Hawkman Volume 3: Wings of Fury


By Geoff Johns, Rags Morales, José Luis García-López, Scot Eaton & various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-4012-0467-9

Rising to even greater heights this third volume of the resurrected Winged Wonders (collecting issues #15-22 of their own high-flying series and including material from JLA A to Z #1-2) intensified the high-octane thrills and dynamic tension of the lovers-with-many-lives in a sequence of tales which delved deeper into their many and varied pasts and even had a bold shot at reconciling all the bewildering iterations generated by the many reboots and retcons the Feathered Furies have endured over the decades.

Despite being DC’s most popular and visually striking characters, the various versions of Hawkman and Hawkwoman always struggled to find enough of an audience to sustain a solo title. From the very beginning as the second feature in Flash Comics, they battled through many excellent yet always short-lived reconfigurations. From ancient heroes to space-cops and (post-Crisis on Infinite Earths) Thanagarian freedom fighters, they never quite hit the big time they deserved…

Hawkman premiered in Flash Comics #1 (January 1940), created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville, with Sheldon Moldoff and Joe Kubert carrying on the strip’s illustration, whilst a young Robert Kanigher was justly proud of his later run as writer. Carter Hall was a playboy archaeologist until he found a crystal knife that unlocked his dormant memories. He realised that once he was Prince Khufu of ancient Egypt and that he and his lover Chay-Ara had been murdered by High Priest Hath-Set. Moreover with his returned memories came the knowledge that both lover and killer were also nearby and aware…

Hall fashioned a garish uniform and anti-gravity harness, becoming a crime-fighting phenomenon. Soon the equally reincarnated Shiera Sanders was fighting and flying beside him as Hawkgirl. Together these gladiatorial “Mystery-Men” battled modern crime and tyranny with weapons of the past.

Fading away at the end of the Golden Age (the last appearance was in All Star Comics #57, 1951 as leader of the Justice Society of America) they were revived nine years later as Katar Hol and Shayera Thal of Thanagar by Julie Schwartz’s crack creative team Gardner Fox and Joe Kubert – a more space-aged interpretation which survived until 1985’s Crisis, and their long career, numerous revamps and retcons ended during the 1994 Zero Hour crisis. After the universe-shuffling a new team of Winged Wonders appeared (See Hawkworld) – refuges from a militaristic Thanagarian Empire who found new purpose on Earth.

When a new Hawkgirl was created as part of a revived Justice Society comicbook, fans knew it was only a matter of time before her Pinioned Paramour rejoined her, which he did in the excellent JSA: the Return of Hawkman, after which he immediately regained his own book. This time the blending of all previous versions into a reincarnating, immortal berserker-warrior appeared to strike the right note of freshness and seasoned maturity. Superb artwork and stunning stories didn’t hurt either.

The reconstituted Hawkman now remembers all his past lives: many millennia when and where he and Chay-Ara fought evil together as bird-themed champions, dying over and over at the hands of an equally renewed Hath-Set. Most importantly, Kendra Saunders, the new Hawkgirl, differs from all previous incarnations since Shiera was not reborn this time, but rather possessed the body of her grand-niece when that tragic girl committed suicide. Although Carter Hall still loves his immortal inamorata his companion of a million battles is no longer quite so secure or sure of her feelings…

This cracking chronicle opens with a portentous reunion between the Winged Warrior and alien cop Shayera Thal in ‘The Thanagarian’ a three-part saga by Geoff Johns, Rags Morales & Michael Bair which sees the alien virago seeking to discover the final fate of “her” Hawkman…

With Katar Hol now incorporated into the body and memories of Hawkman nobody is prepared for the brutal attack of another Winged Wonder claiming to be the actual Thanagarian hero… It takes the combined efforts of Hawkman, Hawkgirl, Shayera Thal and guest-star Animal Man to divine the secret of the murderous mystery marauder…

Artistic maestro José Luis García-López took over for ‘Blood Lines’ as the old soldier revisits his history and some of the places where he has been buried over the centuries, affording us an insight into the tragedy of reincarnation, before Carter Hall revives his career as an archaeologist in ‘Hunting For History’ (Scott Eaton & Ray Kryssing), excavating in Saharan Kahndaq and renewing a somewhat strained relationship with five thousand-year-old erstwhile comrade Black Adam…

An arcane supernatural threat materialises in St. Roch when ‘The Headhunter’ (Morales, Bair & McMurray) comes to steal the memories of the Aerial Ace and not even best friend the Atom can tip the balance when Hawkman’s past incarnations slip their graves to hunt them down in ‘Taking Off the Mask’. As ever, in the end it’s all a matter of guts and determination to end Headhunter’s ‘Blood and Lies’, but victory might well be just a far more subtle kind of defeat…

Tense, terse, beautiful and extremely violent this book saw the start of far more savage hero than previously seen but Geoff Johns’ worthy attempts to rationalise the chequered histories of Hawkmen new and old should easily stifle the qualms of the old guard: this new composite Winged Wonder is an unmissable, visceral delight no superhero devotee can afford to be without.

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