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All-Star Squadron #7 Carnage for Christmas!
Cover Date: March, 1982
Baron Blitzkrieg walks the streets of Washington D.C., plotting the downfall of the first meeting between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill. Meanwhile, the Atom reports to President Roosevelt on the disbanding of the Justice Society. With ...
Issue Description
Baron Blitzkrieg walks the streets of Washington D.C., plotting the downfall of the first meeting between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill. Meanwhile, the Atom reports to President Roosevelt on the disbanding of the Justice Society. With the JSA all fighting on the war front, President Roosevelt invites the Atom to join the All-Star Squadron. Atom agrees, and the All-Stars are assigned to investigate a plot to kill Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The All-Stars stop the Baron’s plot, with the help of Plastic Man disguised as the Prime Minister.
Note: This issue contains the Hostess Superhero Ad, Batman in "The K-9 Caper!".
All-Star Squadron
- Publisher
- DC Comics
Volume Description
"Come with us now to Earth-Two, and the awesome origin of the All-Star Squadron!"
Roy Thomas, Rich Buckler, Jerry Ordway (credited here as Jeremiah Ordway!) along with editor Len Wein, letterer John Costanza and colorist Carl Gafford begin the wartime adventures of the Golden-Age heroes of the DC Universe. Writer Roy Thomas is no stranger to World War II, or wartime comic book super-heroes having come off Marvel's WWII super-team, The Invaders.
The world of Earth -2 was at war. In a dimension not unlike that of the Justice League on Earth - 1, the greatest heroes of the 1940s had banded together to form the Justice Society of America, but even that wasn't enough to battle the Axis powers plaguing their society. So, at the behest of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a new, larger team was created to help unite the war torn country. The massive All-Star Squadron was formed, setting up their headquarters in the Perisphere at the heart of New York's World's Fair.
The creative team of writer Roy Thomas and artist Rich Buckler on "All-Star Squadron" offered readers a nostalgic glimpse back in time, albeit through the slightly distorted lens of Earth-2's history. In this popular series that ran for 67 issues, readers were treated not only to the adventures of the more familiar Justice Society, but also to every other mystery man of the time and dozens of minor heroes from DC's Golden Age, including the speedster Johnny Quick, the patriotic Liberty Belle, power houses Robotman and Commander Steel, and the 1940s versions of Batman and Robin.
With Thomas'comprehensive knowledge of the heroes and history of World War II era Americana, the All-Star Squadron was a certifiable hit, even if the Earth - 2 shattering events of DC's tumultuous "Crisis on Infinite Earths" maxi series of the mid-1980s took a toll on the book's continuity.
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