Product Description: The worlds first super-hero team returns in these stories that revamp the team for todays sophisticated comics readers. The new teamwhich includes Black Canary, Starman, Dr. Fate, the Golden Age versions of Flash and Green Lantern and many others as wellfirst gather at the funeral of the original Sandman, Wesley Dodds, only to head into action together against the Scarab and the classic DC villain Mordru!
Why do I think James Robinson rocks? This is a Justice Society , a team of older generation super heroes ( Green Lantern Alan Scott, Dr Fate, Dr Midnite , Wildcat, Hawkman and Hawkgirl ) , with some fresh faces like Starman, Star spangled girl and so on.
So, you will say, we saw that 1000 times. This is DC's mainstream comics.
There is one big thing to be said, along with former two statements: James Robinson wrote it, and he can make mainstream comic really decent product if not more than that. Read Starman if you don't believe me.
Solid Opening I never read any JSA before reading this and I have to say I enjoyed it. The art was nothing amazing but, it didn't turn me away. IN the story a New Doctor Fate is set to take over the mantle. The JSA is charged with finding the one who is to become Fate. The story just keeps flipping you over and over again until the big conclusion. A good read just wish I could track down a copy of the second volume.
Graphic SF Reader Justice Be Done is a well crafted relaunch of the Justice Society of America series, that draws you in quickly, and keeps you interested, with a mixture of old and new characters to cater to the interests of everybody.
Using the Sandman as a lynchpin, a mystery quickly develops, his protege must step up, and a villain be confronted. Leads into an excellent run of this title that goes for some years.
agree with glenn cox I have to agree with Glenn Cox's review... fans of James R's work on Starman will be disappointed... reading the book you feel like there are hints of the greatness J.R. established with the original starman books but in the end he just doesn't quite get there - kind of like having one bite of your favorite desert and being denied the rest... I paid ten dollars for this book on ebay and quite honestly I don't feel it was worth it - I plan on giving the book away to goodwill (or some other charitable organization)....
Only for the true fan There is a problem inherent with any piece of fiction that contains multiple protagonists, be it comics, film or novels. When you add to that the infinite array of super-powered permutations, it's hard to believe that any superteam book can be good. Yet, superhero group books are some of the longest running comic titles, from DC's venerable Justice League of America through all the myriad X-groups available from Marvel, as well as two titles in Marvel's new Ultimates line. Maybe the popularity of these titles is an inherent interest in seeing collaboration in action, akin to the ensemble drama shows on TV like Law & Order, Hill St. Blues or St. Elsewhere. A group book also promises something for everyone: you might get bored with Superman by himself, but Supes in a JLA book can be ignored if you're a big fan of Wonder Woman.
So it's not suprising that James Robinson, fresh from his deserved success on the Starman title, tries to reinvent additional golden age DC superheroes in a new Justice Society of America (JSA). Starman, after all, had been an original JSA member, so why shouldn't he be able to bring back the others, in both new configurations (the new Hawkgirl is a niece of the original Hawkman and Hawkgirl, wheras Sand is a former child ward of the Sandman) and old (Black Canary is here, somehow able to fit in all this action between her work with Oracle in Birds of Prey, as well as the original Flash, Jay Garrick). And if one hero had been good before, having all of these together had to be better, right?
Unfortunately, what had worked in Starman, because Robinson had time in that title to remind readers of the Starman legacy, get them accustomed to Jack Knight and his quirks, and lay down some great foreshadowing of serious problems to come, is almost all-together missing in JSA: Justice Be Done or glossed over so quickly that only the most dedicated Golden Age fan can keep who all these characters are, and what they are capable of, straight. This problem is then magnified by the plot, which hinges on the predecessors of these heroes or their scion as well as a villain with a deep history, making the story fairly impenetrable for new readers and a textbook case for why both Marvel and DC are "re-envisioning" their characters, to start again without all this baggage.
Everything happens quickly in this book, including the introduction of characters and universe-shattering battles, then back to quiet moments that last a single panel. In some cases, it seems that entire pages or issues are having to be condensed into a single page. I had seen some of this problem before in Starman, when Knight expanded his activities into space and Robinson lost the grounded connection of Jack with his antique store in favor of a Starlin-esque psychotropic jaunt. Here, the stakes for the characters rise too quickly, from attempting to rescue a single child to an apocalytic fight at the end of time, that the reader isn't able to see a sense of scale. It is like a big-budget Hollywood action thriller, where what is important is not the characters, but the spectacle. In the end, instead of an ensemble, the JSA is only a collection of explosions, like fireworks that burst upon the page and are then gone, as this book is from your memory.