Elliot S! Maggin: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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'''Elliot S! Maggin''' was the lead writer of the ''[[Superman]]'' comics during [[The Bronze Age of Comic Books]]. He also wrote two original Superman novels, ''[[Last Son of Krypton]]'' and ''[[Miracle Monday]]'', as well as the [[Novelisation]] of ''[[Kingdom Come]]''.
'''Elliot S! Maggin''' was the lead writer of the ''[[Superman]]'' comics during [[The Bronze Age of Comic Books]]. He also wrote two original Superman novels, ''[[Last Son of Krypton]]'' and ''[[Miracle Monday]]'', as well as the [[Novelisation]] of ''[[Kingdom Come]]''.


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Revision as of 00:22, 1 February 2014

/wiki/Elliot S! Maggincreator

Elliot S! Maggin was the lead writer of the Superman comics during The Bronze Age of Comic Books. He also wrote two original Superman novels, Last Son of Krypton and Miracle Monday, as well as the Novelisation of Kingdom Come.

One of his earliest and best-known comic book stories is "Must There Be A Superman?", in which the Guardians of the Universe take Superman aside and suggest to him that his readiness to help everybody may be doing harm as well as good, by letting people get into a habit of relying on him to do things they could and should do themselves.

The idiosyncratic punctuation of his middle initial has its origins in the days when comic books habitually used exclamation marks at the end of every sentence. After typing out an entire script full of exclamation points replacing periods, he did the same to his own name out of force of habit, and it stuck.


Works by Elliot S! Maggin with their own trope pages include:

Other works by Elliot S! Maggin provide examples of:

  1. Which included such details as Clark Kent and Superman following different religions -- each, according to Maggin, followed the religion of his parents.