The "Black Adam and Isis" epic concludes here! With Billy Batson banished from the Rock of Eternity, the Justice Society calls upon an old friend to help in the battle against the Black Marvel family and stop Black Adam and Isis once and for all!
Overall, with Johns leaving this title soon and Jerry Ordway taking over, the quality of storytelling should remain high, although few, if any, recent comic book writers can measure up to what Johns has done for the medium and DC in particular. Hopefully, if we a return of Captain Marvel to the fold, Ordway will have some more classic characters to play with. JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA has been one of DCs strongest titles over the past few years in storytelling and art and if it stays this way it will stay at the top of many reading lists. Read Full Review
Hopefully we'll get an answer in the near future. Read Full Review
If you liked this review, be sure to check out more of the authors work at Monster In Your Veins Read Full Review
I think there are only 2 more Geoff John's written issues of this series left before he departs, and I for one hope Geoff manages to bring back that old magic he had with this series one last time before he goes. Read Full Review
"Black Adam & Isis" is a bad Marvel Family story shoehorned into a Justice Society vehicle, and Justice Society of America #23 through #25 are bad comics. What's more troubling is that Ordway isn't done with the book quite yet. As far as this JSA fan is concerned, Matt Sturges and Bill Willingham can't get here soon enough. Read Full Review
Johns was never able to develop this series in a way that reached the heights of his achievement on the more tightly-focused (and shorter-titled) "JSA" series, but if you're looking for good, old-fashioned comic book superheroics with more characters than you can shake your crotchety old stick at, you could do a lot worse that "Justice Society of America" #25. Read Full Review
Now, granted, I'm not too thrilled with those changes, but if they're going to just undo them, there are more elegant ways to do it. Read Full Review