Gladiator (Bison Frontiers of Imagination Series)
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
With Burrough's Mars series, Wylie's Hugo Danner is generally credited as the ancestor of both Clark Kent and Clark Savage, Jr. Danner, the product of a strength serum given to his mother during pregnancy, is able to lift 4,000 pounds, leap 40 feet in the air, and so forth. Unlike Superman and Doc Savage, however, Danner is never happy with his skills, hating the isolation and at times using his strength for monetary gain. Also, you can't imagine Doc Savage spending his summer after freshman year the way Danner did.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
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First published in 1930, Gladiator is the tale of Hugo Danner, a man endowed from birth with extraordinary strength and speed. But Danner is no altruist. He spends his life trying to cope with his abilities, becoming a sports hero in college, later a sideshow act, a war hero, never truly finding peace with himself. The character of Danner inspired both Superman's creators, and Lester Dent's Doc Savage. But Wylie, an editor with the New Yorker, sought to develop more than a pulp hero. His Gladiator provides surprising insights into the difficulties suffered by the truly gifted when born in our midst.
--This text refers to the
Digital
edition.
Gladiator (Bison Frontiers of Imagination Series)
Gladiator (Bison Frontiers of Imagination Series),Philip Wylie,Janny Wurts,Bison Books,0803298404,Alienation (Social psychology),Fathers and sons,Fiction,Fiction - Science Fiction,Human experimentation in medic,Human experimentation in medicine,Muscle strength,Science Fiction,Science Fiction - General
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