Settling into being a Green Lantern again, John ventures to Mogo to retrieve another escaped sciencell prisoner, putting him face-to-face with Ellie, whom he’s been avoiding. Meanwhile Keli, Aya, Vexar’u, and Narf’s training on energy-twin projection is interrupted by a Red Lantern/Yellow Lantern dispute in the middle of Malaqyte!
To say there's a lot going on would be putting it lightly! But this issue manages to bring everything together pretty neatly, particularly when it comes to its villains. Read Full Review
Green Lantern Corps #11 reminds us why John Stewart is one of the emotional pillars of the Lantern mythos. This issue isn't about winning fights; instead, it's about reckoning with loss, legacy, and the weight of connection. Whether it's Enquar's tragic path, Effigy realizing just how badly he's crossed the line, or John and Ellie navigating a bond that exists without shared memory, the story leans into the humans behind the power rings. Morgan Hampton understands that the Corps thrives not just on willpower, but on relationships, and this issue strengthens those bonds while planting seeds for conflicts that feel personal, dangerous, and worth following. Read Full Review
Green Lantern Corps #11 gets across the current chaotic state of the DC Universe post-Fractured Spectrum. Focusing on all the different ways the Green Lantern Corps are tackling the state of the DCU gets across the grander scope for the series. Read Full Review
Green Lantern Corps #11 is a good setup issue. Each of the three storylines are charting a course toward bigger events. On a story level its not the most impressive thing the series has done by any stretch, but its effective for what it is. Visually, though, it is somewhat rocky with the multiple art teams. With nothing exceptional to recommend it on either front, this is one Green Lantern Corps weakest issue. Read Full Review
abomination