Mr. A is a fictional comic book hero created by Steve Ditko. Unlike most of his work, the character of Mr. A and the Mr. A stories remain the property of Ditko, all of which were written and illustrated by himself. The character first appeared in Witzend #3, 1967. Mr. A's name comes from "A is A", a popular way to represent the Law of Identity used often by Ayn Rand in particular.
Almost every character speaks about the ideological reasoning behind their actions on every panel, thus showing that the adventure story is not meant to be just entertainment, but is to show an ideological dialogue and hopefully sway readers over to Objectivism.
Not all of Mr. A's stories are crime adventures. Some are allegorical representations of the guilty trying to explain why they compromised their values. Mr. A, on a white platform, denounces their explanations. These stories typically end with the guilty falling into an abyss off of their black platform. This representation often occurs at the end of the adventure stories as well.
Detractors have said that Mr. A is an unfeeling character who offers no remorse or mercy to criminals. In the stories themselves Mr. A says that he feels only for the innocent and victimized. His brand of justice might seem harsh to some, but on the other hand his punishments for criminals arguably fit the crimes they committed. People who commit "just one crime", such as accepting dirty money are turned over to authorities to stand trial for what they have done. Mr. A refuses to overlook their transgressions, even if they profess they will be good from then on. Killers and would-be-killers generally find themselves in situations where they need Mr. A's assistance to save them, but since they had no respect for innocent lives then he offers no aid for their guilty ones. It is only when an innocent life is directly threatened that Mr. A will kill, and when he does so it is without remorse.
Ditko responded to his critics in a Mr. A essay titled " Violence the Phoney Issue", printed in Guts #5 in 1969. This essay was reprinted in Ditko's 2002 collection Avenging World.
Mr. A became the subject of the song "Goodbye Mr. A" by the British indie band The Hoosiers in late 2007, the lyrics talk about Mr. A's uncompromising values and the character's lack of popularity. Also, in The Hoosiers' music video of "Goodbye Mr. A", Mr A is launched into the air by a rocket and the band becomes superheroes in his place. Both Steve Ditko and Mr. A are referenced in the song "New Broom" by British band XTC, on the album "XTC Explode Together": "Mr. Ditko was right, Mr. A so near".
Ditko’s H Series and J Series (standing for "hero" and "justice" respectively) tell the stories of men who never compromise their beliefs, even when their futures or lives are at stake. At the end of H Series, the hero’s brother is distraught because he is disgusted by himself when compared to someone like his brother who never bends to the will of others and never does wrong. This is another common theme with Mr. A, and the heroes in all these stories could easily be interchanged with him.
(Note that the character Rorschach from Moore's series Watchmen is based partially on Mr. A.) The song is written to the tune of The Velvet Underground's song Sister Ray.[Bruce Hershenson promoted a Mr. A. #3, that would be "Mr. A. vs. the Polluters", but it never appeared.]