Monday, June 24, 2024

Summer Green #11 - Dopes!


The eighty-sixth issue of Green Lantern and Green Arrow is the second of two issues which deal with the very real problem of drugs among the youth of America. The issue by the now-regular team of Denny O'Neil, Neal Adams and Dick Giordano is gorgeous to look at
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When Green Arrow discovers his ward Speedy is a junkie, his reaction is anger, as he realizes a lot of it misplaced, but a fury which is rained down on  Speedy himself. Disgusted he abandons his ward.

Meanwhile the junkies who first accosted Green Arrow in the first part of the story are enjoying their reward to having turned over the heroes to the dealers and one of the them overdoses on the exceedingly pure drug.


Green Lantern discovers the body of the dead junkie and finds Speedy in throes of his addiciton. Speedy is taken to the apartment of Dinah Drake who takes the boy in while he tries to go cold turkey.  Green Arrow meanwhile is hunting the dealers, despite his injured arm, and is soon enough captured and sent to the bottom of the ocean with an anchor for company on the orders of the top boss a successful socialite businessman named Salomon Hooper. Green Lantern saves GL and while Speedy painfully recovers tended to by Canary, the duo locate the drug lab and bring down the operation.

At the funeral of Speedy's junkie comrade he confronts his mentor Oliver Queen and lets him know that drugs are a complicated response to a painful world and that Ollie needs to own his contributions to the problem. Walking away defiantly Speedy rebuffs his mentor, and Green Arrow shows regret for his role, and shows pride for the way his ward has grown up.

This one was a dang pretty good story. The battle against drugs is ongoing and sometimes gets swamped by the moralism which attempts to treat the issue more as sin than disease. In a society which is as medicated as our own, it's difficult to understand why people don't understand how the young learn quickly enough that outside substances are a way to deal with pain and suffering. They see it all around them all the time.

I'm not sure I agree with all the speeches in these Green Lantern issues but certainly the attitude that drugs are a taboo subject for discussion does no one any good.



More to come.

This is a verdant vintage Dojo post. 

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2 comments:

  1. Both GL/GA #85 and #86 were very powerful comics - perhaps the most memorable from the Bronze Age for me. However, it was also a landmark in that it precipitated the break-up of the O'Neil/Neal Adams partnership. O'Neil was angry that Neal Adams changed the end of the story unilaterally in #86 by having Speedy punch Green Arrow, O'Neil saying that he final message becomes "A punch in the mouth solves everything" was not the message he was trying to get across.

    When Neal Adams subsequently changed the end of Batman #251 so that the Joker falls into the oil, Batman laughs and says "Only the Joker could make me grateful for pollution!", O'Neil felt it was the last straw. They never collaborated again.

    It could be argued that Neal Adams was more in tune with what made a good comic punchline, of course.

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    1. Sorry it's taken me so long to respond. Your post got lost in the machinery, and I just found it.

      I've read the many rigors that Roy Thomas suffered with Adams. I think that's why Roy worked with him exclusively almost at Marvel, as he was the only one who'd put up with it for the good of the team. I wonder if he pulled that on Stan on Thor and that was it.

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