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For 87 years, DC Comics has been telling superhero stories, and over those years, we’ve gotten some amazing tales starring the first superhero. There’s something about a story starring the Man of Steel, and his best are some of the best of all-time. These are the ten best Superman stories in DC history, tales that have vaulted to the top of the heap.
10) “Warworld Saga”

There have been some excellent modern Superman stories, but few of them grabbed readers like “Warworld Saga”. The story came at just the right town; after several years of successes, the Bendis run on Superman and Action Comics had dragged Krypton’s last son down. Writer Phillip Kennedy Johnson came onboard Action Comics and unleashed this epic with artists Daniel Sampere, Riccardo Federici, Dale Eaglesham, Fico Ossio, and more. It follows a weakened Man of Steel and his version of the Authority to Warworld to free the planet from Mongul. What follows is a story that uses the central conceit of Superman as a character to inform its narrative. It’s everything you could want from this kind of story and then some.
9) Superman and the Authority

Grant Morrison is one of DC’s greatest talents, and their work on Superman is especially good. Morrison showed how well they could write the Man of Steel in JLA, and since then has been given numerous occasions to write the hero. Superman and the Authority, by Morrison, Mikel Janin, Fico Ossio, Travel Foremon, and Evan Cagle, was the writer’s “last” DC comic (they’ve since come back twice), following a weakened Kal-El as he assembled a new version of the Authority to help him in his final acts of heroism. It’s an awesome little miniseries, pitting the hero against two of his best, yet underrated, villains for a greatest of all time romp.
8) Superman Annual #11

Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons gave readers Watchmen, as well as one of the greatest Superman stories ever. Superman Annual #11 sees Wonder Woman, Batman, and Robin head to the Fortress of Solitude for the Man of Steel’s birthday. When they arrive, they find him ensnared in a plant called the Black Mercy, a fiendish present from the alien warlord Mongul. It kills whoever it traps, giving them their heart’s desire all the while. As the heroes battle the monstrous villain, Superman fights his own battle in his mind, realizing that his “perfect” life isn’t actually perfect. This is an amazing one and done story; Moore and Gibbons are in rare form, giving readers exactly what they’d expect from a team of this caliber. Add in one of the greatest fights in comic history, and this is a book that deserves its lofty reputation.
7) “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?”

Crisis on Infinite Earths closed the door to the DC Comics of the Silver and Bronze Ages, and Alan Moore demanded (playfully choking Paul Levitz, as revealed by Levitz in DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore) to tell the last Superman story. Moore was teamed with two of the best artists ever in George Perez and Superman legend Curt Swan for “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?”. In the future, Lois Lane is telling a reporter of the last days of Superman. As his enemies make even bloodier attacks against him than ever, revealing his identity, Superman takes the people he loves to the Fortress of Solitude, leading to a siege that could only end with death. This story says good-bye to 30 years of Superman stories in the perfect way, with Moore giving it a modern edge, all while embracing the Silver Age feel that Swan’s flawless artwork gives the story.
6) “Death of Superman”

I know what you’re thinking, and it’s something along the lines of there’s no way “Death of Superman” is better than an Alan Moore story. However, there are few stories more important “Death of Superman”. This epic from Dan Jurgens, Roger Stern, Louise Simonson, Jerry Ordawy, Brett Breeding, Jackson Guice, Jon Bogdanove, and Tom Grummet does everything it set out to do, and it does it with aplomb. It’s able to capture the danger and the tension of the battle against Doomsday perfectly, and the art and writing are better than you remember. It’s a simple slugfest, but there’s so more to it than that, as it takes readers on an emotional ride unlike any they’d been on at the time.













