It's not intuitive to me that because Len Strazewski had been a good writer of a retro-set JSA story that he would be the man to bring them back in the present day. It's a very different idea! But man, he sure was.
The series begins with a prologue set shortly after Armageddon: Inferno, with the JSA being heralded at a big event to welcome them home after their years fighting in the simulation of Ragnarok. (In a nice touch, Clark Kent is in the audience, and he is a total fanboy at getting to see the JSA again.) The series then jumps forward a couple months to let the JSA members settle into their lives again and pick up with what they're doing now. As the first present-day post-Crisis JSA ongoing, Justice Society vol. 2 can make use of a lot of the ideas Roy and Dann Thomas introduced in All-Star Squadron and Infinity, Inc. for the first time. For example, A-SS's Johnny Quick reappears, and we learn that since we last saw him way back in 1942, he and Liberty Belle had a daughter and got divorced. This daughter, Jesse, is writing a dissertation on superheroes, and has inherited her father's super-speed (now revealed to be a consequence of Invasion!'s metagene); she quickly (ha!) becomes involved with the JSA as superheroine "Jesse Quick." (Plus Gernsback the robot is even installed in the JSA's new headquarters!) Infinc's Rick "Hourman II" Tyler reappears, now succumbing to Miraclo-induced cancer. The Hawks don't want to join a new JSA at first, being in mourning over the death of their son Hector in The Sandman. (On the other hand, it's a bit odd to read about this series's Wes "Sandman" Dodds, a rare appearance of his post-Crisis but pre-Sandman Mystery Theatre incarnation. This version of the character was being wiped out right as JSA vol. 2 drew to a close.)
from Justice Society of America vol. 2 #2 (art by Mike Parobeck & Mike Machlan) |
Another of the series's strengths is its characterization. Strazewksi hits exactly the balance I like to see in a superhero comic. No issue ever lacks for a fight scene-- but each issue usually also finds time for an extended conversation. Strazewksi's writing is heart-warming without being saccharine, and he has a great handle on the present-day JSA members. My favorite touch is that of all the JSA, Al "the Atom" Pratt is the most like a grumpy old man. It's like, of course he is, because he had a chip on his shoulder since his college days... but he was also the youngest of the original JSA by far, so it's ironic, too! The interplay between him and Wildcat was especially great, but I loved seeing all of them in action: Alan Scott, Jay Garrick, Charles McNider, Johnny Thunder, and so on.
In the lettercol to issue #10, Strazewski says he was inspired by seeing Buckminster Fuller and pre-WWII woman union members: "the senior heroes of my experience, folks [...] who had been making their statements and bucking conventional wisdom for decades[,] seemed to me, for want of a better word, secure." There's no angst here, just pleasure in a job they've always loved doing.On top of that we have fun stories and good art. Mike Parobeck has a clean, heroic, retro style, perfectly suited to the world's first superhero team. You can tell all his characters apart even as civilians (not every superhero artist can do this); they have distinct builds and faces and hairstyles. The action is usually clear and clean. The plots are solid: the JSA battles evil experimenters (surprise, it's Ultra-Humanite), goes back to Badhnesia (where Johnny's powers come from) to find out what happened to its people, and stops a deadly hate plague spread by Spectre foe Kulak. I had a blast reading every single issue.
It's a shame, of course, that the series ended so soon; one senses that they were just getting started. Jesse Quick does a little, but not a lot; Kiku, the new ward for Johnny Thunder who gains some power over the Thunderbolt, hardly does anything. Future writers would pick up on Jesse, but I am pretty sure Kiku is forgotten. At the end of issue #10, Starman and the Sandman have only just got back into action. (Starman, by the way, clearly has one son, not two.) But even still, Strazewski, Parobeck, and Machlan carved out a way for the JSA to remain relevant in the 1990s and beyond; I think there's a direct line from what they did here to how David Goyer and James Robinson ultimately brought the JSA back in 1999. (But more on that later! Much later at the rate I am going.)- All Star Comics: Only Legends Live Forever (1976-79)
- The Huntress: Origins (1977-82)
- All-Star Squadron (1981-87)
- Infinity, Inc.: The Generations Saga, Volume One (1983-84)
- Infinity, Inc.: The Generations Saga, Volume Two (1984-85)
- Showcase Presents... Power Girl (1978)
- America vs. the Justice Society (1985)
- Jonni Thunder, a.k.a. Thunderbolt (1985)
- Crisis on Multiple Earths, Volume 7 (1983-85)
- Infinity, Inc. #11-53 (1985-88) [reading order]
- Last Days of the Justice Society of America (1986-88)
- All-Star Comics 80-Page Giant (1999)
- Steel, the Indestructible Man (1978)
- Superman vs. Wonder Woman: An Untold Epic of World War Two (1977)
- Wonder Woman: Earth-Two (1977-78)
- Secret Origins of the Golden Age (1986-89)
- The Young All-Stars (1987-89)
- Gladiator (1930) ["Man-God!" (1976)]
- The Crimson Avenger: The Dark Cross Conspiracy (1981-88)
- The Immortal Doctor Fate (1940-82)
- Justice Society of America: The Demise of Justice (1951-91)
- Armageddon: Inferno (1992)
This series was not supposed to end when it did. DC's Mike Carlin was not a fan, and he had it killed.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbr.com/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-13/
This sound vaguely familiar. A real shame! Glad DC reversed its take on the legacy stuff in the 2000s (though then they went back to the Carlin take in the 2010s, I think).
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