
The actual comic isn't bad. There's a look at Libra's origins, showing that he's been involved with Darkseid longer than we knew and giving him Golden Age connections not possible when he appeared pre-Crisis. It answers some questions I had and is thoroughly competent, but eminently missable; the greatest pleasure it gave me was seeing Libra's creator, Len Wein, credited as scripter.
Well, that and laughing at Libra's original costume again. Darkseid gives him a cover-up cloak and new boots - who knew the dark Lord of Apokolips had taste?
That first story, nicely drawn by one Tony Shasteen, takes up most of the issue. The rest is feature pages - Grant Morrison shows up with a thoroughly confusing history of the Anti-Life Equation (do we really need anything beyond 'it's a mystical maths concept that turns people into Darkseid's drones'?).
Greg Rucka, Steve Lieber and Eric S Trautmann give us The Words of Lilith, a page from the Crime Bible, but as with the similar offerings in DC's CB mini series, I tried to plough through it, but couldn't be bothered to finish. Cod-biblical prose written in semi-script, red on orange, with a colour-hold underlay, doesn't make for an easy read. Hasn't DC heard of 'over-designed'?
I did enjoy Morrison and JG Jones' Secret Files Sketchbook, which looks at the Justifiers, dark Mary Marvel and various other FC-related types. The most intriguing inclusion is a slightly tweaked classic Aquaman, hinting that Arthur Curry will be back among the DCU mainstays soon (click for a close-up).

All in all, this is a decent way to spend half an hour, but eminently missable.
Mart, are you sure that's Aquaman and not Nemesis semi-disguised as Aquaman?
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