Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

JLA (comic book)

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Schedule
  
Monthly

Inker(s)
  
John Dell Paul Neary

Genre
  
Superhero comics

Format
  
Ongoing series

Main character
  
Justice League

Publisher
  
DC Comics

JLA (comic book) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Publication date
  
January 1997 – April 2006

Number of issues
  
126 (#1–125 plus issue numbered 1,000,000)

Creator(s)
  
Grant Morrison Howard Porter

Pencillers
  
Howard Porter, Bryan Hitch, Doug Mahnke

Writers
  
Grant Morrison, Mark Waid, Joe Kelly, Dennis O'Neil

Similar
  
Justice League, The World's Greatest, Trinity, The Superman Family, Superman

JLA was a monthly comic book published by DC Comics from January 1997 to April 2006 featuring the Justice League.

Contents

Publication history

The low sales of the various Justice League spinoff books by the mid-1990s prompted DC to revamp the League as a single team (all the various branch teams were disbanded) on a single title. A Justice League of America formed in the September 1996 limited series Justice League: A Midsummer's Nightmare by Mark Waid and Fabian Nicieza. In 1997, DC Comics launched a new Justice League series titled JLA, written by Grant Morrison with art by Howard Porter and inker John Dell. Morrison stayed as writer for the series through issue #41, though several issues had fill-in writers. JLA #18-#21 and #33 were written by Mark Waid. Mark Millar, Devin Grayson and Mark Waid, and J.M. DeMatteis wrote issues #27, #32 and #35 respectively.

This series, in an attempt at a "back-to-basics" approach, used as its core the team's original and most famous seven members (or their successors): Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Flash (Wally West), Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner), and the Martian Manhunter. Additionally, the team received a new headquarters, the "Watchtower", based on the Moon. JLA quickly became DC's best-selling title, a position it enjoyed off and on for several years.

Morrison introduced the idea of the JLA allegorically representing a pantheon of gods, with their different powers and personalities, incorporating such characters as Zauriel, Big Barda, Orion, Huntress, Barbara Gordon (Oracle), Steel (John Henry Irons), and Plastic Man. He also had Aztek, Tomorrow Woman, and Green Arrow (Connor Hawke) as temporaries.

Under Morrison, the series pitted the League against a variety of enemies including White Martians, renegade angels, a new incarnation of the Injustice Gang led by Lex Luthor, and the Key. Other foes were the new villain Prometheus, the existing JLA villain Starro the Conqueror, "The Ultra-Marines", and a futuristic Darkseid. Morrison's run culminated in an arc titled "World War III" which involves the New Gods preparing the Earth for battle against a creature known as "Mageddon", a super-sentient weapon of mass destruction.

Since this new League included most of DC's most powerful heroes, the focus of the stories changed. The League now dealt only with Earth-shattering, highest-priority threats which could challenge their tremendous combined power. Enemies faced by this new JLA included an invading army of aliens, a malfunctioning war machine from the future, a horde of renegade angels, a newly reformed coalition of villains as a counter-league, mercenaries armed with individualized take-down strategies for each superhero, various cosmic threats, and the enraged spirit of the Earth itself. In addition, because almost all of the members had their own comics, the stories were almost always self-contained, with all chapters occurring within JLA itself and very rarely affecting events outside of that series. Developments from a hero's own title (such as the new costume and electric based powers temporarily adopted by Superman in 1997–1998) were reflected in the League's comic book, however.

Morrison departed with issue #41, after which the book saw runs by Mark Waid and Joe Kelly. Subsequent to this, the series switched to a series of rotating writers with issue #91 while Kelly (via JLA #100) was given the mini-series Justice League Elite, which featured Green Arrow, Flash, and several other characters. The new format saw stories by John Byrne, Chuck Austen, and Kurt Busiek. Geoff Johns and Allan Heinberg would take over the book with #115, which saw a multi-part storyline dealing with the aftermath of Identity Crisis, and served as a lead-in to the events of "Infinite Crisis", as Superboy-Prime destroyed the Watchtower at the end of issue #119. Bob Harras wrote the book's final storyline (JLA #120–125) as Green Arrow struggled in vain to keep the League afloat.

Storylines

Despite this, DC did not create continuing spinoff series as it had done before. Instead, a large number of miniseries and one-shots featuring the team were released. One spin-off team, the Justice League Elite was created following the events of JLA #100, but their series was limited to 12 issues, and the team appeared only once after the title ended its allotted run. JLA's popularity was also able to launch the critically acclaimed JSA series, which was relaunched as Justice Society of America to coincide with the new Justice League of America book.

In 2005, a story arc by Geoff Johns and Alan Heinberg called "Crisis of Conscience" (JLA #115–119) depicts the dissolution of the Justice League of America as the breakdown of trust shown in the 2004 limited series Identity Crisis reaches its zenith. At the end of the arc, Superboy-Prime destroys the Justice League Watchtower. JLA, one of several titles to be cancelled at the conclusion of the Infinite Crisis storyline, ended with issue #125.

