Saturday, August 03, 2019

Scott's Take: Marvel Encyclopedia New Edition


Marvel Encyclopedia New Edition, published earlier this year, is a book that left me wanting more in most of the entries. This book was out of date even before it was published. It is way out of date on The Avengers, Spiderman, The X-Men and The Squadron Supreme. One could ignore that if the entries were well written, but they are not. The entries often just stop with no rhyme or reason and not naturally. The entries try to combine past storylines with current information and the result is a mess. Unlike the same type of book from DC, there is no timeline in this book as well and that is a huge failure.

There is very little information on character personalities or the relationships among characters. Some important characters are completely missing like Robbie Reyes and Quake. One character is mentioned under two different names for some reason instead of combining the two entries (The Red Hulk). Even characters that get multiple pages have entries that are very shallow and need way more detail.

Most entries have no information on the motivation of why characters act as they do. One prime example of how bad these entries are is the limited paragraphs on Hyperion. Most people do not know Hyperion. He is one of Marvel’s many versions of Superman. In two very short paragraphs, the people behind this book thought it was a really good idea to combine more than three versions of Hyperion from vastly different universes and time periods where each version has a very different personality.  This idiotic idea results in a convoluted paragraph where it discusses how he is perfect hero with no flaws, who then is a killing machine sociopath, and in yet another version is the noble hero who ultimately failed to save his home Earth and now lives in an alternate reality. None of those versions have anything to do with what he actually is portrayed now as he is a brainwashed hero created by the government to replace the Avengers and do good works. So, they jumble up three versions for no good reason, and then ignore the actual version presently being done in numerous comic books.


This book is not good on explaining the depths of complex characters that tend to switch back and forth from good to evil like Emma Frost, Loki, Magneto, Namor, Doc Ock, Black Cat and Doctor Doom. They switch back and forth with and there is next to no explanation of why this happens. Then there are issues with the fact that multiple characters that use the same code name, for example, Hawkeye and Enchantress, are all lumped together even though individually they are way different depending on storyline.

Speaking of storylines, there are huge issues with how this important facet is handled in this book. The information for the Multiverse is limited at best and completely obsolete in regards to the Ultimate Universe and was so before this mess was actually published. In many entries, there is a bullet point area with the phrasing, “essential storylines” which is supposed to give the reader basic information essential to the character. In some cases it is accurate, but in many cases, things have changed. In fact the information presented is often grossly inaccurate and therefore meaningless. Such information was inaccurate before this book was published and yet was included anyway.


With so many involved in the project, one wonders how many of them sat back and as they contemplated the finished product, realized just how bad a job was done. Textually the book reads as if they copied and pasted in aspects of prior editions and tried to splice in some new information. Not only is the text inaccurate in many cases, the artwork also leaves a lot to be desired.

The artwork in the book, for the most part, is just not the best examples of comic book art to showcase. In some entries, the art is terrible. The fact that the cover art is the some of the better art found in the book is not a compliment. Note how odd the faces of Thanos, Thor, and Captain Marvel look on the cover. Very odd.

This feels like a product that was made to make money and nothing more. This book only includes information on the comics. There is nothing on the movies, novels, television shows, cartoons, video games, or anything outside of the comics. Clearly an amazingly stupid decision since that stuff is used heavily as a marketing angle to keep regular readers interested as well as to attract new ones.

While I am a huge Marvel fan, I can’t recommend this book for anyone. Bad art and a total lack of detail in many entries as well as a tremendous amount of inaccurate information mean this book was worthless the day it was published and has only gone downhill from there. Marvel Encyclopedia New Edition is useful though as a screaming example of what not to do in such an encyclopedia.





Marvel Encyclopedia New Edition
Various Editors and Contributors
Dorling Kindersley Limited (division of Penguin Random House)
April 2019
ISBN#978-1-4654-7890-0
Coffee Table Sized Hardback
448 Pages
$40.00


Material supplied by the good folks of the Dallas Public Library System. My copy came from the Kleberg-Rylie location.


Scott A. Tipple © 2019

1 comment:

The Beautiful Artist said...

They missed Nina Price