The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture
The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture book cover

The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture

Paperback – March 21, 2017

Price
$15.19
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1476756738
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.88 x 8.38 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

“Weldon’s The Caped Crusade is Batman: sometimes hilarious, sometimes frightening, but always intelligent, fascinating, and impossible to put down.” —Tom King, New York Times bestselling writer of DC Comics’s Batman "A roaring getaway car of guilty pleasures—film gossip, comic-book esoterica, hilarious tales of nerd rage. . . . Weldon writes with humor and Day-Glo élan." — Jennifer Senior, The New York Times " The Caped Crusade is a great read for those who are proud Gothamites, those less initiated, and those who flip the switch on the Bat-Signal in order to find themselves. . . .A sharp, deeply knowledgeable and often funny look at the cultural history of Batman and his fandom...both a page-turner and a Riddler Trophy." — Chicago Tribune “Engaging. . . . What Weldon ultimately achieves here is a character and comic-franchise history that is itself flexible enough to become what the reader needs it to be. If you’re a Bat-neophyte, this is an accessible introduction; if you’re a dyed-in-the-Latex Bat-nerd, this is a colorfully rendered magical history tour redolent with nostalgia.” —The Washington Post "For fans of Gotham’s Batman, this is the perfect book to pick up before you head to the movie. . . . Even casual fans will find themselves quickly turning pages to learn more about how our comic heroes affect and even shape our everyday lives." — Bookish "[ The Caped Crusade ] accomplishes what so many supervillains, from The Joker to Bane, have long desired to do: pin down Batman and systematically dissect him. Weldon navigates Batman's history with an expert step...a winning mix of humor, and incisive social analysis. Even his footnotes are funny. Under that famous cowl, he sees ugliness, wonder, and the undercurrents of pop culture in all their conflicting glory." —NPR "Writing a book about Batman is tricky. He is a cultural icon deeply meaningful to many because his story touches on themes of loss, adversity and perseverance. Also, he is an implausible character who defies laws of physics and common sense every time he swoops on gun-blazing lunatics. Weldon successfully walks the tightrope, showing reverence for the character but keeping it fun." —Associated Press "Excellent, insightful. . . .Weldon has crafted that rare jewel: a book of comics analysis that nerds and “normals” alike can enjoy." — Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Sprawling in scope, yet written with breezy flair. . .An enthusiastic, immersive, entertaining guide for both die-hard Batfans and curious onlookers." — Kirkus Reviews “ The Caped Crusade is breezy, insightful, and surprisingly moving. Glen Weldon is the illuminating, hilarious writer Batman deserves—and the one we need right now.” —DC Pierson, author of The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep and Never Had To and Crap Kingdom "Simply put, The Caped Crusade is the best book I’ve read this year....Highly addictive reading, with just the right blend of comic book history and nerd culture analysis." —Comic Book Herald "The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture doesn’t read like a history book, and it’s not just due to the author’s fantastic storytelling. Weldon informs the reader of the history of Batman with a passion that can be found in any tried and true Batman fan and with a level of knowledge I’ve never encountered before. It is the book that Gotham City deserves, and I can’t recommend it enough." —ComicsVerse “Weldon, a critic for NPR, offers possibly the most erudite and well-researched fanboy manifesto ever.” —Booklist “There's no better time to stop, relax, take a breath and read NPR critic Glen Weldon's history of Batman…Because here, in these entertaining pages, you will discover that nerd rage over the Dark Knight is nothing new.” —Mashable (Geek Book of the Week) “[A] smart, engaging dissection of Batman’s pulpy comic-book roots, his rise to campy ’60s TV stardom, his takeover of toy shelves and his resurrection as the dark knight of the silver screen.” —Parade “Sinkinginto the pages of ‘The Caped Crusade’ is the next-best thing to debating who’sthe better Batman.” —Detroit Free Press "Anyone familiar with Weldon’s frequent NPR appearances will delight in this book’s near-perfect translation of his verbal and comedic sensibilities. Its tone is reverent and analytical, acknowledging the absurdities of Batman and celebrating its wondrous appeal in equal measure." —DCist “If you looked at Glen Weldon’s utility belt, you’d find wit, humor & endless knowledge about Batman. Thankfully he's condensed that utility belt into a book where you will learn the origin, the ups, the downs and the sideways of one of the most iconic bat-based superheroes of all time.” —Kumail Nanjiani, comedian and star of HBO’s Silicon Valley “This is the hero’s journey of Batman from a raw idea of a character to a cornerstone of pop culture. Weldon pulls the back the cowl and reveals us—creators, performers and fans—all collaborating to shape a modern myth that bends with the times to endure. Once I started, I kept reading every chance I got.” —Jeff Parker, writer of BATMAN ’66 " The Caped Crusade is seriously informed, daringly opinionated and endlessly charming...It’s not just a book about Batman, its Nerd Culture’s origin story." —Guy Branum, host of Pop Rocket Glen Weldon has been a theater critic, a science writer, an oral historian, a writing teacher, a bookstore clerk, a movie usher, a PR flack, an inept marine biologist, and a slightly-better-than-ept competitive swimmer. His work has appeared in The New York Times , The Washington Post , The New Republic , Slate , The Atlantic , The Village Voice , The Philadelphia Inquirer , and many other places. He is a panelist on NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour and reviews books and comic books for NPR.org. The author of Superman: The Unauthorized Biography and The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture , he lives in Washington, DC. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Caped Crusade Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “A roaring getaway car of guilty pleasures” (
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • ), Glen Weldon’s
  • The Caped Crusade
  • is a fascinating, critically acclaimed chronicle of the rises and falls of one of the world’s most iconic superheroes and the fans who love him—now with a new afterword.
  • Since his debut in
  • Detective Comics
  • #27, Batman has been many things: a two-fisted detective; a planet-hopping gadabout; a campy Pop Art sensation; a pointy-eared master spy; and a grim ninja of the urban night. Yet, despite these endless transformations, he remains one of our most revered cultural icons. In this “smart, witty, and engrossing” (
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • )
  • cultural critique, NPR contributor and book critic Glen Weldon provides “a sharp, deeply knowledgeable, and often funny look at the cultural history of Batman and his fandom” (
  • Chicago Tribune
  • ) to discover why it is that we can’t get enough of the Dark Knight. For nearly a century, Batman has cycled through eras of dark melodrama and light comedy and back again. How we perceive his character, whether he’s delivering dire threats in a raspy Christian Bale growl or trading blithely homoerotic double entendres with Robin the Boy Wonder, speaks to who we are and how we wish to be seen by the world. It’s this endless adaptability that has made him so lasting, and ultimately human. But it’s also Batman’s fundamental nerdiness that uniquely resonates with his fans and makes them fiercely protective of him. As Weldon charts the evolution of Gotham’s Guardian from Bob Kane and Bill Finger’s hyphenated hero to Christopher Nolan’s post-9/11 Dark Knight, he reveals how this symbol of justice has made us who we are today and why his legacy remains so strong. The result is “possibly the most erudite and well-researched fanboy manifesto ever” (
  • Booklist).
  • Well-researched, insightful, and engaging,
  • The Caped Crusade
  • , with a new afterword by the author, has something for everyone: “If you’re a Bat-neophyte, this is an accessible introduction; if you’re a dyed-in-the-Latex Bat-nerd, this is a colorfully rendered magical history tour redolent with nostalgia” (
  • The Washington Post
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(208)
★★★★
25%
(87)
★★★
15%
(52)
★★
7%
(24)
-7%
(-25)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Nerds versus Normals

