A look back at a time when justice was swift, and crime didn't pay!
Justice Traps The Guilty #1 and #2 (Oct-Nov , 1947 and Jan 1948)
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A blog about comic books, and enjoying the stories, characters and creators of them...and occasionally subjects that relate to comic books as well.
A look back at a time when justice was swift, and crime didn't pay!
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We salute those who gave their all to defend our country on this Memorial Day with this Joe Kubert cover to Sgt. Rock #324 (January, 1979).
...with a look at a special issue that reviewed what happened the day a bolt of lightning hit a shelf of chemicals in the lab of police scientist Barry Allen...
...scarring him horribly, and leaving him paralyzed in a hospital for years....
...wait, what?
Yes, that is where the story starts for Flash #300 (August, 1981, by Cary Bates, Carmine Infantino and Bob Smith, with a cover by Infantino and Dick Giordano) in "1981 - A Flash Odyssey".
At Morningside clinic, Dr. Petrou is confronting the patient Barry Allen about his delusions (brought on by his accident and years of reading comics) that he is the fastest man alive.Along the way, they go through Barry's origin, the origin of Jay Garrick, Barry's first meeting with Jay, reuniting the Justice Society of America and the multiple Earths with their own crisis and more.
...all to get to the reveal of the villain who pulled this magic trick on the Flash (where Barry outsmarted this foe, yet again!).
...before moving over to its own title in, starting with #1 (facing Despero).
While Superman seems to be winning this battle, the Washington Monument might disagree.
With his incredible amount of credits, picking something to represent his work was rough..
...so, why not pick the biggest of all...
...the 12 issue series, Crisis On Infinite Earths, wherein he and George Perez held the entire DC Universe in his hands as the DC heroes and villains battle the Monitor to save the multiverse!
A series where worlds would live, and worlds would die, the series did theoretically kill both Supergirl and the Flash, but, they both later got better (and ended up on the CW, wherein they met writer, Marv Wolfman, during that series version of the Crisis).Such is the case with Casey - Crime Photographer!
The creation of novelist George Harmon Coxe, Jack "Flashgun" Casey was a feature of the pulp magazine Black Mask and in novels, as well as being a radio show before becoming a comic book.
It followed the adventures of Morning Express photographer Casey, reporter Ann Williams, with Casey reporting his activities to Ethelbert, bartender at the Blue Note jazz club.
The first cover was a combination photograph and art by Allen Anderson, with interior art by Vern Henkel (with no writer on record)., and typical of the hard hitting crime based comics that were popular in the day.
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This series was a murder mystery set during the time of Batman: Dark Victory, with Selina Kyle bring Eddie Nygma (Riddler) to Rome to chase down her possible family history involving Carmine Falcone of the Gotham mob.
To capture the foreign feel of the series, Tim echoed art from French/Italian fashion illustrator, Rene Gruau.
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