Written by Dennis O’Neil; Gerry Conway; J.M. DeMatteis; Martin Pasko; & Paul Kupperberg.
Art by Dick Dillon; George Tuska; Rich Buckler; Marshall Rogers; Mike Nasser; Romeo Tanghal; Joe Staton; Pat Broderick; Dick Giordano; Gerald Forton; Frank Chiaramonte; Bob Smith; Vince Colletta; Frank McLaughlin; Jerry Serpe; Doug Klein; Bob LeRose; Gene D’Angelo; Adrienne Roy; Ben Oda; Shelly Leferman; Albert DeGuzman; Todd Klein; & Milton Snapinn.
Interior Art Restoration by Mike Kelleher.
Credited Cover Art by Ross Andru & Dick Giordano; Jim Aparo; Neal Adams & Dick Giordano; Dick Dillin & Dick Giordano.
Collection Cover Art by Jim Aparo & Allen Passalaqua.
SUMMARY:
Released by DC Comics in 2018, this 182-page trade paperback reprints the following 1979-1980 tales:
World’s Finest Comics # 256 – “Encounter With a Dark Avenger!”
Meeting Green Arrow for the first time, Black Lightning teams up with the Justice Leaguer for a mutual vendetta against Metropolis mobster Tobias Whale (Part 1 of 2).
World’s Finest Comics # 257 – “Death Ransom!”
A captive Black Lightning is caught in the crossfire between Tobias Whale and rival mobsters (Part 2 of 2).
World’s Finest Comics # 258 – “The Blood of the Lamb!”
In Metropolis, Black Lightning faces off vs. Tobias Whale inside the city’s Superman Museum.
World’s Finest Comics # 259 – “The Last Hideout.”
A Metropolis mob showdown at the Hotel Empire has Black Lightning pondering the fate of a long-missing jewel thief.
World’s Finest Comics # 261 – “Return of the River Rat!”
On a Metropolis River cruise ship, an undercover Jefferson Pierce goes into action as Black Lightning.
DC Comics Presents # 16 – “The De-volver.”
Teaming up with Superman, Black Lightning encounters a bizarre energy creature threatening Metropolis.
Justice League of America # 173 – “Testing of A Hero.”
Commencing a bizarre initiation test, the League (Hal Jordan’s Green Lantern; Zatanna Zatara; Barry Allen’s Flash; Green Arrow; and Superman) impersonate some familiar super-villains to test an unsuspecting Black Lightning. If he lives up to expectations, then Black Lightning will be invited to join the JLA.
Justice League of America # 174 – “A Plague of Monsters.”
Having declined the team’s offer, Black Lightning is the League’s (Batman; Green Arrow; Wonder Woman; Zatanna Zatara; Superman; Red Tornado; Aquaman; & Elongated Man) ace against the deranged Regulator, who telepathically commands an army of mutated vermin.
Detective Comics # 490 – “Lightning Strikes Out.”
Taken captive, Black Lightning tries to rescue a friend from a vengeful Haitian crime ring’s arson death trap (Part 1 of 2).
Detective Comics # 491 – “Short-Circuit.”
Having lost his powers, Black Lightning must improvise to thwart a strange Haitian gang of crooks (Part 2 of 2).
The Brave and the Bold # 163 – “Oil, Oil, … Nowhere.”
Black Lightning and Batman team up to thwart an American paramilitary army’s scheme to invade Middle Eastern oil fields.
Detective Comics # 494 – “Explosion of the Soul.”
In Suicide Slum, Black Lightning pursues a psychotic masked vigilante: the Slime-Killer.
Detective Comics # 495 – “Animals.”
As Suicide Slum hosts a teenage Olympics, the vicious Duke Street Kings gang takes six female athletes as expendable hostages. Threatening to kill a hostage every ten minutes, the Kings demand from the Metropolis police a million-dollar ransom and a free ride out of the country. Along with guest star Jimmy Olsen, Black Lightning pays the Kings a visit.
REVIEW:
In terms of DC Bronze Age nostalgia, this compilation is something of a rough gem. While these stories aren’t necessarily genre classics, they effectively define Black Lightning’s evolution going into the early 1980’s. Not only has the artwork been nicely refreshed, the consistently simple and satisfying storytelling (the ridiculous Justice League of America # 173 gets a pass here) is much appreciated.
Despite some nasty inferences in the last story, Black Lightning, Volume Two is a welcome visit from DC Comics’ archives. The terrific page count alone makes it worth the price of admission. For Black Lightning fans, given the effort that DC went towards supplying its pristine look, this book is a should-have for the collection.
ADDITIONAL CONTENT:
The character’s co-creator, Tony Isabella, supplies a single-page introduction written in 2017. A table-of-contents with creative credits is included. In a full-page format, each cover precedes its story. Also included are: Black Lightning’s Who’s Who (1985) profile (artist: Jim Aparo); a full-page pin-up (circa 1992); and his 1992 Who’s Who profile (artists: Mark Bright & Joe Rubenstein, who also presumably devised the pin-up).
BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING: 7½ Stars