corner box
menu button
Boosterrific.com: The Complete, Annotated Adventures of Booster Gold
Boosterrific.com: The Complete, Annotated Adventures of Booster Gold

Buy Booster Gold

Friday, June 3, 2022

A History of Crises

When Dark Crisis arrives next week, it will be only the latest nearly-annual DC Universe-threatening event in a series stretching back nearly four decades to the incredibly influential Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985, which also happens to be the same year a young hero named Booster Gold first made the scene.

Therefore, now seems a good opportunity to look back at how each annual mini-series event has affected Booster's career.

  • Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985)
    Debuting in Booster Gold #1, Booster Gold was the first hero to appear in the new DC Universe following the resolution of the greatest Crisis of all crises.
  • Legends (1986)
    The anti-hero sentiment stirred up by Glorious Godfrey motivates a mob to attack a hospitalized Booster Gold in Booster Gold #13. Booster will flee to the future for medical help and return to the 20th century with his twin sister.
  • Millennium (1988)
    As motivation to force him to join their cause, the Manhunters steal Booster's fortune in Booster Gold #24 and nearly drive him into early retirement. In the aftermath, we learn that Booster is an important link in the future evolution of the human race. He will stop working solo and join the Justice League International full time alongside a fellow hero in a similar situation, Blue Beetle.
  • Invasion! (1989)
    Booster and the rest of the Justice League International join the heroes of the world in striking against the alien alliance in Invasion! #2. Later, as two of the technology-based heroes unaffected by the detonation of the alien gene bomb, Booster Gold and Blue Beetle help keep the peace in New York City. His experiences on the islands of the Pacific Ocean during the invasion will open the door to a series of bad judgements and misfortunes that will ultimately drive Booster to quit the team.
  • Armageddon 2001 (1991)
    Booster takes a temporary leave of absence from leading his new, corporate-sponsored team, the Conglomerate, to aid a Justice League in disarray against Monarch in Armageddon 2001 #2.
  • War of the Gods (1991)
    Once again, the heroes of the world — including Booster Gold — join in another strike force, this time against the gods of New Olympus in War of the Gods #4.
  • Eclipso: The Darkness Within (1992)
    Once again, the heroes of the world — including Booster Gold and the recently reformed Justice League International — join in another strike force, this time on the moon against the demigod Eclipso in Eclipso: The Darkness Within #2.
  • Bloodbath (1993)
    Having previously lost his 25th-century technological powers to Doomsday, Booster tests his replacement armor against the powerful alien parasites in Bloodbath #1.
  • Zero Hour: Crisis in Time (1994)
    The time-manipulating Extant erases Booster from history in Zero Hour #1. When the timeline is restored, Booster Gold and his pal Blue Beetle will join a splinter group of the Justice League dedicated to taking a more proactive, "extreme" approach to defending the world against future threats.
  • Underworld Unleashed (1995)
    Teammates Booster Gold and Blue Beetle help keep the peace in Metropolis during the demon Neron's supernatural famine in Underworld Unleased #3.
  • The Final Night (1996)
    Booster and Beetle are as powerless as everyone else to restart the sun in The Final Night #3.
  • Booster plays no role in Genesis (1997), DC One Million (1998), or Day of Judgement (1999).
  • Our Worlds at War (2001)
    Booster and other former Justice League International members fight a nigh-omnipotent Imperiex Probe to the death in JLA: Our Worlds at War #1.
  • Joker: Last Laugh (2001)
    During the chaos of Joker's attempt to poison the world, Booster Gold is turned into a pig by the witch Circe in Wonder Woman #175.
  • Identity Crisis (2004)
    Booster attends the funeral of Sue Dibny in Identity Crisis #1.
  • Infinite Crisis (2005)
    After his best friend, Blue Beetle, is killed by the villainous Checkmate in Countdown to Infinite Crisis, Booster Gold goes to the future and restores his long-lost armor, then seeks out Beetle's successor and leads him against the evil Brother Eye artificial intelligence. In the crisis's aftermath, Booster will join Time Master Rip Hunter to save the newly reborn multiverse (in 52).
  • Final Crisis (2008)
    Booster attends the funeral of Martian Manhunter in Final Crisis: Requiem #1. In the crisis's aftermath, Booster will join other Time Masters in hunting Batman, who has been lost in history (in Time Masters: Vanishing Point).
  • Blackest Night (2009)
    Possessed by the Black Lantern of Nekron, the deceased Blue Beetle rises from the grave to attack both his successor and Booster Gold in Booster Gold #26. In the crisis's "Brightest Day" aftermath, Booster will rejoin his old Justice League International allies in hunting down Blue Beetle's reanimated killer (in Justice League: Generation Lost).
  • Flashpoint (2011)
    Cut off from his allies, Time Master Booster Gold fights alone to repair the damaged DC Universe timeline in Booster Gold #45. Despite his best efforts, he fails. In the "New 52" timeline established afterwards, Booster will become the leader of a reimagined Justice League International (in Justice League International).
  • Futures End (2014)
    Booster Gold becomes unstuck in time in Booster Gold: Futures End #1 and is manipulated into putting the entire Multiverse in jeopardy.
  • Convergence (2015)
    The Booster Golds of two different universes collide in Convergence Booster Gold #1. One becomes the new Waverider and uses his newfound power to help undo the damage he caused. These newest changes set in motion new events that will eventually lead to the eventual unravelling of the "New 52" timeline and a reunifying "Rebirth" of pre-Flashpoint history.
  • Booster plays no role in Rebirth (2016) or Dark Nights: Metal (2017).
  • Heroes in Crisis (2018)
    After the ramifications of a series of time-travel misadventures drive a traumatized Booster Gold to seek mental help, he is accused of murdering the other patients in his superhero care facility in Heroes in Crisis #1. Booster escapes capture and proves his innocence with the aid of his recently reborn best friend, Blue Beetle.
  • Doomsday Clock (2019)
    In the aftermath of the universal rebirth, once again the heroes of the world — including Booster Gold — join in another strike force, this time against the menace responsible for the "New 52," Doctor Manhattan, on Mars in Doomsday Clock #9.
  • Year of the Villain (2019)
    The Dark Multiverse's The Batman Who Laughs continues his assault on the heroes of Earth by spreading his evil infection to an unsuspecting Booster Gold in Hell Arisen #2. He will eventually be rescued by Lex Luthor.
  • Dark Nights: Death Metal (2020)
    All the heroes and villains of the world — including Booster Gold — join in another strike force, this time against the Batman Who Laughs' multiverse-devouring master, Perpetua, in Dark Nights: Death Metal #5.

