Picture of author.
216+ Works 2,903 Members 129 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Amanda Connor

Image credit: Picture by Jimpaltti

Series

Works by Amanda Conner

Harley Quinn Vol. 1: Hot in the City (The New 52) (2014) — Author — 358 copies
The Pro (2002) — Illustrator — 232 copies
Harley Quinn Vol. 2: Power Outage (The New 52) (2015) — Author — 176 copies
Harley Quinn Vol. 3: Kiss Kiss Bang Stab (2015) — Author — 134 copies
Power Girl (2006) — Illustrator — 103 copies
Harley Quinn (Rebirth) Vol. 1: Die Laughing (2017) — Author — 98 copies
Harley Quinn & Power Girl (2015) 85 copies
Power Girl: A New Beginning (2010) — Illustrator — 81 copies
Harley's Little Black Book (0201) 61 copies
Green Arrow and Black Canary: The Wedding Album (2008) — Illustrator — 56 copies
Power Girl: Aliens and Apes (2010) — Illustrator — 52 copies
Starfire Vol. 1: Welcome Home (2016) — Author — 50 copies
Power Girl: Power Trip (2014) — Illustrator — 46 copies
Harley Quinn (Rebirth) Vol. 3: Red Meat (2017) — Illustrator — 38 copies
DC Comics: The Sequential Art of Amanda Conner (2012) — Illustrator — 36 copies
Two-Step (2010) — Illustrator — 35 copies
The Art of Amanda Conner (2012) — Author — 32 copies
Starfire Vol. 2: A Matter of Time (2017) — Author — 31 copies
Terra (2009) — Illustrator — 29 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #1 (2013) 29 copies
Birds of Prey: Harley Quinn (2020) 28 copies
Before Watchmen Omnibus (2018) — Illustrator; Author — 26 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #11 (2016) 20 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #0 (2013) 18 copies
Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre #1 (2012) — Illustrator — 15 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #2 (2013) 14 copies
Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre #2 (2012) — Illustrator — 14 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #4 (2014) 13 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #1 (2016) 12 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #5 (2014) 12 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #6 (2014) 12 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #7 (2014) 12 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #8 (2014) 11 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #3 (2014) 11 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #9 (2014) 9 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #10 (2014) 9 copies
Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre #3 (2012) — Illustrator — 9 copies
Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre #4 (2012) — Illustrator — 8 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #12 (2014) 8 copies
Gatecrasher: Ring of Fire (2000) — Illustrator — 7 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #11 (2014) 7 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #1 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 7 copies
SuperZero Vol. 1 (2016) 6 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #14 (2014) 6 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #15 (2015) 5 copies
Harley Quinn: Futures End #1 (2014) — Author — 5 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #2 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 5 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #25 (2016) 4 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #3 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #22 (2015) 4 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #24 (2016) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #23 (2015) 3 copies
Starfire [2015] #6 (2015) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #12 (2017) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #19 (2017) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #7 (2016) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #6 (2016) 3 copies
Starfire [2015] #9 (2016) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #3 (2016) 3 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #16 (2015) 3 copies
Starfire [2015] #2 (2015) 3 copies
Brute Force (2018) 2 copies
She-Hulk [2005] #3 - Time of Her Life (2004) — Illustrator — 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #10 (2016) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #9 (2016) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #8 (2016) 2 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #5 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #7 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #5 (2016) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #4 (2016) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #13 (2017) 2 copies
Starfire [2015] #11 (2016) 2 copies
Starfire [2015] #10 (2016) 2 copies
Starfire [2015] #4 (2015) 2 copies
Starfire [2015] #3 (2015) 2 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #6 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
The Invincible Red Sonja #4 (2021) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #15 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #18 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #17 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #20 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #16 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #23 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #24 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #21 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2016] #14 (2017) 2 copies
Harley Quinn [2013] #19 (2015) 2 copies
Harley Quinn 09 (2016) 1 copy
Starfire [2015] #1 (2015) 1 copy
The Invincible Red Sonja #9 (2022) — Illustrator; Cover artist, some editions — 1 copy
Secret Origins #4 (2014) 1 copy
Starfire (2016) 1 copy
The Invincible Red Sonja #10 (2022) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 1 copy
The Invincible Red Sonja #8 (2022) — Author; Cover artist, some editions — 1 copy

