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By: Justin Jordan (writer); Stephen Segovia, Edgar Salazar, and Jed Dougherty (pencils); Stephen Segovia, Jason Paz, Jason Gorder, and Jed Dougherty (inks); Andrew Dalhouse and Hi-Fi (colors)
The Story: Kyle finds himself drawn back to Earth when a mysterious artist starts trying to ‘put things right’.
The Review: Green Lantern: New Guardians Annual #2 gets off to a strange start, and I mean strange. One of the major themes of the issue is the feeling that things are just wrong and, while it never gets to quite that point, the early pages of this issue summon up some of that feeling, for better or worse.
The major problem with this issue is that it’s a little hard to get your feet. The transition from the last issue of the series to this story is extremely abrupt and Justin Jordan’s absolute focus on the here and now over the first nine pages doesn’t help at all.
It seems as though Jordan’s script is fighting his page limit a bit. Despite the extra storytelling power of an additional sixteen pages, things are kind of rushed. Part of that is a lack of economy that had been very much present in Jordan’s previous New Guardians work, but it would be dishonest to think that the scope of the story wasn’t a large factor in it. So even after the opening pages on Earth, Kyle is Deus ex Machina’d back to Earth and finds himself at an extremely important location to the torchbearer Lantern.
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Filed under: DC Comics | Tagged: Andrew Dalhouse, Carol Ferris, Edgar Salazar, Ferris Air, Green Lantern New Guardians, Green Lanterns New Guardians Annual 2, Hi-Fi, Jason Gorder, Jason Paz, Jed Dougherty, Justin Jordan, Oblivion, Stephen Segovia, White Lantern | Leave a comment »