Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
John Stewart debuted in Green Lantern vol. 2 #87 (December 1971/January 1972) when artist Neal Adams came up with the idea of a substitute Green Lantern. [3] The decision to make the character African American-descent resulted from a conversation between Adams and editor Julius Schwartz, in which Adams recounts saying that given the racial makeup of the world's population, "we ought to have a ...
Green Lantern is the name of several superheroes appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.They fight evil with the aid of rings that grant them a variety of extraordinary powers, all of which come from imagination, fearlessness, and the electromagnetic spectrum of emotional willpower. [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
B'Shi is one of several Green Lanterns appearing in the "A Lantern Against the Dark: A Forgotten Tale of the Green Lantern Corps" story, from Green Lantern 80-Page Giant #3. She is a monkey-like Green Lantern from the jungle world of Suirpalam, who is recruited into the Green Lantern Corps by Raker Qarrigat (and in turn recruits Ash-Pak-Glif ...
The Green Lantern title returned with issue #90 (Aug.–Sept. 1976) [24] [25] and continued the Green Lantern/Green Arrow team format. O'Neil continued to write the stories, which were drawn by artists such as Mike Grell and Alex Saviuk, while muting the social and political themes that had characterized the stories that had been drawn by Neal ...
Damon Lindelof is wading back into DC Comics waters. As confirmed by DC Studios co-CEO James Gunn, Lindelof — who previously created 2019’s acclaimed Watchmen miniseries — is among the ...
Green Lantern proved popular and was given his own series, Green Lantern, later that year. Most of his adventures were set in New York. In 1941, Alan Scott was paired with a sidekick named Doiby Dickles, a rotund Brooklyn taxi driver, who would appear on a regular basis until 1949. In 1948, Alan also got a canine sidekick named Streak.
Showcase #22 (Oct. 1959), the first appearance of Hal Jordan, as the modern Green Lantern. Cover art by Kane. In the late 1950s, freelancing for DC Comics precursor National Comics, Kane illustrated works in what fans and historians call the Silver Age of Comic Books, creating character designs for the modern-day version of the 1940s superhero Green Lantern, [11] for which he pencilled most of ...