John Stewart was a Marine, an architect, a Green Lantern. Now John is the only one who can stop the Lightbringer’s plans, but in order to do so, he must choose a new path forward, one that will change his role in the DC Universe forever! Back on Oa, Jo Mullein faces the formidable Anti-Guardian!
With the two storylines coming together in Green Lantern #10, we seem to be approaching a big finale. There's clearly some unanswered questions left as well as an action packed showdown. It's all set up here in this issue though as the visuals are stunning from Chriscross, Castro, Santucci and Atiyeh. Read Full Review
Green Lantern #10 brings several running mysterious into focus into one colossal battle, and it all feels decidedly epic in scope, a threat perfect for a Corps such as the Green Lanterns. Read Full Review
Is it easy to hang on for such a thrilling ride? Maybe not, but it's surely some of the most daring, "big idea" comics from the mainstream available today. Read Full Review
Green Lantern remains a title that has interesting ideas, but too few are getting properly developed Teen Lantern was noticeably absent again that keeps it from reaching its full potential. Read Full Review
With allies and potential enemies lurking overhead, it's a high-octane issue with the fate of what's left of the Corps and Oa itself at stake. Read Full Review
While this continues to be a hard book to continue and what feels like an impossible book for new readers to figure out, there are still some interesting concepts in the characters being explored and the ideas of time and what it means... Usually, nothing when Hypertime is involved but there's some decent stuff here. The only problem is the way that the book is being told seems convoluted at times and the two-story style leaves you wanting more from both by the end. Read Full Review
Green Lantern #10 continues to propel the series towards the completion of Geoff Thorne's story. In all honesty I can't think of a time in the history of the franchise when the writing has been this poor. I fully expect we'll see John Stewart return to save the day over the course of the next two issues, but in the end I fail to find much to enjoy about the book. Four out of ten lanterns. Read Full Review
If you like John and Jo as characters, you'll like this issue and where the series is going. (I like them and am enjoying this run.)
This is really bad. Underdeveloped and nonsensical and boring. I think I'm gonna have to stop reading this series. This issue just did not work on any level. It was a mess. I slogged through this issue and immediately fell asleep. Woof.
This is the lowest point of GL writing that there has ever been.
I started reading GL around when Blackest night came out and loved Johns run. I’ve since read everything going back to Crisis in the 80’s and aside from a few bits here and there, green lantern has been awesome! This run though… is trash. It’s sad to see. I’ve stuck around out of loyalty to the title but I’m done now.
Wow, this is like DC handed the franchise over to a bad fan fiction writer.
Wait, so now Jo and Hal have been in contact all along?! There are things like this just sprung on the reader with no explanation that just undermine the storytelling. It's all thrown at you like some big "gotcha" that reads more like the writer is scrambling to make this make some sort of sense at the last minute.
Been reading GL for a LONG time and this series is by far the most mishmashed narrative mess. DC, please end this book once this arc is done and put someone credible on it.
Tiresome. Uninteresting. Did the Katma-Tui plot come directly from fanboy's message board? I