

The JSA held two books for a moment in the aughts, but otherwise it's a low-selling title with a passionate fanbase, not dissimilar to the Legion. Thomas has repeatedly stated how much he would love another crack at writing the All-Star Squadron, why doesn't DC extend the olive branch to him and one of his chief collaborators, Jerry Ordway, to write the team that he created? Without a doubt, Roy is one of only a few writers that seems to have a handle on these Golden Age characters. Considering that even counting YOUNG ALL-STARS (whose continuity picked up where ALL-STAR SQUADRON left off), and something like 100 issues of the two series, we just got from December 6, 1941, through the middle of 1942, we'd have had to go several hundred issues to get through the war! Wish it had happened that way! Could've gone on for decades with THE INVADERS, too, which starts later in December 1941. "I never really thought ahead to war's end in ALL-STAR SQUADRON, but I did envision the group ending with the war, though of course the much smaller JSA would've gone on.

Luke goes back to Tatooine, Leia battles alone, Han and Chewie play the deadly Big Game, and Darth Vader hunts for answers! Revisit all your old favorites and discover some new ones! In between, the Rebels face a wealth of new perils - from space pirate Crimson Jack to the bounty hunter Beilert Valance, as well as a surprisingly svelte Jabba the Hut (one "t").

It's the return of the Jedi to Marvel in an opening volume that begins with Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope and ends with Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back. Now, the House of Ideas is re-presenting those original adventures in its over-sized Omnibus format! Marvel Comics published the very first Star Wars comic-book series.
