Every time that Kurt Busiek and Stuart Immonen have worked together, they've done something I've really enjoyed, and Superman: Secret Identity is no exception. It sounds at first like a high concept story, where a weird coincidence sees a small town boy named Clark Kent actually realizing he does have super-powers, but in reading the whole story, it becomes clear that it's as much about the central notion of Superman and the common life cycle we'll all live through as it is about a neat gimmick premise. Busiek tells a story about what it might be like to have super powers in a more real world, where the government wouldn't leave you alone and everything, from love to marriage to kids to retirement, might be affected by your super powers. With Immonen providing an unusual, painted style artwork that is realistic and yet hauntingly beautiful and otherworldly at the same time, readers will be transported to the world of "Clark Kent" even as they keep one foot in their own thoughts, dreams and wonders about the future.
The story is grounded by Clark Kent's narration, by the feeling of what might really happen to a man who developed powers. To some extent, it reads like the culmination of Busiek's work, examining the nature of celebrity and superheroes the way Busiek and Immonen did on Superstar, looking at the superhero with a more rounded approach as Busiek does in Astro City and showing a love for classic superheroes like Busiek has done in Untold Tales of Spider-Man and Avengers. I don't know if I would have enjoyed this book as much had I read it when I was single and childless, but now, as a married father of one, Secret Identity hit me just in the right spot. It's a reflection on the changes we go through in life and the world we try to build for (and with) our children and loved ones, with a very optimistic, hopeful outlook that stops just short of being pollyanna or unrealistically bright.
There's an impressive balance that Busiek maintains between superhero sense of wonder and realistic character-building. It's the easiest thing in the world when doing this type of story to apply more human frailties to the characters, giving them feet of clay or a tendency toward using their powers for selfish or ignoble purposes. Busiek sidesteps this notion by making Clark an honest, giving and noble person, but he doesn't go too far in the direction by making Clark a saint either. We see him lose his temper, we get inside his head (and his heart) thanks to his narration and falling for Lois, and we see when he's terrified of being captured by the mysterious agency that's looking for him. And while Clark does use his powers in fairly spectacular ways, they are always contrasted against a realistic backdrop, whether that is high school or the fields of Kansas or the geopolitical structure of the real world. There's no Lex Luthor or Braniac here, and just as Clark's strengths come from his humanity, so do his opponents and the dangers he must overcome.
Busiek shows the fears and joys of Clark Kent's life, and by extension, the lives we all lead. The worry that something (not necessarily a government conspiracy but maybe an accident or a violent crime) will hurt us or our loved ones is balanced by the joys that come from finding the love of your life, seeing your children grown and seeing them take the lessons you've taught them and their own intelligence and deciding to make the world a better place. Busiek's story here is one of a father truly making a difference for his children, as well as one man making a change in the world, and I can't think of a better message for a Superman story.
Though I've always been fond of Stuart Immonen's artwork, he adopted a new style for Secret Identity that is perfectly matched to the tone of the book and undeniably beautiful. It's a sort of washed out, oddly colored approach that is very realistic and yet at the same time has an unreal quality to it at the same time. The colors, with some panels sometimes done entirely in cool blues or hot reds, tend to enhance the mood of the story, and some of the pages have the same emotional punch as some of the work of Alex Ross or Tim Sale. In particular, the double-page splash of the gas main explosion is very evocative, although Immonen also does a great job on smaller moments, such as the joy on Clark's face when he first discovers he can fly or the anger visible in his burning red eyes when he discovers Case's betrayal. He also does an exceptional job with the aging of Clark throughout the series, as we watch him grow from a child to a man, from a teenager to a husband to a father. There's a reality and warmth that comes through in the Christmas celebrations, and a terrific fatherly look that Clark takes on later in the series.
Superman: Secret Identity took me by surprise. I expected it to be good, maybe even great. But what I didn't expect was to find something that not only reaffirmed my interest in the Superman character and provided some actual lessons about real life, all the while telling a kickass yarn. It is truly "mature readers" comics, not in that it features curse words or nudity or extreme violence (in fact, it features none of that) but in that it is going to appeal the most to those who want to see the story of a life, one that is different because of superpowers but also similar to the lives that many of us will go through. It's probably the best Superman story I've read in years, even though it doesn't feature the "real" Superman at all.