Glen Weldon—author, critic, and effervescent panelist on NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” —writes of the Batman phenomenon from the standpoint of nerds versus “normals” cultures in the United States (and, presumably, beyond). His splendid book, “The Caped Crusade,” assumes that there is a nerd culture, such as that caricatured on the TV show “Big Bang Theory,” one, moreover, that is specifically focused on Batman, and what’s more, that there are “normals” distinct from them. One might just as well as point to Batman fans (the word is a derivative of fanatic) versus those with a more casual interest in Batman, for, as Weldon points out, there is diversity in the opinions of both groups. Nonetheless, some generalizations can be made: the nerds have favored a dark, solitary, heterosexual, borderline (?) psychotic Batman, whereas the “normals” have been somewhat more tolerant of less dark, more family-friendly, even if sometimes more sexually ambivalent, Batman.

Weldon’s device of nerds versus normals works well in treating this pop cultural phenomenon. He focuses on how these cultures defined the Batman idea over time. What might have been interesting would have been to have asked how Batman’s changing image reflected who we were as a people over time. What did the original Batman fighting those who bilked the rich say about an America coming out of the Depression, and what does the ultra-violent Batman of today say about our uneasy society?

This book is a romp through the decades of Batman from his first appearance in 1939 as a rich guy defending the rich right into this decade, in which Batman is, in print and on screen, more often than not the Dark Knight who fights shocking crimes against the city of Gotham, a superhero who revels in his “badassery.” After the camp Batman of the 1960s TV show, the nerds, who hated that unserious (or, rather, unseriously serious) depiction of the Caped Crusader, have gradually won the day as Batman embraces the nerds’ idea of him.

Weldon, an articulate and amusing podcast panelist, writes the way he talks, which means he uses sometimes precious and quirky expressions like “a bolus of gothy showbiz.” To read Weldon’s prose is to encounter this persona that Weldon projects on “Pop Culture.” You either like it or you don’t. It certainly seems appropriate in the context of superhero pop culture.

I found Weldon’s book a pleasure to read. The nerds versus normals thesis aside, Weldon provides a terrific summary of the Batman phenomenon. Those curious to learn more about the various aspects of Batman will certainly be grateful for and delight in Weldon’s annotated bibliography, which follows the book proper.
1 people found this helpful
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Engaging use of Batman as a lens with which to view modern fandom

Fascinating take on fandom and its development in our modern times, using Batman as the lens. Glen Weldon does a great job in distilling a lot of Dark Knight history down to its salient points without missing…the point.

I don’t agree with all of Weldon’s takes or their proportions within his framework, but the book challenged me and will have me thinking, pondering, and sleuthing out the meanings we assign Batman. There’s a lot to like here and much to celebrate and appreciate. The book is also a great occasion to think more deeply about fandom and evolving fan culture—what it gives, and what it takes away.

Highly recommended for those who take their nerding seriously, as I do.
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Book covers I received have been damaged.

I have re-ordered this book three times and each time including the latest book the covers have been damaged. I give up and I am just keeping this one and hopefully I can find one at another bookstore that is not damaged. I want to read this book but I don't like to pay money for damaged book covers.
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Good

It's cool.
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Required Reading for Batnerds

Required reading for Batnerds written by a Batnerd. Very enjoyable book and great historical perspective of each iteration of Batman. “Batman is an inkblot; we see in him what we want to- even if we aren’t ready to admit it to ourselves.”
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Easily the most engrossing

Easily the most engrossing, thought-provoking and funniest foray into comic book history and culture that I have ever read. Weldon's gift for turning a phrase ensures that the reader will never get bored, even during the longer stretches of historical exposition. 'Caped Crusade' managed to be at once a love letter to the pop culture phenomenon of Bateman and a level-headed critique of his not-always-so-great history. I loved it.