Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology

$17.87
by Jeff Yang

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There's this guy we know―quiet, unassuming, with black hair and thick glasses. He's doing his best to fit in, in a world far away from the land of his birth. He knows he's different and that his differences make him alien, an outsider―but they also make him special. Yet he finds himself unable to reveal his true self to the world. . . . For many Asian Americans, this chronicle sounds familiar because many of us have lived it. But it also happens to be the tale of mild-mannered reporter Clark Kent, better known as Superman. And the parallels between those stories help explain why Asian Americans have become such a driving force in the contemporary comics renaissance as artists, writers, and fans. Yet there's one place where Asians are still underrepresented in comics: between the four-color covers themselves. That's why, in Secret Identities , top Asian American writers, artists, and comics professionals have come together to create twenty-six original stories centered around Asian American superheroes―stories set in a shadow history of our country, exploring ordinary Asian American life from a decidedly extraordinary perspective. Entertaining, enlightening, and more than a little provocative, Secret Identities blends action, satire, and thoughtful commentary into a groundbreaking anthology about a community too often overlooked by the cultural mainstream. The editors of this highly alternative (to standard stereotypes, that is) comics collection define Asian American to include not just Chinese and Japanese but all the other heritages from India on east, representatives of which have been sidekicks at best and villains more often in American superhero comics. The first illustrated page establishes the predominant satiric tone. It’s the cover of a comic book, The Y-Men, featuring “The Lamest Stupor-Zeroes of All!”—to wit, Four Eyes; “oriental” vamp Madame X; Riceman, slinging globs of “pork-fried pain”; Kamikaze; and Coolie, whose “sweaty feet . . . are express tickets to Hell!” A standout longer contribution is Gene Yang and Sonny Liew’s “The Blue Scorpion and Chung,” in which the latter is the long-suffering driver-sidekick for a foul-mouthed, drunken, white-caped crime fighter. Uniformly energetic, the art ranges from mainstream-comics bravura to manga-influenced sassiness to alt-comics mannerism, and the kinds of superpowers on view are equally varied. Narrative coherence goes AWOL now and then, but the satire usually amuses and sometimes strikes deeper, to the heart. --Ray Olson "Beyond awesome! . . . This book made me feel like I could leap over tall buildings in a single bound." ―Margaret Cho "Criminally overdue, but well worth the wait, Secret Identities is a treasure trove of an anthology. These stories are as rousing, uplifting, tragic, and funny as our deepest secret fantasies." ―Dwayne McDuffie, founder of Milestone Comics and writer of Justice League of America "Wowee!!! What mind-blowing superheroes exploding out of the pages of Secret Identities ! As a kid who grew up on comics in the '40s and '50s, for the first time in my life, I recognized, identified, and became a comic book hero." ―George Takei "These Asian American superheroes knocked me out! I wish I had known these superheroes when I was a kid―I'd have traded my entire comic book collection for this butt-kicking, death-defying, and brilliant anthology." ―Helen Zia, author of Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People Gene Luen Yang: Asian-American superheroes! I dare you to name three. ("There's Jubilee... and uh, Shang-Chi the Master of Kung Fu... and does Psylocke after she gets race-swapped by ninjas count?") Well, after you read Secret Identities you'll be able to name literally dozens. That's because Secret Identities is an anthology of stories about Asian-American superheroes! Sonny Liew and I did a riff on the Green Hornet and Kato. Did it ever bother you that Bruce Lee was the chauffeur? I mean, he's Bruce Freaking Lee! Jeff Yang founded the pioneering Asian American periodical A. Magazine , writes the “Tao Jones” column for the Wall Street Journal , and is a regular contributor on NPR. With Keith Chow, Jerry Ma, and Parry Shen, he is a co-author of Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology and a co-editor of Shattered: The Asian American Comics Anthology , both published by The New Press. He is also the author of Once Upon a Time in China and a co-author (with Jackie Chan) of I Am Jackie Chan and (with Dina Gan and Terry Hong) of Eastern Standard Time . He lives in Brooklyn, New York. Parry Shen, best known for his lead role in the movie Better Luck Tomorrow , has appeared in numerous television shows, including Criminal Minds and General Hospital . He has spoken at more than one hundred universities, sharing his experiences as an Asian American in the media with college students across the country. He has been profiled on Entertainment Tonigh

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