Appearing in "Secret of the Sinister Sorcerers"
Featured Characters:
Supporting Characters:
Adversaries:
- Simon Magus, The Evil Magician (Single appearance)[1]
- Saturna, the Lord of Misrule (Single appearance)[1]
- Troll King (Single appearance)[1]
Other Characters:
Locations:
- Magic-Land
Items:
- Crystal Ball of Merlin
- Green Lantern Ring
- Lasso of Truth
- Merlin's Magic Wand
- Justice League Signal Device
- Bracelets of Submission
- Wonder Woman's Tiara
- Utility Belt
Vehicles:
- None
Synopsis for "Secret of the Sinister Sorcerers"
- Synopsis not yet written.
Notes
- This issue is reprinted in Justice League of America (Volume 1) #48, and Justice League of America Archives, Volume 1.
- It is uncertain whether the Merlin that appears in this issue is the same sorcerer that fathered the demon, Etrigan, and served under Arthur Pendragon in Camelot.
- Aquaman appeared last in Adventure Comics #279. He appears next in Showcase #30.
- Batman appeared last in Detective Comics #286. He appears next in Superman (Volume 1) #142.
- The Flash appeared last in Flash (Volume 1) #117. He appears next in Flash (Volume 1) #118.
- Green Lantern appeared last in Green Lantern (Volume 2) #3. He appears next in Green Lantern (Volume 2) #4.
- Martian Manhunter appeared last in Detective Comics #286. He appears next in Detective Comics #287.
- Superman appeared last in Action Comics #271. He appears next in Superman (Volume 1) #142.
- Wonder Woman appeared last in Wonder Woman (Volume 1) #118. She appears next in Wonder Woman (Volume 1) #119.
Trivia
- First appearance of Jimmy Carr, Snapper's brother. It is established later in the Hourman series, that Snapper also has a brother nick-named "Spitter". Whether Jimmy and Spitter are the same person or two different siblings has yet to be revealed. Jimmy Carr appears next in Justice League of America (Volume 1) #114.
- Wonder Woman's loss of her powers seems odd in light of the fact that supposedly the science based heroes would lose their powers, but as Wonder Woman's power source remains mystical, that should not happen to her. In the JLA Index #2, the power loss is attributed to a psychosomatic reaction to the situation of the others. The Index also notes that #65's power loss incident happened due to a psychosomatic reaction.
See Also
- Write your own review of this comic!
- Discuss Justice League of America Vol 1 2 on the forums
- Images from Justice League of America Vol 1 2
Recommended Reading
- Justice League of America (Volume 1)
- Justice League of America (Volume 2)
- Action Comics
- Aquaman (Volume 1)
- Batman
- Detective Comics
- Flash (Volume 1)
- Green Lantern (Volume 2)
- Superman (Volume 1)
- Wonder Woman (Volume 1)
- World's Finest (Volume 1)
Links and References
- Justice League of America article at Wikipedia
- Justice League of America article at Wikipedia
- JLA page at DC Comics
- The Captain's Unofficial Justice League Home Page
- Cosmic Teams: Justice League
Footnotes
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