DC’s new series, Alan Scott: Green Lantern, examines the history of Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, in the current DC continuity, which shows the hero dealing with being a closeted gay man in the 1940s. However, the series takes place in two different time periods, showing Scott’s pre-war time period, as well, and it is the narrative of that time period that ended with a shocking cliffhanger – Alan Scott committed to Arkham Asylum!Alan Scott: Green Lantern #1 was written by Tim Sheridan, and drawn by Cian Tormey, with colors by Matt Herms, letters by Lucas Gattoni and a cover by David Talaski (variants by John K. Snyder III and Nick Robles. The Robles variant is the header for this piece). That same creative team did a prologue story in DC Pride: Through the Years a few months back that set up this comic book series.In DC Pride: Through the Years, we see the first meeting between Alan Scott and Johnny Ladd, who would become the love of Alan’s young life. They were both working in the Army Corps of Engineers, as part of Project: Crimson, a project investigating a mysterious power source known as the Crimson Flame. Alan and Johnny begin to date while on the ship (Sheridan is cleverly using the fact that Alan Scott’s original name was Alan Ladd, before it was changed to Scott, so here, Alan took the name Ladd from Johnny, so his full name is Alan Ladd-Scott). In this first issue, we see the 1936 mission in one of the timelines.Why The Whole Green Lantern Mythos Needs A Golden Age Makeover
DC’s new series, Alan Scott: Green Lantern, examines the history of Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, in the current DC continuity, which shows the hero dealing with being a closeted gay man in the 1940s. However, the series takes place in two different time periods, showing Scott’s pre-war time period, as well, and it is the narrative of that time period that ended with a shocking cliffhanger – Alan Scott committed to Arkham Asylum!
Alan Scott: Green Lantern #1 was written by Tim Sheridan, and drawn by Cian Tormey, with colors by Matt Herms, letters by Lucas Gattoni and a cover by David Talaski (variants by John K. Snyder III and Nick Robles. The Robles variant is the header for this piece). That same creative team did a prologue story in DC Pride: Through the Years a few months back that set up this comic book series.
In DC Pride: Through the Years, we see the first meeting between Alan Scott and Johnny Ladd, who would become the love of Alan’s young life. They were both working in the Army Corps of Engineers, as part of Project: Crimson, a project investigating a mysterious power source known as the Crimson Flame. Alan and Johnny begin to date while on the ship (Sheridan is cleverly using the fact that Alan Scott’s original name was Alan Ladd, before it was changed to Scott, so here, Alan took the name Ladd from Johnny, so his full name is Alan Ladd-Scott). In this first issue, we see the 1936 mission in one of the timelines.
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