Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 2, Summer 2006 | Page 110

106 Popular Culture Review forehead didn’t make him especially interesting.” “We had eyes only for SpiderMan or Batman in those days, superheroes in two dimensions, with lunch boxes and television shows and theme songs,” Everett tells us (119-120). The phrase “superheroes in two dimensions” suggests that even in this “hyper-reality” where a superhero might move into the neighborhood, there is still a distinction made between those superheroes who exist in both worlds and those superheroes who— lacking in range or depth—do not. Everett tells us that Super Goat Man’s comic had a “five-issue run” and then it was “forever canceled” making him a “minor star" (120-121). Even his publisher, Electric Comics, “wasn't one of the major comic publishers'’ and the stories themselves “were both ludicrous and boring": “Super Goat Man’s five issues showed him rescuing old ladies from swerving trucks and kittens from light ning-struck trees, and battling dull villains like Vest Man and False Dave” (121). In the end, Everett finds the comics to be “embarrassing for myself, for Super Goat Man, and for my dad” and dismisses them out of hand, as he does Super Goat Man (121). Umberto Eco wrote that “Real heroes are always impelled by circumstances; they never choose, because if they could, they would choose not to be heroes" (122). And this seems to be the maxim that the story seeks to work through in the second part when Super Goat Man is called to act and does so with tragic consequences: The year is 1981. Everett is a junior at Corcoran College in New Hampshire and Super Goat Man has joined the teaching staff in order to “fill the Walt Whitman Chair in the Humanities” (127). Toward the end of Spring Term two frat boys climb up Campanile Tower on campus and begin bellowing: “Baaahh, baaahh. Super Goat Man! . . . What’s the matter with your goaty senses? Smoke too much dope tonight?” and so on (134). Obviously a superhero associated more with saving kittens and little old ladies than with super-valorous deeds may not be the kind of superhero needed in this situation. Still, clad only in a silk kimono—which, hanging loose, might make a passable cape—he shakes the cobwebs from his head and treks toward the Commons and the Tower. Armed with giant sculptures of paperclips, the two boys wait. Of course tragedy is also waiting and as one of the boys tries to balance on the roof, he slips and plummets to the ground, shattering his lower body. Super Goat Man, who had been climbing up to rescue him, had reached out in an attempt to catch him, but came away only with the model paperclip. The boy survives fall, but is paralyzed and spends the last year at the university as a kind of sad figure. That he is alive, however, prevents any sort of mythologizing about the incident. “Instead,” Everett informs us, “it was covered in clumsy hush” (136). In the third part of the narrative, we learn that Everett finished his studies and went on to graduate school and pretty much forgot about Super Goat Man. After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of California at Irvine, he takes a two-year post-doc at Oregon State University and there he meets Angela and marries her. She has studied at Oxford and is in America on a scholarship.