setbacks completely (a la any superhero comic that involves teleporting, or the massacre of an entire city or country), or to strike a compromise and try to inhabit an unrealistic world realistically (a la Astro City)? That is the question. Finally (though it only touches on superheroes tangentially, in a spoilery discussion of Unbreakable) there’s a post on infodumps and infolocks in genre fiction.

Given where I’ve been spending my days lately, these are all a lot of fun to read.

Links courtesy of NeilAlien and Kevin Melrose.