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The ’80s saw the Justice League return to prominence thanks to the Justice League International era, which used B and C-list heroes in superhero comedy stories. DC tried to keep this version of the Justice League around for too long, putting low-level heroes on the team. Readers left throughout the ’90s, until DC happened upon the perfect creator to solve the problem โ Grant Morrison. The Justice League was back, and despite much of the decade being a failure for the team, the ’90s have some amazing League stories. These 10 Justice League stories are the best of the best, Justice League classics of the highest order.
10) JLA #16-17

JLA #16-17, by Grant Morrison, Howard Porter, and Arnie Jorgensen, expanded the League. See, part of the inspiration for this version of the Justice League was the Satellite League โ they had their own space fortress already to be stuffed with superheroes โ and this story is the one that gives the team the greatly expanded roster of the Satellite League. The Justice League present their new expanded roster with a press conference, but their invitation is taken advantage of when new villain Prometheus sneaks into the Watchtower and enacts a perfectly made plan to defeat the Justice League. With everything stacked against them and the big guns out of commission, the new members have to step up. This is an awesome two-issue story โ which was pretty common in the early years of the book โ that gave DC an amazing villain that they never really took advantage of in Prometheus. This story is a lot of fun, and a great showcase for Morrison’s League.
9) JLA #22-23

Starro the Conqueror is an important part of Justice League history. The massive alien was the Justice League’s first enemy, and ended up giving the JLA a baptism by fire in JLA Secret Files and Origins #1. That attack was just the beginning, and JLA #22-23 sees Starro make his most powerful attack yet. However, three of the League’s powerhouses โ Superman, Wonder Woman, and Kyle Rayner โ are pulled into the Dreaming by Daniel as the attack begins, their mission integral to the survival of the Earth. This story is awesome, giving readers action like they could only get from DC Comics. Morrison and Porter were on fire with this story, and it’s still great even all these years later.
8) JLA: Earth-2

The multiverse was destroyed in 1985’s Crisis on Infinite Earths, taking away a crucial component of the Justice League. However, Grant Morrison wasn’t going to let that stop them from bringing back the Crime Syndicate of Earth-Three. Morrison came up with an easy fix, and created the mirror Earth of Earth-2 in JLA: Earth-2. Morrison is joined by artist Frank Quitely for this tale, and it’s pure Justice League goodness. When a plane from another Earth โ the money is different and the passengers’ hearts on the other side โ crash lands, the Justice League and the Crime Syndicate both realize the existence of their mirror worlds and use this an opportunity to attack the other Earth, leading to one of the coolest battles between the League and the Crime Syndicate ever. This is top flight Justice League, giving readers a taste of the Silver Age multiverse stories in a singular DC Universe.
7) DC One Million/JLA #1,000,000

DC One Million is a four issue event book from Grant Morrison and Val Semeiks. JLA #1,000,000 is a tie-in to that story by Morrison and Howard Porter. Read together, they give readers one of the coolest Justice League stories of the ’90s. The Justice Legion A of the 853rd century venture to the present to invite the JLA to the future to witness the emergence of the Prime Superman. However, a plan millennia in the making from Vandal Savage and Solaris the Tyrant Sun strands each group outside of their own times, having to work together over the span of 833 centuries against enemies who have seemingly covered all the angles and have a traitor in their midst ready to strike. This is a sensational story full of twists and turns, and it’s peak Justice League. DC One Million doesn’t get nearly enough credit for just how great it is, and it’s time to give that story the flowers it deserves.
6) JLA #6-7

JLA #6-7, by Morrison and Porter, pits the Justice League against angels and demons. Neron and the Demons Three decide to attack the Earth just as the angel Zauriel was escaping the Silver City to help defend against rogue angel Asmodel and the Bull Host. Superman, Kyle Rayner, and Wally West are trapped on the Watchtower, forcing the rest of the League to battle against the Bull Host of angels. This story is the kind of wild action that you only got out of JLA in the mid ’90s. There are some wild images in this story โ Superman pulling the moon back to orbit using his electric blue powers and two massive electromagnets and a full page splash of Superman wrestling Asmodel โ giving readers hit after hit after hit. This is superhero action redefined, and it’s honestly one of Morrison and Porter’s finest hours together.













