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Feast your eyes on the latest cash cow, folks! Alan Scott: The Green Lantern #1, promising the compelling tale of Scott's early days. Are you excited? You better be.
As explained in the latest issue of Alan Scott: The Green Lantern, one key element of his superhero status quo — the very lantern he uses to wield his superpowers — has a revamped origin story.
Green Lantern hasn't been as present in live-action movies and TV shows as other DC superheroes, but there are enough ...
Alan Scott's battle with the Red Lantern concludes in Alan Scott: The Green Lantern #6. Will Alan cross a line he can never return from?
Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, made his comic debut back in 1941. But thanks to the modern story development of Alan Scott coming out as gay, he remains surprisingly relevant to the DC ...
This latest update for the original Green Lantern manages to connect Alan Scott's power level to his queer identity in a way that hints at much more.
The original Green Lantern doesn't get the attention of his successors, but in his new series by Tim Sheridan sheds light on his personal struggles.
DC Alan Scott, the original Green Lantern, will be revealed as gay as part of a reboot of the older characters in the DC Comics universe.
A new origin story tells a drastically different tale of who made the Green Lantern that gave Alan Scott his superhero name.
Alan Scott: The Green Lantern #4 by Tim Sheridan and Cian Tormey recalls the early years of Vladimir Sokov. Born in Belarus, Sokov learned English at an early age, thanks to several books on ...
In 'Green Lantern: Alan Scott' by writer James Tynion IV and artist Stephen Byrne, Alan, one of DC's oldest superheroes, comes out to his adult children Jade and Obsidian.
The original Green Lantern doesn't get the attention of his successors, but in his new series by Tim Sheridan sheds light on his personal struggles.
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