Wednesday, March 16, 2011

The Fascinating Evolution of the Modern-Day Superhero [Literature]

There are many intelligent things I could say about Hero by Perry Moore, but all that comes to mind is: Damn this book is good.

Hero blends the genres of superhero fiction with gay and lesbian fiction, and in the process improves on both genres. The story focuses on Thom Creed, a high school basketball player, who happens to be coming to terms with his sexuality and also happens to be developing super powers. His father, a non-superpowered ex-superhero, blames all the evils in the world on two things: gays and superpowers. The story follows Thom's battle to keep up a good relationship with his father while trying to figure out who he is.

Thom receives an invitation to join The League - the same organization his father used to belong to - and learns to control his new powers, gains allies, and uncovers evils within the League.

Hero deals with Thom's orientation very well too. The book brilliantly doesn't focus too much on Thom being gay, instead letting that be just another characteristic of who he is. The issues and concerns every gay youth goes through are perfectly illustrated in the book, but Moore doesn't drown the narrative with it, instead letting Thom's orientation be just another aspect of a very well-crafted novel.

This book is a must-read for anyone who even mildly enjoys superheroes, and even for people who don't. Hero is a coming-of-age novel with so many fascinating spins. I literally could not put it down. I carried it with me everywhere I went since purchasing it, and now that I've finished I'm still holding onto it longingly wishing there were more.

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