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Steve Jobs comic book tells the story of Apple in strip form

There are those who think Steve Jobs is a superhero, so it's fitting he's joining Batman, Green Lantern and Iron Man with his own comic book.

Richard Trenholm Former Movie and TV Senior Editor
Richard Trenholm was CNET's film and TV editor, covering the big screen, small screen and streaming. A member of the Film Critic's Circle, he's covered technology and culture from London's tech scene to Europe's refugee camps to the Sundance film festival.
Expertise Films, TV, Movies, Television, Technology
Richard Trenholm
2 min read

There are those who think Steve Jobs is a superhero, so it's fitting he's joining Batman, Green Lantern and Iron Man with his own comic book. Steve Jobs: Co-founder of Apple tells the story of Jobs and his company in comic strip form.

The 32-page comic is published by Bluewater. It's written by one CW Cooke with art by Chris Schmidt and a cover, pictured above, by Marvel, DC and Doctor Who artist Joe Phillips.

Bluewater has made a name for itself with cheap cash-in biographies of celebrities including Barack Obama, Charlie Sheen, Lady GaGa, David Beckham, Justin Bieber, Prince William and Prince Harry.

Other high-prestige titles include spin-offs from Logan's Run and Plan 9 From Outer Space, clones of Clash of The Titans, and books with such luminaries as Adam West, William Shatner and Walter Koenig involved. We can't help thinking Steve deserves better...

Bluewater biographies generally consist of art cribbed from photos with explanatory captions, rather than an attempt to dramatise the subject's life or provide insight into what makes them tick -- like a Wikipedia article with better pictures, we suppose. We are impressed with Bluewater's commitment to comics about US political figures and issues, demystifying politics for younger readers -- or those with a short attention span, like us.

A biography that's received the official Jobsian blessing is due next year.iSteve: The Book of Jobs will draw on interviews with Apple employees, friends and Steve himself.

The Jobs comic follows a Bluewater biography of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, soon to be republished in graphic novel form. Both tech titans have been the subject of a movie: Jobs in Pirates of Silicon Valleyand Zuckerberg in Oscar-winner The Social Network.

Steve Jobs: Co-founder of Apple is out in August. If Steve Jobs was a superhero, what would his powers be? And if tech companies and products were comic-book characters, what superpowers would they have? Leap tall buildings and leave a comment below, or head faster than a speeding bullet to our Facebook page.