Fantastic variant cover by Nick Robles for Alan Scott: Green Lantern #4.
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The New Golden Age #1 variant cover by David Talaski
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Colli meets alen Scott the Golden age Green lantern and tries to give him one last day with the love of his life he lost when he became the Green lantern
Greetings, my dear @masqueradenoir! 👋😊
Thanks for the request!
Even though I don't feel that much comfortable anymore writing crossovers, I don't want to disappoint you.
Drabble: Lost Love
Scott Alan couldn't believe what just happened! The mysterious little boy he met managed to give him one last day with his lost love! Scott spend a wonderful day with him, until he had to say Goodbye to the love of his life.
The mysterious little boy, Colli, was pulled into a tight yet soft hug. "Thank you!" Scott said with a tearful expression. The celestial boy with otherworldly fluffy lavender hair and a heart of gold cuddled close to the Golden Age Green Lantern.
"I am glad that you could see him again, Mr. Alan!" Colli said with a soft smile on his adorable multi-colored face. Scott didn't fail to notice the kindness in the sweethearted starboy's eyes.
The End
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"Because I wanted you to know what I know-- that you have friends."
"I told you, I work alone."
"I'm not talking about the super friends, Mr... Scott."
The first five pages of Alan Scott: The Green Lantern (2023) #1, featured in The New Golden Age: Special Edition (2023) #1.
(Tim Sheridan, Cian Tormey)
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you will read the alan scott mini. yes you. go buy it
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Green Lantern and Batman by Ramona Fradon(R.I.P.)
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The original art by Neal Adams for the wraparound cover for Superman (vol. 1) #252, June 1972.
This issue was a 100-Page Super Spectacular that contained reprint stories of Superman (the original Powerstone story from the Golden Age), as well as Golden Age stories featuring Dr. Fate, Hawkman, Black Condor, the Spectre, Starman, and the Ray.
I guess Adams decided to include more of DC’s flying superheroes to fill-out the cover. It’s lknd of deceptive advertising, as Kid Eternity, Lightly, Black Racer, Shining Knight, the Silver Age Green Lantern, the Golden Age Green Lantern, the Silver Age Hawkman and Hawkgirl, Red Tornado, Supergirl, and the Shining Knight aren’t inside the book. But it’s an awesome Neal Adams cover, so the court will allow it.
That image of Superman is arguably the DC Comics used the most for merchandizing and ads throughout the 1970s and early 1980s; mores than the running Superman image I posted yesterday. DC used the image on the covers of Superman, right over the logo, for a brief time.
It’s also been copied a million times. There were plenty of ads where the image was used, with only minor changes to the costume. Heck, it was even used for a newspaper ad for an X-rated spoof film of Superman, right after Superman the Movie was released.
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Whoever wrote the Fandom wiki page for Alan Scott was REALLY feeling the new issue oh my god
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