26. Legion of Super-Heroes: The Greak Darkness Saga
by Paul Levitz and Keith Giffen
Published by DC Comics
This is it -- the single greatest Legion of Super-Heroes story ever. And while it is part of an ongoing series, it was and remains a strong, stand-alone graphic novel.
Darkseid (before he was so overdone in the DC books), and the slightly older LSHers, this one was a different take on the idea of young heroes. Replacing the great hopefulness of the previous books with a "Great Darkness," this is one of the more underrated books that helped usher in the dark and gritty comics movement.
Only, rather than just being gritty for the sake of being gritty, The Great Darkness Saga never loses sight of the fantastic story at its core.
For the "rules" I'm using for graphic novel, check the original post.
Showing posts with label Legion of Super-Heroes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legion of Super-Heroes. Show all posts
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
The Writer Will Take Your Questions Now (#196) -- First Comic Book
What was the first comic book you ever bought?
That's easy. It was Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #255. I had owned plenty before that one, but they had been hand-me-down books from cousins and uncles and such, or gifts from relatives who didn't know what I really wanted to read.
Needless to say, it was the cover that hooked me. Baby Kal-El and rushing, panicked Cosmic Boy. I just had to know what was going on.
Monday, April 16, 2012
The Writer Will Take Your Questions Now (#142) -- Pulp Heroes
Where did your interest (as a reader) in the heroes of pulp originate?
To answer that, I really have to answer two questions because I liked pulp and pulp styled tales long before I knew what pulp actually was.
To answer the first, my interest in the pulp archetypes and pulp style began in my love for comics. Sure, I read mainstream superhero books like Legion of Super-Heroes and Avengers, but I also fell in love with the horror and sci-fi anthologies that tried to make readers think they were more lurid than they actually were. And these tales were really throwbacks to an earlier era, quick-hit, down and dirty stories of demons, murderers, creatures emerging from paintings to kill unsuspecting art lovers, and even battles against the unlucky number 13. Not only that, but even the mainstream books I read at the time had that old sci-fi edge of pulp tales -- in particular, the Legion of Super-Heroes and the Metal Men.
From there, the ball kept rolling downhill, picking up momentum and more mass, introducing me to more new pulp writing and reading opportunities.
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