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Justice League of America (vol. 2) #58

Issue Credits

Writer
James Robinson
Penciller
Daniel Sampere and Miguel Sepulveda
Inker
Wayne Faucher and Miguel Sepulveda
Colourist
Andrew Dalhouse
Letterer
Rob Leigh
Editor
Rex Ogle and Eddie Berganza
Cover Colourist
Andrew Dalhouse
Cover Penciller
Brett Booth
Cover Inker
Norm Rapmund
Variant Cover Artist
Aaron Lopresti
Variant Cover Colourist
Hi-Fi

Quotes

Atom: Big green-blue light says “follow me,” I follow.

Synopsis "Eclipso Rising Part Five: The Destined and the Dying"

Eclipso, the former spirit of vengeance, seeks to kill god by destroying the planet Earth. He has eclipsed a group of heroes and villains, each of whom has some power over shadows, and has led them in a successful assault on the Emerald City of the Starheart. Using the captured Starheart energy Eclipso summoned and apparently killed the Spectre. Then with power stolen in turn from the Spectre Eclipso cleaved the moon in two.
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JLA/The 99 #2

Issue Credits

Writer
Fabian Nicieza and Stuart Moore
Artist
Tom Derenick and Drew Geraci
Colourist
Allen Passalaqua
Letterer
Rob Leigh
Associate Editor
Rachel Gluckstern
Editor
Mike Carlin, Marie Javins, and Naif Al-Mutawa (Consulting)
Cover Artist
Felipe Massafera

Quotes

Batman: In fact, there’s too much happening simultaneously for all of this to be unrelated.
Green Lantern: Really? I’d call it a typical Wednesday.

Synopsis "Stars of Tomorrow"

Previously: The City of the Future was meant to be a shining beacon of cooperation built in the deserts of the Arabian peninsula. Members of the JLA and The 99 had gathered for its dedication, but the crowd suddenly rioted and Superman was uncharacteristically unhelpful. The JLA and the 99 were also collaborated to find out why Darr, one of the 99 with the power to project waves of pain, could not control his powers. Investigating an earthquake in South America leads Hawkman to meet another trio from the 99 who tell him that worldwide the geological upheavals are being caused by a newly activated Noor Stone.

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Rafael Albuquerque’s Justice League

This piece shows an alternative Justice League. It’s attributed to Brazilian artist Rafael Albuquerque (Blue Beetle, Superman/Batman). I don’t know if this is just a commission piece or whether it’s from an unannounced project (he was a DC exclusive until April 2009), but I can’t find it on the artist’s Deviant Art page or his blog.

LJA_by_rafaelalbuquerqueart

It’s an interesting mix and looks like a Justice League collected from across time or multiple continuities – Hawkgirl, Firestorm, Poison Ivy, and the Atom are the modern fellows. That Negative Man costume looks early. The Enemy Ace and Sandman are from the WWI and WWII respectively and that Superman looks like he’s from the future.

[Via Comics By Comic.com and Comic Art Community]

JLA roster revealed in BN #3 advert

bn3-jla-advert

A full page advert (above) in this week’s Blackest Night #3 revealed the JLA roster that had previously been blanked out on preview images. The advert proclaims “October 2009. James Robinson. Mark Bagley. Justice League of America. Issue 38. A new era begins.” It also features a copy of the preview artwork with the full cast revealed (shown below).

bn3-jla-advert2

There are three distinct groups of overlapping characters in that picture. The first group is Green Lantern (Hal), Green Arrow (Ollie) and the Atom were members of the original League and are the feature characters in Robinson’s current JLA: Cry For Justice mini-series. Congorilla is also featured in Cry, but this is his debut as a proper Justice Leaguer.

The second group is what I’d called the “Conway members”, those members of the League added to the rollcall because the writer happens to also be writing their solo title, i.e., in the way that Gerry Conway brought his Firestorm into the satellite era League or Grant Morrison brought Aztek into the Big 7 run. In this case Robinson is currently writing Superman featuring Mon-El. The Guardian is a major supporting character in Superman and he’s been flirting with his neighbour, Doctor Light. Mon-El, Guardian, and Light are all in the above image. She’s also important as she’s the only member shown who survives from the end of Dwayne McDuffie’s League.

The third group, and in some ways the most surprising, is the Titans. Donna Troy is appearing for Wonder Woman and Dick Grayson is there as he’s currently Batman. I suspect there is a major event building for Wonder Woman in Blackest Night – she’s in the final wave of BN DC Direct figures, but nobody knows why. We knew Dick and Donna already, but they’re now joined by Starfire and Cyborg.  She had recently refused Doctor Light’s offer of League membership. Where this leaves the currently meandering Titans title is unknown, but we had been warned the two teams would be coming closer together.

When Brad Meltzer relaunched this title he included Arsenal as the Titan who steps up to take his mentor’s place as Red Arrow. Former Titan Wally West eventually rejoined the group as the Flash, but he’s been a JLA member since his time with Justice League Europe. And while I’m on this divergence – notice that there is no Flash in the image, neither Barry Allen or Wally West appear, but that stop  any Flash Rebirth spoilers.

It’s an interesting roster and at eleven members one of the larger we’ve seen recently. I wouldn’t be too surprised if that image changed slightly when the issue actually ships (its something they did with the last comparable image). I certainly expect that Mon-El, Dick, and maybe Donna will make way for the real Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman once their individual plot-lines are tied up. That wouldn’t make the line-up look so radical – you’d then have six original members and only two former Titans.