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Catherine's character has been criticized for representing an idyllic "normal life" for Frank, instead of being a developed character in her own right; The A.V. Club's Emily VanDerWerff called her "more symbol than character" [17] and "a weak enough character to become a passenger in her own story". [18]
The two primary characters in the saga are Lisbeth Salander, an asocial computer hacker with a photographic memory, and Mikael Blomkvist, an investigative journalist and publisher of a magazine called Millennium. Seven books in the series have been published.
The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of Thinker first appeared in All-Flash #12 (Fall 1943) and was created by Gardner Fox and Everett E. Hibbard. [1] In October 1947, the Thinker was one of the six original members of the Injustice Society, who began battling the Justice Society of America in All Star Comics #37 (Oct 1947). [2]
Mongul (/ ˈ m ɒ ŋ ɡ əl /) is a supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics.Writer Len Wein and artist Jim Starlin created the first version of the character, who debuted in DC Comics Presents #27 (November 1980). [1]
Characters with more than one codename for that period have them listed chronologically and separated by a slash (/). Bolded names in the most recent iteration published are the current agency members. First appearance is the place where the character first appeared as a member of a particular iteration. It is not necessarily the first ...
DC Comics had the first fictional universe of superheroes, with the Justice Society of America forming in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the 1940s. This shared continuity became increasingly complex with multiple worlds, including a similar team of all-star superheroes formed in the 1960s named the Justice League of America, debuting in The Brave and the Bold Volume 1 #28.
Mad Thinker's Intellectual Robots - A group of robots modeled after history's greatest thinkers, including Abraham Lincoln, Albert Einstein, Confucius, Friedrich Nietzsche, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Leonardo da Vinci, Mark Twain, Niccolò Machiavelli, Plato, Sigmund Freud, Socrates, Virginia Woolf, and William Shakespeare.
McKellar was born in La Jolla, California. [5] [6] [7] She moved with her family to Los Angeles when she was eight.Her mother, Mahaila McKellar (née Tello), was a homemaker; her father, Christopher McKellar, is a real estate developer; her younger sister, Crystal (b. 1976), is a lawyer. [8]