(Stock Image)
FYI there's no need to include decimal points(.).
Offer Confirmation
You are about to submit an offer of . If accepted, you are legally obligated to purchase the book. Are you sure you want to continue?
FYI there's no need to include decimal points(.).
Buy Confirmation
You are about to buy this item for , and will be legally obligated under the terms of our User Agreement to pay for it in a timely fashion. Continue?
PUBLISHER: DC
COMMENTS: ow pages
classic Crisis on Earth-One; 1st Silver Age Doctor Fate, Hourman; re-intro Justice Society
Read Description ▼
ow pages
classic Crisis on Earth-One; 1st Silver Age Doctor Fate, Hourman; re-intro Justice SocietyIn Flash #123, DC established a plot device that would have far-reaching implications to the publisher’s universe (or universes, to be more accurate) and what began as a simple idea to unite a Golden Age hero with a Silver Age hero would evolve into one of DC’s central concepts, that of a Multiverse, separate worlds, coexisting simultaneously and accessible to both heroes and villains from the various locations. The idea was fleshed out with much greater depth in the pages of JLA, starting in the historically significant issue #21. The central plot of this issue is overly complex, as a team of bad guys from Earth One and Earth Two commit crimes and then flee to one another’s realms of existence to avoid culpability for their crimes. What ensues is a dizzying cat and mouse game that jumps back and forth between worlds as the regional hero teams attempt to bring the criminals to justice. Starring a jam-packed cornucopia of DC characters, the implications of the alternate universes would go on to bear plenty of fruit, the “Crisis” device would be revisited annually by DC for decades, eventually culminating in the Crisis on Infinite Earths series that would span several titles and storylines within the DC continuity, and the device continues to be employed into the modern era, but this is really where the concept began, making JLA #21 a popular collectible for serious DC mavens. The subject matter is ripe for the picking as the DCEU continues to develop and grow.
classic Crisis on Earth-One; 1st Silver Age Doctor Fate, Hourman; re-intro Justice Society
classic Crisis on Earth-One; 1st Silver Age Doctor Fate, Hourman; re-intro Justice Society