Includes Issues: | Zero Hour: Crisis In Time 0-4, Showcase '94 8-9 | |
Original Publication Dates: | July 1994 - September 1994 | |
TPB Publisher: | DC Comics | |
TPB Publication Dates: | August 23, 1994 | |
ISBN-10: | 1563891840 (Softcover)
| |
ISBN-13: | 978-1563891847 (Softcover)
| |
Pages: | 156 | [More Info] |
For most books, this information is collected from the book itself and double checked against several other resources. If this particular book hasn't yet been released, the information probably comes from the publisher's press releases and
Amazon.com.
Sometimes a book is listed here based upon a past solicitation, but never actually comes out. I like to keep these in the database, but I try to make a note of the situation.
I try to list the earliest publication date. For books with a hardcover and softcover or multiple editions this will be for whichever came first. Same for the ISBN numbers.
If there have been similar releases that have significant differences, eventually both will be listed. This means that Showcase and Archives that collect similar material are listed as separate books. Likewise, Omnibus, Deluxe, or Absolute editions will have a separate page, though they will probably be close in the timeline.
If you think
any of the information on this page is off, feel free to leave a comment with a suggestion! You may also leave links to relevant information, alternative publications, reviews, or anything you think would be helpful to site visitors.
Lists: | Comics, DC Modern Age, DC Universe, Post-Crisis | |
Series/Event: | Crisis, Zero Hour | |
Creators: | Dan Jurgens, Gaspar Saladino, Gregory Wright, Jerry Ordway, K C Carlson | |
Characters: | Abra Kadabra, Agent Liberty, Alpha Centurion, Amazing Man, Anima, Aqualad, Aquaman, Arsenal, Batgirl, Batman, Battalion, Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Brainiac 2, Captain Atom, Captain Marvel, Changeling, Cosmic Boy, Damage, Darkseid, Despero, Doctor Fate, Doctor Light, Doctor Mid-Nite, Doctor Mist, Donna Troy, Dragon, Elongated Man, Extant, Flash, Geo-Force, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, Gunfire, Hawkman, Highfather, Hourman, Impulse, Jade, Johnny Quick, Johnny Thunder, Joker, Jonah Hex, Katana, Kilowat, L-Ron, Lightning Lad, Lightray, Live Wire, Martian Manhunter, Matthew Ryder, Maxima, Metalik, Metamorpho, Metron, Mirage, Mr. Miracle, Nightrider, Nightwing, Northwind, Obsidian, Orion, Pantha, Parallax, Phantasm, Polestar, Power Girl, Red Star, Red Tornado, Redwing, Rip Hunter, Robin, Robin Saturn Girl, Sandman, Shazam, Spectre, Spectre Starfire, Starman, Steel, Superboy, Supergirl, Superman, Terra, The Atom, The Ray, Time Trapper, Triumph, Vandal Savage, Warrior, Waverider, Wild Huntsman, Wildcat, Wonder Woman | |
Edition: | Softcover | [More Info] |
Each book is tagged and sorted by the terms above. Every link in this section (in orange) can be used to generate a dynamic reading list based on the term.
The
Lists are large reading orders including every book that falls under them. For example, the
DC Universe list includes every book in that shared universe. This taxonomy is
hierarchical, which means that there can be sub-lists under the main lists. The DC Universe
Pre-Crisis list is an example, allowing you to narrow the selection of DC books. The distinction is important, because eventually there will be Silver Age book lists for Marvel
and DC, and the lists will
not be intermingled because of that hierarchy. Look to the list information in the sidebar to see all the lists currently active. Check the header of each listing for specific information about each one.
The
Series/Event taxonomy, like the rest, is not hierarchical. Not every book is part of a particular publication series, nor necessarily included in the reading order for an event. Events often include specific crossovers and tie-ins, but many event reading orders also include books purely because they are recommended for appreciation and understanding of that event.
The
Creators will be tagged in every book in the database. These include all the writers, artists, and editors that worked on the collected material, as well as anyone who significantly contributed to the collected edition.
The
Characters are very important to this database, since most users enjoy seeing a reading list generated by their favorite heroes and villains. Since each book is tagged with any reoccurring character inside, the amount of orders that can be generated through these tags is staggering.
Since there is so much information to be found in each book, it's relatively common for a couple tags to be missed. If you think this book needs attention - should be given any additional tags or moved off a particular list, for example - just leave me a comment and I'll get right back to you!
These links take you to the previous or next book in the database. It's worth a mention that, at this point, this is specifically
in the database.