Associated Works

The Starman Omnibus, Volume One (2008) — Illustrator — 250 copies
Before Watchmen: Minutemen/Silk Spectre (2013) — Illustrator — 243 copies
Jem and the Holograms: Showtime (2015) — Contributor — 176 copies
Wednesday Comics (2010) — Illustrator — 133 copies
Harley Quinn: Night and Day (2013) — Illustrator — 92 copies
Sexy Chix (2006) — Illustrator — 74 copies
Girl Comics (2010) — Cover artist — 66 copies
Captain Marvel Vol. 1: Re-Entry (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 65 copies
Batgirl: Destruction's Daughter (2006) — Illustrator — 61 copies
The Movement Vol. 1: Class Warfare (The New 52) (2014) — Cover artist, some editions — 56 copies
Young Justice Book One (2017) — Illustrator — 43 copies
Mystic: The Tenth Apprentice (2012) — Cover artist — 42 copies
DC Meets Hanna-Barbera, Vol. 1 (2017) — Author — 40 copies
Supergirl Vol. 3: Identity (2007) — Illustrator — 36 copies
Warriors Three: Dog Day Afternoon (2011) — Illustrator — 30 copies
Jem and the Holograms #1 (2015) — Cover artist, some editions — 26 copies
Superman Red & Blue (2021) — Illustrator — 23 copies
Red Sonja: The Black Tower (2015) — Cover artist, some editions — 16 copies
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Wedding Special #1 (2007) — Illustrator — 10 copies
Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre (2000) — Illustrator — 9 copies
Wonder Woman #600 (2010) — Contributor — 8 copies
The New 52: Futures End: Five Years Later Omnibus (2014) — Contributor — 8 copies
Plastic Man [2018] #1 (of 6) (2018) — Cover artist, some editions — 7 copies
Jimmy Olsen #1 (2011) — Cover artist — 5 copies
Avengers West Coast [1985] Annual #4 (1986) — Illustrator — 5 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #5 - Capture (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #3 - The Gold Mine (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #4 - The Brothers of Misfortune (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
The Movement #1 (2013) — Cover artist — 4 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #1 - The Coronation (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #2 - The Crossing (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 4 copies
Convergence: The Question #2 (2015) — Contributor — 4 copies
Booster Gold/The Flintstones Special #1 (2017) — Author — 3 copies
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #6 - Temple of Ghosts (2019) — Cover artist, some editions — 3 copies
The Movement #2 — Cover artist — 3 copies
Superman: Lois Lane (1998) #1 (1998) — Illustrator — 2 copies
Legion of Super-Heroes [2005] #14 — Illustrator — 2 copies
Miracleman [2014] #11 (2014) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
The Flintstones [2016] #02 — Cover artist — 2 copies
Here Come the Big People #1 (1997) — Illustrator — 2 copies
Batman: Black and White, Vol. 2 #4 — Cover artist — 2 copies
Codename Knockout # 14 (2002) — Illustrator — 1 copy
The Movement #3 (2013) — Cover artist — 1 copy
Rage — Variant Cover Artist, some editions — 1 copy
Red Sonja (2019-2021) #1 Preview — Cover artist, some editions — 1 copy
Titans Giant Vol. 2 #1 — Contributor — 1 copy
Batgirl, Vol. 1 #66 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Jem & The Holograms Covers Treasury Edition (2015) — Illustrator — 1 copy
Codename Knockout # 09 (2002) — Illustrator — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

When I reread the "Power Trip" arc of JSA Classified, I was reminded of how awful Geoff Johns's writing was... but also what a brilliant artist Amanda Conner was, and what a good fit she was for the buoyant, expressive Power Girl. So I decided to pick up this collection, which contains all twelve issues of her run on Power Girl vol. 2. (Unfortunately, it also includes that terrible JSA Classified story, but I skipped it rather than suffer through it a third time. Note that Geoff Johns gets first billing on the cover for writing just four of the seventeen issues included here, whereas Amanda Conner—the only person to work on all seventeen and the volume's clear star—is down in fourth. Must be nice to be the former president of DC!)

The twelve issues of Power Girl collected here run concurrently with Justice Society of America vol. 3 #29-40 and JSA All-Stars vol. 2 #1-6, taking place during the time when Power Girl is leading the JSA. (When the volume opens, the team seems to be unified still; by the time of the closing arc, it has split up, and Magog has left.) But the story's focus is on the fact that despite what's happening with the Justice Society, Power Girl is no longer frustrated at her lack of a clear origin, and just trying to be herself—whoever that may be. So for the first time in a long while, she's reactivated her civilian identity of Karen Starr, and is using it to build a technology company while she moves out of the JSA brownstone into an apartment of her own. She develops friendships, and builds up her own supporting cast. There's even her cat from her JLI days.

