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Written by: Jeremy Adams
Art by: Xermanico, Amancay Nahuelpan
Colors by: Romulo Fajardo Jr.
Letters by: Dave Sharpe
Cover art by: Xermanico
Cover price: $4.99
Release date: May 14, 2024
Green Lantern #11 takes Carol Ferris for a walk down the aisle while Hal marshals the rebel Lanterns to confront Thaaros before the United Planets Council.
Is Green Lantern #11 Good?
Oh, Carol. You can’t quit Hal Jordan. You never could, and you never will. That’s the message Jeremy Adams sends to longtime Green Lantern fans, and it’s a sure bet things are about to heat up in Sin City.
When last we left Hal Jordan, he infiltrated the OA Sciencecells to rescue what few Lanterns he could and at least one U.P. Lantern after learning Lord Premier Thaaros is orchestrating the destruction of Lantern batteries across the galaxy.
Now, Carol Ferris laments yet another Hal Jordan disappearance, especially after the drone takeover at Ferris Industries left the company in tatters. Overcome by a need for stability, Carol asks Nate to elope to Las Vegas.
On OA, Hal discusses the Thaaros situation with his allies, and they agree that the tenuous nature of the U.P. Council might unravel if Thaaros was publicly exposed. At first, they believed it wouldn’t work without proof. Fortunately, the U.P. Lantern they freed from the Sciencecells announces he’ll testify that he witnessed Thaaros giving the order to destroy the batteries.
The Lanterns crash through the U.P. Council chamber door and accuse Thaaros of his crimes. However, the plan fails because the entire U.P. Council has been replaced by Thaaros’s shapeshifting brethren. Let the fighting commence.
Meanwhile, Carol and Nate arrive at a Superman-themed wedding chapel to get married. The ceremony goes off without a hitch. But before rings are exchanged, a Star Sapphire ring materializes in the air in front of Carol.
Backup Story
Guy Gardner makes contact with OA to tell them he’s apprehended the fugitive known as Lobo. Unfortunately, the Czarnian Guy has in custody isn’t Lobo, and the communication sent was intercepted by every bounty hunter in the galaxy. Just as a barroom brawl over the right to turn in “Lobo” commences, the Czarnian is beamed up to Brainiac’s ship with Guy along for the ride.
Frankly, I’m not a fan of Kevin Maguire’s art in this backup but the story is amusing, and it unexpectedly (cleverly) incorporates Guy into the House of Brainiac story happening over in Action Comics.
What’s great about Green Lantern #11? Adams uses this issue to initiate another welcome change in the status quo – namely the revelation that the U.P. is a bunch of baloney and now the heroes have a justifiable reason to take it out. If you could point to one thing Adams is doing consistently well, it’s correcting and undoing mistakes of the past while bringing something new to the table. Establishing a new GL Corps was the right move. Exposing the U.P. is another right move.
What’s not so great about Green Lantern #11? Carol running off to get married seems out of character for her. Depending on how complete or binding the ceremony turned out before the Star Sapphire ring materialized, the “marriage” could add months of annoying drama that nobody is looking forward to. Surprise developments should fill the reader with anticipation, not dread. Let’s hope Adams chooses not to repeat the mistakes Zeb Wells and Nick Lowe are unceasingly making with the Peter/MJ relationship over at Marvel.
How’s the art? Xermanico’s eye for dramatic compositions, energy, and character acting are on point. That said, Xermanico’s stylistically rough hatching and contour lines don’t seem to be a good fit for a Space Adventure comic.
About The Reviewer: Gabriel Hernandez is the Publisher & EIC of ComicalOpinions.com, a comics review site dedicated to indie, small, and mid-sized publishers.
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