| 1. JLA, Vol. 1 | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics September 02, 2008
The JLA Deluxe editions collects Grant Morrison's vision of what the Justice League is all about; quite simply put:
The seven greatest heroes of the DC Comic Universe (Aquaman, Batman, Flash, Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter, Superman, and Wonder Woman) uniting to solve that universe's greatest problems.
The real selling point to the Deluxe editions is that Grant Morrison's... more
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| 2. JLA, Vol. 2 (Deluxe Edition) | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics June 30, 2009
The JLA Deluxe editions collects Grant Morrison's vision of what the Justice League is all about; quite simply put:
The seven greatest heroes of the DC Comic Universe (Aquaman, Batman, Flash, Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter, Superman, and Wonder Woman) uniting to solve that universe's greatest problems.
The real selling point to the Deluxe editions is that Grant Morrison's... more
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| 3. JLA/Avengers | 
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By: Kurt Busiek Publisher: DC Comics November 18, 2008
After the proposed project was delayed way back in the 1980's, the two major comicbook companies (DC & MARVEL) finally got their **** together 20+ years later, and the JLA/AVENGERS Cross-Over finally got off the ground. It was worth the wait because [they] made it into a "4-Issue Event" (in its initial release). Now it is published into trade paperback combining all four issues from the talents... more
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| 4. JLA: Earth 2 | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics October 01, 2000
The story is aimless, with only half of anything being explained to the reader. It was a fast pace with nearly no setup, leaving me annoyed by the time I got to the end. Quietly's pencils are down right ugly, making Wonder Woman look like Rocky and the end of any of the movies. I recommend this only if you are a self-hating emo person who needs to punish themselves for some godforsaken reason. I wish... more
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| 5. JLA (Book 1): New World Order | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics April 01, 1997
Decent enough artwork but the story was found wanting in my opinion. In truth, I felt that the characters remained a little too flat to make this one interesting. Batman is the surly guy who gets underestimated, Superman is the self-righteous one who is taken down surprisingly easily, Martian Manhunter is of dubious loyalty, and Aquaman is arrogant and out of touch but finally comes around just in... more
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| 6. JLA (Book 7): Tower of Babel | 
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By: Mark Waid Publisher: DC Comics August 01, 2001
When I came into this book, especially after reading the Amazon.com reviews, I was expecting something epic. When I heard that this book dealt with Batman's ultimate plans against the rest of the JLA in the case of a superhero gone rogue, I was anticipating some brilliant ways to take down the most powerful beings in the universe that only Batman could devise.
I have to admit, when I read... more
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| 7. JLA (Book 2): American Dreams | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics January 01, 1998
One of the worst graphic novels I have ever read. The first story, about Tomorrow Woman, is the tired old cliche of robot becoming human. Poor Asimov is rolling over. The middle story about angels is well nigh unintelligble. There are entire frames that seem to be from some other story. The last piece about The Key is okay but half the story is the villain posing about and telling you what his... more
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| 8. JLA, Vol. 3 | |
By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics May 04, 2010
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| 9. JLA (Book 3): Rock of Ages | 
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By: Grant Morrison Publisher: DC Comics May 18, 1998
So after a shakey start, Morrison hits us with his big magnum opus. I suppose he could have just started off with this instead of Vol. 1 which looks even worse in comparrison, but then what would be the fun in starting the series guns blazing, right? Well, actually that would have been a great idea, but oh well.
So here we're given a 6 part story arc that introduces the newly reformed... more
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| 10. JLA (Book 4): Strength in Numbers | 
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By: Grant Morrison, Mark Waid, Christopher Priest, Howard Porter Publisher: DC Comics December 01, 1998
So by this point, I'm pretty much into the groove of Grant Morrison's writing and I didn't really think he would surprise me with anything new or exciting, but with the first story in here he did it. We are introduced to a new villain, Prometheus, and he is just too cool. He's basically the anti-Batman, except he gains all his knowledge and abilities by downloading it into his helmet. But he sure... more
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