That means that if you came to this book page via a specific character reading order, for example, the links may point to books that were
not listed on the previous page's reading order. This is because they are taking into account the entire database.
At this time, they go by the
Recommended Reading Order (or equivalents for non-DCU lists) for determining which books to link.
I am currently looking into getting them to give direction based on what page you came from, but it's possible that there is no solution to that issue.
Unique Reading Order ID: | 200803230000 | |
Chronological List Value: | 1994.09 | |
TRO Database Book ID: | 358 |
[More Info] |
The
Unique Reading Order ID determines this book's placement in all lists generated from the
Recommended Reading Order (or equivalents for non-DCU lists). It's not actually unique site-wide, but is unique for each major list. This value is actually based on a date system, but has no relation to any real dates.
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The
TRO Database Book ID is a value indicative of when this book was added. It is used primarily for reference within the TRO database and not for sorting. It used to help with interpage linking, but has been replaced with a more user friendly "slug" (web url title) system.
These values are provided for the purposes of sorting your own collections. You could keep an excel spreadsheet or google document with the titles of the books in your collection. In columns next to the books, place each of these numbers. Then when you display the list sorted numerically by either of these columns, your books will fall into order.
Of course, now that TRO's
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Chris D. wrote on at February 23, 2011 3:14 am:
This is the only book associated with the character tag “Parallax.” I know he was in Rebirth and Sinestro Wars. I’m also trying to figure out when he was introduced (trade wise) and took over Hal. Emerald Twilight?
[Reply]
I’m not sure I would include Parallax in anything prior to Rebirth, really, since it was a retcon introduced by Geoff Johns in that miniseries.
[Reply]
wait, no he wasn’t.
http://comicbookdb.com/character_chron.php?ID=71
I thought I remembered him by that name in this book, but otherwise it’s definitely him. I haven’t actually read rebirth, so I don’t know how he explains it, but I think his arc was more about explaining away the motivations, but the name has existed since the 90s.
[Reply]
Oh really? I take back what I said then…apparently I should just stick to what I know about Marvel, haha.
[Reply]
I think he introduced it as a separate entity. Before then everyone just thought hal went bonkers.
[Reply]
yeah from what I can tell he “became” Parallax and THEN in rebirth they said it was actually an intelligent villain trapped in the power battery on OA. Just gave him more of a back story.
[Reply]
Of course you can tag Parallax in here, Hal adopts the moniker of Parallax in this trade. Now, I can see if you’d want to distinguish between ‘crazy Hal’ Parallax and ‘space bug’ Parallax, but it’s a difficult move
[Reply]
glad you agree. we might try to put in a secondary set of tags for parralax like Parallax (Hal Jordan) and Parallax (Entity) but probably not for a while. We don’t even have separate tags for the Spectre, etc.
[Reply]
to answer your original question, yeah, Emerald Twilight.
[Reply]
and honestly, though, I think these stories are much better not knowing about the “take over”. I’m glad I read them before I learned about that. Following hal through the silver age and then to this point makes these almost devastating. Especially because of all the Corps characters… well, read it.
[Reply]
Emerald Twilight is a fantastic read and Ian is correct in saying that is where Parallax first shows up even if he isn’t known as an entity at this point. Zero Hour follows on from ETwilight almost straight away so can read both back to back if you really want to get stuck into this one.
[Reply]
Cool, that’s what I was wondering. I just got ZH, should I wait to get ET before reading?
[Reply]
Yeah deff wait it’ll make reading ET a chore rather than the enjoyable experience it should be.
I’ve got the Emerald Twilight/New Dawn trade, a 2-in-1 trade, pretty cheap and New Dawn is pretty cool too:
http://www.tradereadingorder.com/dc/green-lantern-emerald-twilight-a-new-dawn/
It appears to be pretty dear now though, along the same pricing as “Final Night” which is essentially the 3rd part to the story (ET -> ZH -> FN). I still haven’t got Final Night myself.
[Reply]
Jayjay wrote on at March 29, 2014 7:02 am:
I might be adding this really late, I just happened to stumble onto this blog and read a couple of the first posts, I haven’t read all of them, so apologies if this has already been addressed. But to answer/comment on one of the first posts: Hal Jordan wasn’t possessed by Parallax, he became Parallax, basically nothing more then a name change, after he snapped and went nuts when The Cyborg (while masquerading as The Man of Steel) and Mongul blew up Silver or Star City, or whatever the name of the city was, during the Death of, Reign of Supermen, & Return of Supermen. This lead Hal Jordan to become Parallax, seeking out a way to bring is beloved city back. This is one of the main things that lead to the Zero Hour Storyline.
[Reply]