That's a lot of drama! Will Dark Crisis be a boon or a bane for Booster Gold? We'll start finding out next week.

Comments (4) | Add a Comment | Tags: dark crisis events

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Fools. Bureaucratic Fools.

Booster Gold does not appear in this week's Justice League: Road to Dark Crisis #1, or as Booster booster Rob Snow recently called it, Countdown to Dark Crisis. (I love that title. I mean, seriously, DC, It was right there! )

Although there's no Booster to be seen here, there are still two things I find interesting about this issue.

Thing 1: Despite its cover blurb that "It All Starts Here," Dark Crisis #0 was already released for Free Comic Book Day, and that's not even counting the Justice League issue where the team died or the three Infinite Frontier mini-series that led up to their deaths. So it really began months ago. Or, really, decades ago, since this is very overtly a retread of the seminal 1985 Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Thing 2: Booster Gold isn't on the cover. And before you tell me that's not unusual for a book Booster Gold is not in, let me explain.

I'm talking specifically about the issue's variant cover by Chris Burnham & Nathan Fairbairn:

© DC Comics

As you can see, Crisis on Infinite Earths' Pariah is sitting on a throne built of long-boxes of comics reading other comics featuring other famous DC "crisis" events. The book in his hand is the Silver Age Justice League of America Volume 1 #30 (1964), in which the JLA of Earth-One and the JSA of Earth-Two battle the Crime Syndicate of America of Earth-Three in a story called "The Most Dangerous Earth of All." (It's a great "meta" cover for an issue that expects its readers to know the ins-and-outs of 40 years of comic book history.)

More relevant to this blog are the three books on the floor at his feet: Final Crisis #1 (2008), Zero Hour: Crisis in Time #4 (1995), and Infinite Crisis #1 (2005). Booster Gold played a role in all of these mini-series events, even appearing on some of their covers. But he does not appear in any of these particular issues, just as he doesn't appear in or on this issue.

So what's interesting about that?, I hear you say. What's interesting about this cover that Booster isn't on is that he's still kind of on it!

On a cover like this, a cover celebrating the fantasy and history of comic books and multiverses, where else should we expect to find Booster Gold — the first character introduced to the DC Universe after the initial Crisis and a modern superhero whose sole desire is to be famous enough to be a character in comic books — than inside the comic book box by Pariah's left foot labeled "A - B"!

© DC Comics

So close but yet so far, Booster.

Comments (0) | Add a Comment | Tags: chris burnham covers dark crisis nathan fairbairn pariah rob snow

Monday, May 30, 2022

LOOK!! First Appearance of Booster Gold

Last week on Twitter, the image of a 1938 house advertisement for Action Comics #1 inspired Russ Burlingame to compare it to "that Direct Currents-style book that circulates as '1: Booster Gold' from time to time."

For those of you who don't know, Burlingame was talking about this, DC Releases Vol.1, No. 21, February, 1986:

© DC Comics

DC Releases was a free handout for customers in the nascent direct comics market of the mid-to-late 1980s. (No. 48 was the final issue before it was replaced by Direct Currents, which continued to promote DC products for another decade.) This is called the "February" issue because it was promoting books with a "February" cover date, although they were mostly being sold to consumers in October/November 1985.

The solicitation text, likely written by DC's promotional copywriter extraordinaire, Paul Kupperberg, is pretty Boosterrific:

He's In It For The Bucks!

