I've read All-Star Superman and I've read Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?, For the Man Who Has Everything, and What's So Funny About Truth, Justice, and the American Way?, and I'm caught up on the current Action Comics (but haven't been reading the current Superman).
What Superman or Action Comics run should I read next?
Millar's Superman Adventures and Superman for Animals(don't bother with his red son) McCloud's Superman Adventures and Superman : Strength Busiek's Secret Identity(dont bother with his run on Action comics) Alan Moore's Supreme(not in print, so pirate this shit. It's the pinnacle of Superman) Morrison's Action Comics Adventures of Superman anthology Collections of silver age Superman
Dylan Green
Morrison Action Comics run. It beats anything rebirth has done for Superman
Camden Gray
You can just pick up random single issues with cool covers user. You don't need to turn your leisure reading into homework assignments.
The Richard Donner arc named last son is really good, also I recommend Geoff John's Superman abd the Legion of Superheroes.
Kayden Perry
Seconding all these. Great taste, user.
Also, the 1986-1999 weekly books are pretty solid, with various highs and lows. This is the post-Crisis rebooted era, starting with the Man of Steel mini by John Byrne and eventually there was a Superman book every week, Action Comics, Superman: The Man of Steel, Superman (vol. 2), Adventures of Superman and Superman: The Man of Tomorrow (quarterly). This was known as the diamond-numbering era for the special numbering system for keeping track week to week.
You can find reading orders online for it. John Byrne and Marv Wolfman and later Roger Stern, Karl Kesel, Jerry Ordway, Dan Jurgens and Louise Simonson (among others) perfected the modern take on the character which was more about balancing human drama and superheroics than previous versions of Superman, which was more about him being a MacGuffin that crazy shit happened around (tho also valid).
The modern take on the character can go suck a cock. Concentrating on how vulnerable and “relatable” Superman is it in part the reason why so many people find Superman so boring today.
Liam Martinez
If you like a cool Space Opera: >Superman: Warworld (DC Comics Presents #27 to #29) >Superman: Panic in the Sky! >Superman: Brainiac
If you want some horror with your Superman: Superman: Phantom Zone (by Steve Gerber) >Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #142 &143 >Action Comics #595
If you like Superman’s world a lot: >The Great Darkness Saga >Adventure Comics #353 >Adventure Comics #369
Brayden Gray
In the year One Million or whatever, do you think Superman misses Lois?
Elijah Scott
have sex
Aaron Wilson
The story event is called 1 million but the setting is only 15000 years in the future. To answer your question, Morrison's golden Superman probably got horny and revived Lois to bang her for the rest of eternity. Pathetic.
Gerber's Phantom Zone mini deserves to be so much more widely read. It is amazing. >Gene Colan art >Every Phantom Zone villain ever >Involves the entire DCU >Psychedelic as hell >Punk rock Kryptonians
Lincoln Green
>terminally sperges out whenever someone says Nazis are bad What did the Republican Party mean by this?
Isaac Long
>YOU MUST BE FROM REPIBSKVICAN PARTY!!! Just stop.