James D. Hudnall (1957–2019)
Author of Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography
About the Author
Image credit: Portrait by Michael Netzer
Series
Works by James D. Hudnall
ESPers #2 of 4 2 copies
ESPers #1 of 4 2 copies
Hardcase #9 1 copy
ESPers #4 of 4 1 copy
Strikeforce Morituri 29 1 copy
Death of the Squad #4 1 copy
The Solution #9 1 copy
Hardcase #1 1 copy
The Solution #14 1 copy
Action Comics # 666 1 copy
Interface #1 1 copy
ESPers #3 of 4 1 copy
Devastator #s 1-2 1 copy
Hardcase #19 1 copy
Espers, 4-issue miniseries 1 copy
Espers #5 1 copy
Interface #s 1-8 (Espers) 1 copy
The Psycho #s 1,3 (of 3) 1 copy
Hardcase #3 1 copy
Heartbreakers Bust Out 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Hudnall, James D.
- Legal name
- Hudnall, James David
- Other names
- Hudnall, James
- Birthdate
- 1957-04-10
- Date of death
- 2019-04-09
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Santa Rosa, California, USA
Members
Reviews
Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography features writing from James D. Hudnall, art by Eduardo Barreto, color from Adam Kubert, and letters by Bill Oakley. As a graphic novel, the book could go beyond the weakened limits of the Comic Code in 1989, focusing on Peter Sands, a washed-up drunk of a reporter who sets out to write a sleazy biography of Luthor in order to raise some funds. Hudnall tells the story in flashback, with Clark Kent relaying what he knows of these events to police since he show more stands accused of Sands’s murder. As the story unwinds, Hudnall portrays a Luthor who tormented those around him from a young age, figuring out how to wield power over others and scheming to control them. Hudnall portrays Luthor having his parents killed for insurance money and then parleying that windfall into a front company that enabled him to develop and distribute designer drugs, filling the gap left when the CIA’s Air America program ended. Barreto’s portrayal of Metropolis’ slums differs from the usual clean, well-lit city of Superman, recalling instead David Mazzucchelli’s portrayal of Gotham in Batman: Year One with its grime and vice. Kubert’s colors add to this effect, with more muted colors and washes bringing out the grittiness of Barreto’s linework.
When Sands pitches the book to Ellen Fisher at Tinsel Town Press, she responds, “That sounds great! Could do better than Trump’s book.” The reference to Trump: The Art of the Deal doesn’t end there as Eric Peterson’s cover illustration directly references the cover to Tony Schwartz and Trump’s book, especially in the font choice and layout. This works particularly well, coming as it does three years after Marv Wolfman and John Byrne’s post-Crisis revamping of Lex Luthor as a wealthy businessman in 1986. While the story takes place in Superman’s world, the Man of Steel only makes a brief blur of an appearance. Most of the story is grounded, taking place in the human world even as Luthor’s power and influence begin to border on classic supervillainy. Hudnall builds on Luthor’s identity as a businessman when he depicts Sands getting the opportunity to ask Lex why he did what he did. Luthor responds, “Life is short. I could have become like my parents, had I chose to wallow in cheap emotion and self loathing, as did they. Instead I chose to become a god. I control human lives, instead of being controlled. I can destroy someone with a phone call. Which is why I cannot abide Superman! There is only room for one god on this planet!” Though no longer canon, Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography offers an interesting take on Superman nemesis that feels all-too-relevant today. show less
When Sands pitches the book to Ellen Fisher at Tinsel Town Press, she responds, “That sounds great! Could do better than Trump’s book.” The reference to Trump: The Art of the Deal doesn’t end there as Eric Peterson’s cover illustration directly references the cover to Tony Schwartz and Trump’s book, especially in the font choice and layout. This works particularly well, coming as it does three years after Marv Wolfman and John Byrne’s post-Crisis revamping of Lex Luthor as a wealthy businessman in 1986. While the story takes place in Superman’s world, the Man of Steel only makes a brief blur of an appearance. Most of the story is grounded, taking place in the human world even as Luthor’s power and influence begin to border on classic supervillainy. Hudnall builds on Luthor’s identity as a businessman when he depicts Sands getting the opportunity to ask Lex why he did what he did. Luthor responds, “Life is short. I could have become like my parents, had I chose to wallow in cheap emotion and self loathing, as did they. Instead I chose to become a god. I control human lives, instead of being controlled. I can destroy someone with a phone call. Which is why I cannot abide Superman! There is only room for one god on this planet!” Though no longer canon, Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography offers an interesting take on Superman nemesis that feels all-too-relevant today. show less
An interesting psychological portrait of Lex Luthor emerges when Clark Kent is arrested for the murder of a reporter who was doing an investigative article on Luthor. Illuminating, but I don't care much for this ruthless killer Luthor, much preferring the complex tragic figure of the old storylines who began his tenure in the comics as Superboy's friend, and who never killed anyone - unless you could count his many attempts upon Superman.
Feb 18, 2015 (Edited)French
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 93
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 307
- Popularity
- #76,699
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 21
- Languages
- 2
- Favorited
- 1















