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| Green Lantern Vol. 1: No Fear | 
enlarge | Author: Geoff Johns Publisher: DC Comics Category: Book
List Price: $12.99 Buy New: $6.69 You Save: $6.30 (48%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 43436
Media: Paperback Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 176 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 6.6 x 0.5
ISBN: 1401210589 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5 EAN: 9781401210588 ASIN: 1401210589
Publication Date: May 20, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New! Save 30 - 50% off of retail prices on our wide selection of comic book graphic novels, manga and anime, role playing games, DVDS, Osprey military history books, and more!
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Product Description Green Lantern Hal Jordan has returned from the dead -- but not everyone is happy to see him back on the job as Earth's protector. As he re-establishes his life as a test pilot for the Air Force and reconnects with his super-hero comrades-in-arms, Green Lantern faces renewed threats from his rogues gallery of foes, including Hector Hammond, the Shark, Black Hand and the Manhunters. This volume also includes a beautifully illustrated tale with art by Eisner Award winner Darwyn Cooke (DC: THE NEW FRONTIER), revealing the first time Hal's father took him flying as a child.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
"No evil shall escape his sight..." October 26, 2006 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
You've got to hand it to Geoff Johns. The fan favorite writer has managed to sucessfully weave superb stories during his runs on the Flash, JSA, and his DC Universe shattering Infinite Crisis. However, there's something about his relaunch of Green Lantern that just stands head and shoulders above the rest of the pack. After the events of Green Lantern: Rebirth, silver-age GL Hal Jordan has been resurrected and restored as a member of the Green Lantern Corps, with fellow GL John Stewart in the JLA, and fellow GL's Kyle Rayner, Guy Gardner, and Kilowog in space training new recruits. Now that Hal is back, Johns retraces his silver-age origins from when he is first bestowed with the ring, to the present day as he is once again an air force pilot trying to reclaim the life that he had lost. No Fear begins with Hal on the trail of a murderous renegade Manhunter, and seeks out information from long time adversary Hector Hammond. There's plenty of other appearances from the GL rogue gallery as well, and Johns' wonderfully done homages to the GL stories of yesteryear are magnificent. Featuring art by a list of greats: Carlos Pacheco, Ethan Van Sciver, Darwyn Cooke; No Fear is an excellent re-launching of the new ongoing Green Lantern series, and an even more excellent return of one of the most iconic figures of the DC Universe.
No Fear July 11, 2006 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
This collection of the latest adventures of the Silver Age Green Latern (Hal Jordan) is an excellent relaunching for the character and a fine place to begin for a reader new to this character. The history of the title comes alive, but in a way that does not swamp new readers to the series and the artwork is high-quality. The sole disappointment is the series is a bit slow to develop a few of the secondary story arcs.
Keeps up the Pace After Rebirth January 9, 2007 6 out of 11 found this review helpful
After Johns' "Green Lantern: Rebirth" miniseries, in which he restored Hal Jordan to the role essentially by ignoring the last ten years of DC continuity surrounding the character and creating the "Yellow Cosmic Fear Bug" that explained away Parallax, he started new with a new volume of GL's ongoing monthly title. This new series started just before "Infinite Crisis" was getting off the ground, and it wasn't long before it became obvious that Johns was essentially treading water. Jordan's character takes on a much larger role in the post-IC DC Comics Universe, and consequently the first ten issues of the new Green Lantern series (this volume collects 1-5, I believe), which took place before and during the Crisis, were there merely to create the presence of a Green Lantern title in the market. The character wasn't actually rethought, retooled and relaunched until DC's One Year Later event (the first issues of which were just released in the Revenge of the Green Lantern Corps hardcover, also by Johns).
Have No Fear February 4, 2007 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
This book was excelent. If you love Hal Jordan or even Green Lanterns you'll love this. It's not that action packed or anything, but the art is great and the story is extremely well done.
Green Lantern Soars the Spaceways Again! January 11, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
GREEN LANTERN: NO FEAR is far less technically ambitious than its predecessor, REBIRTH. The previous novel in the "new" adventures of Hal Jordan basically had to re-invent the character and discard a decade and more of maltreatment of the character, in my opinion.
However, that said, NO FEAR offers a lot in the way of great character building. Geoff Johns's first graphic novel in the Green Lantern saga was all about getting back to the basics and skewering missed approaches to Hal Jordan. This volume reintroduces Hal Jordan and Green Lantern to the world as a human being and a hero. It's about history and family, about dreams and responsibilities, and the fact that there's precious little wiggle room for anybody trying to balance all those things and live a good life.
I especially loved the first story. The art by Darwyn Cooke was amazingly simple and really underscored the light but deep tale as Hal remembered his relationship with his test pilot father. The fact that Hal and Kyle Rayner (the latest Green Lantern, and the character that really split the polls on favorite Green Lanterns) are shown together and we get a sense of how that relationship is going. Johns could have totally blown off the Rayner character, but he chose to embrace him in the series to offer the readers the best of both possible worlds.
From there, the stories move into more Green Lantern history with the threat of a Manhunter, the androids created by the Guardians to police the spaceways before they created the Green Lantern Corps. The art is pretty cool, shows lots of action, and allows a great pacing for Johns's story.
I enjoyed the sequences with Hal's brother a lot too. Johns seems intent on advancing stories as much as he is on introducing back stories that we hadn't before seen. The story of why Hal got dishonorably discharged from the United States Air Force was especially emotionally compelling.
Johns also broadens his current Green Lantern universe by bringing in other old enemies: Hector Hammond and Black Hand. Both of those characters are far creepier and more dangerous than we've ever seen them before.
I have to admit that the scene where Hal pounded away at Hector Hammond when the man couldn't defend himself made me uncomfortable. On one level, I understood it because Hammond had used his mind-probing powers to assault Green Lantern, but it still just didn't seem like something Hal would do.
This collection of stories was much lighter than the arc that ran through REBIRTH. Since I read them so close together, I'm glad there was such a difference. REBIRTH emotionally exhausted me, but NO FEAR was - mostly - a fun romp.
The scene where Hal busted General Stone in the mouth the way he had all those years ago, and the fact that that clue was what gave away Hal's secret identity as Green Lantern, was great. I think having a USAF general know that Hal and Green Lantern are the same guy can't be anything but beneficial. (You still have to wonder how Clark Kent can go missing all the time from the DAILY PLANET.)
I've got two more of the graphic novels lined up to read, and I'm really looking forward to them. Johns is making magic again, and it's fun to watch.
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