Encompassing events from the Great Depression, WWII, McCarthyism, the Cold War, the Kennedy administration, the Civil Rights movement and Watergate, Geary's work serves as an engrossing, easy to take history lesson."- Publishers Weekly Reviews from Goodreads Back About the author Rick GearyĪn award-winning cartoonist and illustrator, Rick Geary has worked for Marvel Entertainment Group, DC Comics, Dark Horse Comics, and Heavy Metal, and has contributed to National Lampoon and The New York Times Book Review.At first they think they have been transported to some alternate, hellish dimension.
" traces the life and career of the creator of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, weaving a compelling portrait of a man isolated by authority and his desire for secrecy while simultaneously making a name for himself and his agency in the war against organized crime. This excellent graphic biography makes the life of Hoover and the history of the FBI both accessible and engaging."- Jodi Mitchell, Berkeley Public Library, Berkeley, California, School Library Journal He maintains an unbiased, objective point of view, but still dishes up some dirt. An interesting point that Geary reiterates is Hoover's strategy to remain nonpartisan while wooing presidential supporters from both parties. He befriended the likes of Jack Warner, who glamorized the FBI in his film. The author provides a fascinating look at how pop culture (films, radio, pulp magazines, comic strips, etc.) worked to aggrandize the status of Hoover, who craftily used entertainment for propagandistic and self-promotional purposes. Geary has done his homework: the cover and splash page distinctly mimic 1930s advertisements for the popular Warner Brothers' film G-Men, showcasing a machine-gun-toting, dapper Hoover looking much like James Cagney, who played him in the movie.
His story is well represented by this master illustrator's old-fashioned, highly stylized, black-and-white line art and high-crime drama-superhero comic-book format. Hoover, director of the FBI for nearly 50 years, has been elevated to iconic status in the annals of U.S. "This comprehensive, highly detailed account is captivating. The resultant book is a dandy skim over a fascinating figure." - Ray Olson, Booklist Geary gives such things their due, but no more, preferring to limn the considerable evidence of Hoover's self-righteousness, paranoia, power mongering, and egomania. That view comes up in Geary's just-the-facts-ma'am treatment, as do the rumors about Hoover's sexuality. Of course, many think the FBI's founding director was a bad guy, who violated the Constitution he was sworn to uphold.
"The deft graphic chronicler of nineteenth-century homicide in the Treasury of Victorian Murder series turns his deadpan skills to an ostensible good guy. As solid, thrilling and informative a guide to the life of America's most powerful authoritarian as one could ask for."- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Geary doesn't stoop to rumor-mongering about Hoover's sexuality-he points out that the cross-dressing story is most likely false-but he gives the director's lengthy, marriage-like relationship with second-in-command Clyde Tolson the importance it deserves, particularly since Hoover publicly proclaimed such a rigid, outdated view of sexual morality. In the postwar years, he became the embodiment of an American reactionary. Hoover was obsessed almost equally by fighting what he saw as the immoral poison of liberalism and by consolidating his power with that of the FBI-the two often seen as the same thing to Hoover and, thanks to his intense media lobbying, to the nation itself. Geary expertly marks the exacting effort with which Hoover set out during the Depression years to transform the oft-ignored, nearly powerless bureau into a well-publicized and widely idealized national crime-fighting, gangster-busting force. Obsessively hardworking from an early age, with few friends but a careful eye toward staying politically neutral in order to advance his career, Hoover swiftly moved up the ladder from a lowly Department of Justice post procured for him by a cousin in 1917 to head the Bureau of Investigation by 1924. Born in Washington, D.C., in 1895, Hoover came from a religious clan whose 'family business' was the federal bureaucracy. He brings the same clean artwork and swift but steady pacing to his graphic biography of J. His work for National Lampoon and Heavy Metal illustrates his long-standing taste for the pulpier side of things, but Geary also does solid work in historical comics, albeit ones with a gruesome true-crime slant. "The life and times of America's top cop, by prolific author/artist Geary.