![]() ![]() What was the original Golden Age of comics? We explain it all here. The three new miniseries will be published by DC in October. You can get a first look at the new Alan Scott: Green Lantern in the pages of DC Pride: Through the Years, which will be available from comic shops on June 13. The New Golden Age event began in a Johns-penned one-shot last year, before splintering out into the pages of the Justice Society of America comic and Stargirl: The Lost Children, which ends this month with #6. Dodds, we are told, "has given up on the hope of a peaceful world, but he hasn't stopped believing that people can be better to each other, if they're only given the right tools." Production quality is decent, but a far cry from that of Marvel's painstakingly produced omnibuses. "But will The Flash and The Boom be able to thwart a plan that’s been in the works for decades?!"įinally, Wesley Dodds: The Sandman sees the character rushing to find a stolen science journal before its deadly contents are shared with the "belligerent nations" who are trying to pull the United States into the next world war. 1 collects Flash 164-176, Flash: Iron Heights 1, Flash Secret Files 3, and Flash: Our Worlds at War 1, all originally published between 20. ![]() "They'll need to work to find common ground when a mission that started in Jay's early days as the Flash comes roaring to today," says DC's release. ![]() ![]() Jay Garrick: The Flash, meanwhile, is said to be about the difficulties of being a parent, as Jay Garrick must learn to connect with his speedster daughter, Judy. ![]()
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