Dinah Lance Reading List
Reference here
New Earth
Justice League of America (1960) #75
Green Lantern (1960) #78, 79, 81-84, 86,87
Adventure Comics (1938) #418, 419
Justice League International #1-9, 11-13
Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1-3
Green Arrow (1988) #1-3, 5, 7, 9, 10, 13-17, 19-21, 25, 28, 29, 31-39, 44, 45, 49-53, 59-64, 67-71, 73-77, 79, Annual #1-5
Secret Origins (1986) #50
Black Canary (1991) #1-4
Black Canary (1993) #1-12
Black Canary/Oracle: Birds of Prey #1
Showcase '96 #3
Birds of Prey: Manhunt #1-4
JLA: Year One #1-12
Birds of Prey: Revolution #1
Birds of Prey: Wolves #1
Birds of Prey: Batgirl #1
Arsenal (1998) #1-4
JSA (1999) #1-4, 6-22, 25, 26, 31, 32, 37, 49-51, 54, Annual #1
Birds of Prey (1999) #1-26, 28-41, 43-100, 108, 109, 112, 119, 120, 124-127
Nightwing (1996) #45, 46, 56-58,
Green Arrow (2001) #1, 4-6, 8, 9, 12-17, 21, 25, 29, 34, 40, 73-75
Batgirl: Year One #6, 7
Identity Crisis #1-4, 6, 7
Justice League of America (2006) #0-19, 22-32
JLA Wedding Special #1
Black Canary (2007) #1-4
Black Canary Wedding Planner #1
Green Arrow and Black Canary: Wedding Special #1
Green Arrow and Black Canary #1-32
Wonder Woman (2006) #34, 35
Justice League: The Rise of Arsenal #1-3
Birds of Prey (2010) #1-15
Convergence: Nightwing/Oracle #2
Prime Earth
The New 52
Birds of Prey (2011) #0-34, Futures End #1
Batgirl (2011) #7, 8, 32-40, 45, 48-52, Annual #2
Team 7 (2012) #0-8
Black Canary (2015) #1-12
Rebirth
DC Universe: Rebirth #1
Green Arrow: Rebirth #1
Green Arrow (2016) #1-5, 8-17, 19, 20, 22-31, 33-38, 43-50, Annual #1-2
Batgirl and the Birds of Prey: Rebirth #1
Batgirl and the Birds of Prey #1-22
Justice League of America: Rebirth #1
Justice League of America (2017) #1-13, 17-29, Annual #1
Alternative Versions
JLA: The Nail #1-3
Kingdom Come #2-4
All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder #3, 6, 7, 10
Justice #1, 4, 5, 7-12
Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year One #6, 8-12, Annual #1
Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year Two #1-3, 5-8, 11, 12, Annual #1
Injustice 2 #1-3, 5, 7-11, 14, 18, 22-26, 34, 36
Black Canary and Zatanna: Bloodspell #1
Convergence: Green Arrow #1-2
Bombshells: United #6, 13-19
DC Holiday Special 2017 #1 (in "You Better Think Twice")
Gotham City Garage #9-12
Catwoman/Tweety and Sylvestor #1
DC Nuclear Winter Special #1 (in "The Birds of Christmas Past, Present, and Future")
DCeased #1-6
DC's Crimes of Passion #1 (in Green Arrow/Black Canary "The Crimson Bomber")
DCeased: Dead Planet #1
DC Zoom
Black Canary: Ignite
DC Black Label
Birds of Prey (2020) #1
Harley Quinn & the Birds of Prey #2
DC Icons Series
Black Canary: Breaking Silence
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Someone Lied To You About Oliver Queen/Green Arrow
Or, maybe you watched a certain show he starred in. Or maybe you’ve only read his stuff post-n52. Hell, maybe you just assumed, that’s okay too, either way, one thing is for sure, Oliver Queen Isn’t Rich. In fact, he’s usually broke as hell and struggling to pay rent!
(Massive Thank You to @batphobique and @queen-lance for making this post helping me find/source all these panels! Literally wouldn’t have even half of these without their help)
Green Lantern (1960) #87
The original version of the character, practically a Batman clone, was rich, yes. Until in Justice League of America (1960) #75, the late and great Dennis O’Neil reworked his entire character, transforming him into a modern day Robin Hood, and, in aid of this transformation, had him lose all his money after a business rival frames him for embezzlement.
Justice League of America (1960) #75, Action Comics #636, Secret Origins (1986) #38
After that, and the cross-country roadtrip thereafter, Ollie struggled to find work, having a dwindling savings account, and barely scraping enough to make rent. He found occassional work as a columnist, and was for a time working as a public relations agent, though this didn’t end his money problems.
Green Lantern/Green Arrow #6, Action Comics #431 & #424, Green Lantern (1960) #100
This was all during the golden age for Green Arrow, when he was most active on the League, and during the beginning of his relationship with Black Canary. Odds are, if its before the year 2000 and he’s wearing his Neal Adams suit, he’s flat broke.
Action Comics #431, JLA 80 Page Giant #1, World’s Finest #210
It’s important to note, too, that Ollie wasn’t trying to get his money back, he was okay with making do, and even when given the opportunity to have some spare cash, he would rather have it go to something he felt was more important.
Action Comics #424, Green Lantern (1960) #87
To the point that, in a later retcon by O’Neil, instead of losing his money due to a business rival, he instead willingly gave it all away to war relief funds after finding out his company was funding war efforts.
Legends of the DC Universe #9
Later down the line, in the late 80s, Ollie would move to Seattle with Dinah, eventually working with/for her as an assistant florist and delivery driver. With the business from the flower shop and a coincidental big bag of money Ollie kept in his closet they were able to make ends meet together.
Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1, Green Arrow (1988) #13, Black Canary (1993) #1
And that’s about the state he stayed in, until his untimely death-cum-resurrection, wherein he’d inheret the stately home, money, and youth centre of an old man who put his name in his will (no spoilers here, go read Quiver).
He’d continue to use the money to run said centre until the New 52 Reboot, where he’d be reverted to a rich guy, losing and reclaiming and losing and reclaiming his wealth over and over as each writer adapted him to tell their (often unrelated to his character) story.
TLDR: Oliver Queen is not the rich guy you think he is, he’s usually a broke socialist. Please read a comic book before talking about a character…please…just one…
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