Tales of My Green Lantern: The Back of The Flash Years (1972-76), Part 3
In 1975, beginning in The Flash #233 (May, 1975) and 234 (Jun.
In 1975, beginning in The Flash #233 (May, 1975) and 234 (Jun.
Green Lantern is my favorite superhero, and he got around the DC Universe more during 1972-76 (particularly in 1974) than I’ve been giving him credit for in past editions of this column.
In what should have stayed a self-contained, eight-page backup story illustrated by Neal Adams in The Flash #226, Green Lantern found he was incapable of using his power ring effectively.
From the beginning of Jack Kirby’s Fourth World series it was the apprehension of the Anti-life Equation that drove Darkseid.
Green Lantern/Green Arrow #89 (Apr.
haven’t been contributing to Comics Bulletin lately--the more recent half.
After reading Jason Sacks’s “Top Ten 1970s Marvels” and Andrew Wahl’s “Top Ten Most Underrated Bronze Age Comics,” two excellent articles recently published here at Comics Bulletin , coming up with my selection of DC’s best comic book series of the Bronze Age was easy, but convincing myself that the series I chose deserved to stay at the top was the hard part because it wasn’t long before every other series or story I had relegated to #2 came calling with strong justifications for supplanting my choice.
A significant comic strip anniversary is less than two weeks away! Linus began his annual anticipation of the Great Pumpkin’s rising from a sincere pumpkin patch in the “Peanuts” strip that appeared in newspapers on October 26, 1959.
I’m not exactly sure which superheroes Bob Brown is most noted for illustrating during his decades-long career in comics.
Jim Kingman If Infinite Crisis #1 could be reviewed on the basis of anticipation alone, my silver bullet rating would need more ammunition.
