
SPOILER WARNING: The following page may contain story spoilers. Read at your own risk.
Writers: J. M. DeMatteis, Keith Giffen
Penciller: Patrick Olliffe
Inker: Patrick Olliffe
Colorist: Hi-Fi Designs
Letterer: Sal Cipriano
Editors: Michael Carlin, Michael Siglain
Cover Artist: Kevin Maguire
heroes: Big Barda, Booster Gold, Darkstar, Darkstar Phil, Mister Miracle, Rip Hunter
supporting: Skeets II
Settings: 20th-century New York, NY, USA; 20th-century Unknown Planet, DCU; 21st-century Rip Hunter's AZ Lab, DCU, USA
Cover Description: Booster Gold stands holding a bloody puzzle piece over an over-sized jigsaw puzzle of Max Lord.
Brief Synopsis: Booster Gold is torn between his mission against Maxwell Lord and his friendships with the Justice League International.
Costume Worn: MARK I.v2 power-suit
This story has been reprinted in the following issue:
Booster Gold: Past Imperfect (2011)
Page 1, panel 1
Um, I'm no expert, but what have Blue Beetle and Queen Artemis done "fourteen times" in the 30 minutes that have elapsed since their last appearance last issue? (The "30 minutes" time estimate comes from Booster himself later this issue.)
Page 3, panel 1
Booster Gold, Big Barda, Mister Miracle, and Skeets are arrested by Darkstar Phil and his partner on board the Planet Pounder doomsday device orbiting Queen Artemis' planet. Exactly one minute and 33 seconds have elapsed since the end of last issue.
Page 4, panel 5
Speaking of "twitching a lip," just how are all of these people talking to one another in the vacuum of space, again?

Page 5, panel 5
Like Blue Beetle and Booster Gold, Bud Abbott and Lou Costello were an amazingly popular and successful comedy duo. The pair performed on vaudeville, radio, television, and movies in the first half of the 20th century. The duo broke up in 1957, but many still remember their famous "Who's on First" comedy sketch.
Page 5, panel 6
HAIR CLUB FOR HEROES: For the third time in four issues, Booster' thinning hair has been mentioned by a Justice League teammate as a tell-tale sign of his aging. Much more of this and Booster is going to have to get a hairpiece.
Page 8, panel 2
Booster Gold and Skeets are briefly reunited with Rip Hunter in his Arizona Time Lab before rejoining the reborn Justice League International in Justice League: Generation Lost #7.
Page 8, panel 5
FASHION ALERT: The "ridiculous collar"? Skeets, how could you? What is ridiculous is the art -- specifically the colorization -- of Booster's costume on this entire page. In panel 1, he is clearly wearing a facsimile of his original Mark I costume (gold collar, gold gloves). In panel 2 and 4, his shoulders are suddenly blue. He doesn't remove the collar until panel 5 (when Skeets makes a big deal about it). In panel 6, he's changed his gloves off panel, and his costume finally appears as the Mark I.v2 costume should look (no collar, blue gloves). Skeets, you couldn't be more wrong: Booster should return to his original (and greatest!) collared costume to prevent confused panels like this.
Page 8, panel 6
Deceased since 2008, fashion critic Mr. Blackwell was renowned for his "Ten Worst Dressed List," a witty (and sometimes mean-spirited) annual critique of Hollywood fashion flubs.
For more annotations from this issue which occur at a different point in Booster Gold's chronology, click here (for modern Booster Gold) or click here (for classic Booster Gold).
Boosterrific Review: Whew! This issue is all over the place! Fans of Giffen's and DeMatteis' trademark humor will find something to love in this issue. So will fans of DC history. And Blue Beetle fans. And Justice League International fans. And space opera fans. And, well, probably just about everybody. The book's only significant flaw is that the art of Pat Olliffe (pulling double-duty on pencils and ink) is very uneven, probably a side-effect of the book's breakneck plot and diverse plot elements.
Boosterrific Rating: Worth Its Weight In Gold.
Average Fan Rating: (5 votes)
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