Reviews

Wonder Woman: The Complete History by Les Daniels, Chip Kidd

jonmhansen's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

An excellent overview of the history of the character, from her beginnings to the turn of the century. Beautiful book.

spacestationtrustfund's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Jill Lepore did it best, but Les Daniels did it first. Unlike Lepore's book, which mostly focused on WMM himself, Daniels's is all about the creation and evolution of Diana as a character. Best to read the two in conjunction with each other, I think.

theartolater's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This is sort of a coffee table book-style treatment of the history of Wonder Woman, both as a character and of the people who created her. In some ways, it's great - in others, kind of lacking.

The book is great in the respect that it has a lot of photos of memorabilia, of different Wonder Woman publications and such that probably wouldn't see the light of day unless you were a heavy collector. It also tosses some older comics into the context of the times, which is kind of neat - especially for a superhero like Wonder Woman who has gone through so many incarnations.

The interesting parts for me were the parts discussing how Moulton created Wonder Woman, and how much of a foil for much of his studies and ideology regarding feminism and sexuality Wonder Woman truly was. I'd love to read a much larger take on that someday, but starting there and then discussing the context of the Lynda Carter show and the pressures that future writers faced, it was very interesting.

The downside is in two places. For one, it's much less about the Wonder Woman story and more about the story of how the Wonder Woman story came to be. Those hoping for a history of the actual saga are going to be missing something. The other downside is that it effectively ends right around the Crisis on Infinite Earths even though the book was written in the mid-2000s. There's plenty of opportunity to expand, especially during the Rucka era, that would have been beneficial.

Regardless, a good entry-level piece about one of the more iconic heroes out there. Worth a look if you're interested in this sort of thing.

marvelarry's review

Go to review page

informative medium-paced

3.25

eliwray's review

Go to review page

4.0

This is a delightful book, telling the story of Wonder Woman and her creators through text and lots of graphics. I suspect I will perennially pick it up to read a few pages in bed at night, and learn a few more interesting facts each time.
More...