JLA | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | |
Publication date | November 1996 – February 2006 |
No. of issues | 126 (#1–125, plus an issue numbered #1,000,000) |
Main character(s) | Justice League of America |
Creative team | |
Created by | Grant Morrison Howard Porter |
Written by | Grant Morrison (1-17, 22-31, 34-41, 1,000,000), Mark Waid (18-21, 32-33, 43-58, 60), Chuck Dixon (59), Joe Kelly (61-76, 78-90, 100), Denny O'Neil (91-93), Chris Claremont (94-99), Chuck Austen (101–106), Kurt Busiek (61, 107–114), Geoff Johns (115–119), Allan Heinberg (115–119), Bob Harras (120–125) |
Penciller(s) | Howard Porter Bryan Hitch Doug Mahnke |
Inker(s) | John Dell Paul Neary |
Collected editions | |
New World Order | ISBN 1-56389-369-X |
JLA was a monthly comic book published by DC Comics from January 1997 to April 2006 featuring the Justice League of America (JLA, Justice League).[1] The series restarted DC's approach to the Justice League, which had initially featured most of the company's top-tier superheroes but shifted in the 1980s to featuring a rotating cast of established characters alongside newer ones and also saw that franchise expand to several spin-off series, diluting the prestige of the name brand. When relaunched by writer Grant Morrison, the team again focused on the most recognizable, powerful, and long-lasting heroes in DC's library.