![]() ![]() Clark is hesitant because, as we see in flashbacks of teenage Clark talking to his father Jonathan Kent, he’s been warned about having sex with women due to his powers. ![]() Later in the book she invites him into her apartment for dinner, and she changes into a see-through nightgown. This is a running subplot throughout this book, as Lisa aggressively flirts with Clark and practically throws herself at him every time she sees him. He has just moved into a new apartment, where he meets his new next-door neighbor, a beautiful young woman named Lisa Lasalle, who immediately asks him out on a date (to see the Rocky Horror Picture Show) that night. This story picks up an unspecified amount of time after the end of the first volume, but it’s pretty soon since Clark still hasn’t even written his 2nd article for the Daily Planet yet. And I hoped that maybe now that JMS got his origin story out of the way he would do a better job just telling a Superman story within this new status quo. ![]() No I didn’t like the first one, but I like the concept of original stand-alone graphic novels not tied to any other continuity. That’s why I have this whole category on my blog dedicated to writing about him. You’re thinking “Wait a minute, he didn’t like the first volume, so why the bloody Hell did J.R. ![]()
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