Talk shows! Prime-time commercials! Opening night bashes! T.V. guest appearances! Product endorsements! Where does this guy come from?

Just between you and me, the other heroes in the DC Universe aren't too hot on Booster Gold's strivings for star-status. But Skeets, on the other hand, is loving it! Skeets? Oh. He's Booster's flying, computerized companion. Who knows where he came from, either. But wherever it is, all the gossip columns have it that he and Booster came together!

As Metropolis goes goo-goo and ga-ga over this empowered hunk (ya gotta hand it to the guy), he keeps his priorities straight! He knows that being a celebrity super-hero means being a super-hero first, and when B.G. puts his powers into drive—watch out!

In this premier issue, Booster must recover a satellite guidance system stolen from S.T.A.R. Labs (I hope he doesn't miss his contract negotiation meeting because of that!) And: Action explodes in the streets of Metropolis when the incredibly strong Blackguard meets our affluent hero face-to-face!

Dan Jurgens, penciller on The Legion of Super-Heroes, Sun Devils, and Warlord, and Mike DeCarlo, who inked Dan on Warlord, promise a super-action series, seasoned with just the right blend of satire, urbane wit, and humor. So, as Booster Gold would say, buy, buy, buy!

While the widely-seen house ad for Booster Gold #1 that was included in Crisis on Infinite Earths #11 (and almost every other book DC published in October 1985) is more famous and much more widely seen than DC Releases, this handout was created specifically to promote books released on October 8, 1985 (including Crisis on Infinite Earths #11). Therefore, as Russ said, Booster's cover panel here is very likely the character's very first public appearance.

That's why you'll find copies going for $500 on eBay.

Personally, I'd rather spend my money on comics rather than advertisements for comics, but you do you.

Comments (2) | Add a Comment | Tags: dan jurgens dc releases ebay.com mike decarlo paul kupperberg twitter.com

Friday, May 27, 2022

This Day in History: The End of Convergence

If you're starting to feel like tragic events are repeating themselves over and over, you might be a DC Comics reader.

In 1985, the original Crisis on Infinite Earths destroyed the DC Multiverse. Twenty years later, Infinite Crisis revisited the same territory and partially restored the DC Multiverse. Ten years after that, Convergence revisited the same territory and revealed that the DC Multiverse had existed in our hearts all along.

That was 7 years ago today.

© DC Comics

It was in the pages of Convergence Booster Gold #2, released May 27, 2015, that we learned that the Booster Gold who appeared in the New 52 Justice League International was not actually the same person who had appeared in two volumes of comics named Booster Gold.

And it was also in the pages of Convergence Booster Gold #2 that the original Booster Gold died and was brought back to life as the newest Waverider.

© DC Comics

That happened just in time for Waverider to arrive and help save the day in Convergence #8, also released May 27, 2015. How did he help? By empowering Brainiac, the very same creature who had caused the Convergence in the first place.

© DC Comics

The reality created by Convergence lasted barely a year before Doctor Manhattan's tinkering in DC Universe: Rebirth resulted in awkward merging the pre- and post-New 52 realities to create a whole new continuity lying somewhere in between, a reality that has since been revised in Death Metal and is again being challenged in this summer's Dark Crisis.

© DC Comics

Like I said, sometimes reading DC Comics is like being caught in a cosmic hamster wheel of trauma, a wheel that seems to be spinning faster and faster the longer we're on it.

However, the important lesson isn't that the multiverse is full of evil. The lesson is that every time evil rears its head, heroes will emerge to fight it.

© DC Comics

Such is life in every universe.

Comments (4) | Add a Comment | Tags: convergence waverider

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

25 Years of Mindless Behavior

For years and years, artists believed that the best way to show what a comic strip character was thinking was to put their internal dialog in fluffy, bubbly word balloons. According to comics historian Brian Cronin, credit for that innovation belongs to Rudolph Dirks' Katzenjammer Kids newspaper comic strip in the early years of the 20th century.

However, at the dawn of the 21st century, this method began to fall out of favor in mainstream American superhero comics. Old-fashioned, abstract thought balloons were gradually replaced by the more "realistic" approach of putting the same internal dialog in square boxes, as though characters are narrating their behaviors after the fact.

Since this transition happened incrementally over time, it passed largely without comment. Which made me wonder, "When was the last time that Booster Gold used a thought balloon?"

The answer to this question is Superman #124, cover-dated June 1997.

© DC Comics

© DC Comics

So far as I've been able to tell, Booster Gold never thought again.

It just so happens that this issue also marks the last appearance of Booster's clunky late-90s armor, so it also represents something of bookend to his 1990s adventures. If loosing thought balloons is the price we had to pay to get Booster Gold back in tights, I think I can live with that.

Comments (0) | Add a Comment | Tags: balloons brian cronin cbr.com superman


There have been 3052 blog entries since January 2010.

VIEW LIST OF 3096 KEYWORDS

FIND NEWS BY DATE


JUMP TO PAGE



SITE SEARCH


return to top

SPOILER WARNING: The content at Boosterrific.com may contain story spoilers for DC Comics publications.