The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 2
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Average customer review:Product Description
The classic super-hero series STARMAN, starring a Gen-X super-hero, is re-presented in high quality format.
The super-heroic legacy of Starman is renewed in these stories, in which Jack Knight - antiques collector and dealer - inherits the name and powers of his father's old Starman identity from his older brother, who has been assassinated.
In this volume, Jack's disturbing dreams drive him to New York City to meet his father's old friend, Wesley Dodd, the Sandman of the 1940s, and learns of another Sandman - an alien who came to Earth as a hero of the 1970s.
Features spectacular artwork by Eisner Award winner Tony Harris, illustrator of EX MACHINA.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #46821 in Books
- Published on: 2009-03-03
- Released on: 2009-03-03
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 416 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781401221942
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
The second collection of the 1990s Starman comic shows the creators hitting their stride, establishing elements that would become hallmarks of the series: reluctant young hero Jack Knight’s growing confidence in the role of Starman he inherited from his father, flashbacks to 1940s adventures of his predecessor, and stories incorporating the various other superheroes who have operated under the Starman rubric. While the groundbreaking Watchmen (1986) opened the door earlier to other superhero tales set in a world recognizably our own, Starman eschewed that series’ knowing cynicism in favor of the moving coming-of-age story of an idealistic young man learning how to be a hero.
Customer Reviews
Good as Gold
The James Robinson/Tony Harris run on Starman is one of my favorites in 45 years of comic book reading and is certainly the best extension of a Golden Age character ever rendered. Through this second Omnibus collection, Robinson builds Jack Knight's reluctant acceptance of the hero's role, transforms Solomon Grundy, revitalizes the Sandman and passes the mantle of The Mist from a one dimensional Golden Age villian to a fascinating and menacing modern counterpart. Through all of this, artist Tony Harris produces in his characters a range of facial expressions rarely seen in comics. Finally, Robinson and Harris team to make Opal City one of the most fully realized locales in the genre. This Art Deco beauty actually becomes as important as any character in the series. By using people and stories from the city's past (Jon Valor, the Scalphunter, Jake Benetti),the author creates additional texture and continuity for the setting in which Starman and friends cavort.
This Omnibus seems to improve with each individual entry. There is a retelling of a Golden Age story in which the original Starman first faces the Mist. It is followed by the annual episode in which Jack Knight meets with his brother, a former Starman, who died in battle. The book takes off in a 4 issue arc called Stars and Sand in which Jack Knight teams with the aging Sandman, Wesley Dodds. This series explores themes including changing perceptions of the role of the hero, the effect of aging on the physical hero, and the way generations view each other. The marriage between Dodds and Dian Belmont is probably the most mature and complex to be treated in comics. This arc draws upon stories and artwork from the sadly neglected Sandman Mystery Theater series which ran concurrently with Starman.
The volume peaks in Demon Quest. Starman journeys to hell to rescue the Shade and Jack O'Dare. Embodying the normalcy of daily life in Opal City, Knight's meeting with demons seems both extraordinary and oddly normal.
This is followed by a one shot Christmas story which somehow manages to sidestep sentimentality to end up achieving genuine emotion.
I gave my son the entire Starman run beginning with issue zero to read. He liked them as much as I did. The series succeeds for generations of readers in the immodest goal of blending a half century legacy of comic book writing into one memorable and satisfying narrative.
Starman Omnibus #2
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/RJS3P2FG1FWUW Just a quick review.
excellent stuff
A little of Starman Omnibus Vol 2 is connected to larger DC happenings, like the Neron cameo, but most of it is pure old-school comics fun.
The art is only getting better from the last volume, and Robinson obviously loves the characters a great deal. I found it intelligent, beautiful, and a fast exciting read.