As depicted in the Villains United: Infinite Crisis Special and the final issue of Infinite Crisis itself, preparations for the defense of Metropolis against an army of organized super-villains required a brief and temporary expansion of the Justice League to its largest roster to date. The main defensive teams of the JLA, JSA, Teen Titans and Outsiders already being occupied elsewhere by the Crisis, it fell on Oracle and the Martian Manhunter to contact and deputize seemingly every active or once active hero in the DC Universe as effective Justice League members to form a last line of defense for the city.

Reception

The new approach worked, and JLA quickly became DC's best-selling title, a position it enjoyed off and on for several years, as reflected in the following advance sales figures for months in which JLA was DC's best-selling title:

Collected editions

JLA was collected in a series of trade paperbacks:

  • New World Order (collects JLA #1–4, 1997, 1-56389-369-X)
  • American Dreams (collects JLA #5–9, 1998, 1-56389-394-0)
  • Rock of Ages (collects JLA #10–15, 1998, 1-56389-416-5)
  • Strength in Numbers (collects JLA #16–23 and New Year's Evil: Prometheus #1 and "Heroes" from JLA Secret Files #2, 1998 1-56389-435-1)
  • Justice for All (collects JLA #24–33, 1999, 1-56389-511-0)
  • World War III (collects JLA #34–41, 2000, 1-56389-618-4)
  • Tower of Babel (collects JLA #42–46, JLA Secret Files # 3, JLA 80 Page Giant #1 1-56389-727-X)
  • Divided We Fall (collects JLA #47–54 1-56389-793-8)
  • Terror Incognita (collects JLA #55–60 1-56389-936-1)
  • Golden Perfect (collects JLA #61–65 1-56389-941-8)
  • The Obsidian Age (Book 1) (collects JLA #66–71 1-56389-991-4)
  • The Obsidian Age (Book 2) (collects JLA #72–76 1-4012-0043-5)
  • Rules Of Engagement (collects JLA #77–821-4012-0215-2)
  • Trial By Fire (collects JLA #84–89 1-4012-0242-X)
  • The Tenth Circle (collects JLA #94–99 1-4012-0346-9)
  • Pain Of The Gods (collects JLA #101–106 1-4012-0468-6)
  • Syndicate Rules (collects JLA #107–114 and a story from JLA Secret Files 2004 1-4012-0477-5)
  • Crisis of Conscience (collects JLA #115–119 1-4012-0963-7)
  • World without a Justice League (collects JLA #120–125 1-4012-0964-5)
  • There is also a Deluxe Edition:

  • JLA Deluxe Edition:
  • Hardcovers:
  • Vol. 1 (collects JLA #1–9 and JLA Secret Files #1, 256 pages, Deluxe Hardcover, September 2008, Titan, 1-84576-884-1, DC, 1-4012-1843-1)
  • Vol. 2 (collects JLA #10–17, New Year's Evil: Prometheus and JLA/Wildcats, 320 pages, Deluxe Hardcover, Titan, July 2009, ISBN 1-84856-320-5, DC, June 2009, 1-4012-2265-X)
  • Vol. 3 (collects JLA #18–31 and 1,000,000, 256 pages, Deluxe Hardcover. April 28, 2010. DC Comics 1-4012-2659-0)
  • Vol. 4 (collects JLA #34, 36–41, JLA: Classified #1–3 and JLA: Earth 2, 368 pages, Deluxe Hardcover. Nov 10 2010. DC Comics 1-4012-2909-3)
  • Softcovers:
  • Vol. 1 (collects JLA #1–9 and JLA Secret Files #1, 256 pages, softcover, October 2011, DC Comics, 1-4012-3314-7)
  • Vol. 2 (collects JLA #10–17, New Year's Evil: Prometheus, JLA Secret Files #2, and JLA/Wildcats, 336 pages, softcover, DC Comics.com 1-4012-3518-2)
  • Vol. 3 (collects JLA #18–31, 344 pages, softcover. January 2013. DC Comics 1-4012-3832-7)
  • Vol. 4 (collects JLA #32–46, 384 pages, Softcover. Feb 11 2014. DC Comics 1-4012-4385-1)
  • Vol. 5 (collects JLA #47–60, and JLA: Heaven's Ladder, 448 pages, Softcover. June 17, 2014. DC Comics 1-4012-4750-4)
  • Vol. 6 (collects JLA #61–76, 432 pages, Softcover. January 27, 2015. DC Comics 1-4012-5136-6)
  • Vol. 7 (collects JLA #77–93, 416 pages, Softcover. May 26, 2015. DC Comics 978-1401255282)
  • Vol. 8 (collects JLA #94-106, 360 pages, Softcover. May 10, 2016. DC Comics 978-1401263423)
  • Vol. 9 (collects JLA #107-125, 480 pages, Softcover. Nov 25, 2016. DC Comics 978-1-4012-6567-0)
  • References

    JLA (comic book) Wikipedia