It's one of those runs that you can't point to a single issue and say "this is an amazing comic book" but where you can point to the whole and say "this is what a superhero comic book should be." It's funny, it's charming, it's goofy, it has a unique personality all its own. Sometimes Power Girl is battling the Ultra-Humanite and his former lover Santana, but sometimes she's stopping alien girls gone wild and a virile alien warlord who wants to repopulate his sterilized planet, sometimes she's helping out a teenage boy by going comic book shopping with him. Writers Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti have admittedly produced some real shit in their time at DC, but this plays to their strengths—or at least to Conner's, who is surely in the Top Ten of superhero comics artists, and consistently elevates any material she is given.

In Conner's hands, comedy, action, and emotion all get good play, letting the whole story come alive. Sometimes the main conflict of one of these stories will end halfway through an issue, and the rest will just be about Power Girl chilling with her sidekick/new friend Terra—and it is always a delight. Conner hits the perfect note with PG's physical appearance, giving us a woman who is attractive but not objectified. I mean, Gray and Palmiotti definitely write in gratuitous moments, but they feel natural and part of the story. (Which is not always the case with Power Girl; shortly before writing this review, I read JSA All-Stars #1, where PG's costume gets strategically torn in such a way as to reveal her entire midriff, and where her boobs are always hanging in "attractive" unnatural positions... bleh.)

Like many great runs, the worst thing about it is that it wasn't longer; I gladly would have read another twelve issues from this team. I felt that the supporting cast at Karen's new company barely got started in what they could do, and I want more Kara and Atlee bonding in New York City. But even though this comic lasted another fifteen issues, Judd Winick took over as writer and it became (to my understanding, anyway) a Brightest Day tie-in; neither the writer nor the change of focus appeals. That said, it did make me interested in picking up PG's newest series...

The Justice Society and Earth-Two: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (more)
 
Flagged
Stevil2001 | 1 other review | Dec 2, 2023 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

I was reading Power Girl: Power Trip, but a few issues into it, I was starting to wonder what the deal was with "Terra," Power Girl's sidekick and friend, who comes from a hidden nation of subterranean people. Well, it turned out the answer was in this book by the same creative team of writers Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti and artist Amanda Conner, so I paused reading Power Trip to delve into this long out-of-print collection.

Terra is a bit frustrating in that much of the time, we view this new character from the outside; we don't get much of her own struggle. What are her stakes? This is never really clear. The first issue here teams her up with Supergirl, in one of her particularly selfish periods; Terra's perky selflessness serves as a contrast. Then she meets up with Power Girl and Doctor Mid-Nite, then (groan) Geo-Force. Her deal is that she tries to take care of collisions between the surface world and the subterranean one, protecting the underground ecosystem from human intervention and humanity from subterranean creatures. She comes from a whole thriving underground world with a myriad different kinds of life. It's a neat set-up for stories potentially, but one the volume on its own ultimately doesn't make a ton of use of—and since Terra never got another series, I'm guessing was never really used in future stories, either.

Alongside this, there's a subplot about a guy digging underground who accidentally turns himself into a living diamond. This culminates in him attacking Terra's people, and she and Geo-Force team up to defeat him. It's pretty perfunctory stuff, I feel like more could have been made of the bad guy. (There's also some stuff about this Terra's place as the... third, I think, superhero of that name, but I don't know anything about the Teen Titans, so it was all underexplained gibberish to me. For some reason, Geo-Force's memory has to be erased even though he learned that someone was impersonating his dead sister; seems a bit mean. How his dead sister can be from underground, I don't really know.)

Then in a half-issue coda, Terra goes back to the surface and bumps into Power Girl again. This made me very glad I paused Power Trip to read this, because it's basically a set-up for that series, pushing Kara into the decision to resume living her civilian identity and lead a normal life.

So writing wise, it's basically fine. Decent idea, but mediocre execution—which honestly feels par for the course for Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti, who are hacks (meant in the nicest possible way, of course) if ever there were any; they did, after all, write Infinite Crisis Aftermath, Uncle Sam and the Freedom Fighters, parts of Countdown, and what is probably the worst superhero comic ever. But what elevates it is their collaboration with one of superhero comics' best-ever artists, Amanda Conner. Conner's art is fun, bold, sexy, and above all, character driven. You get a sense of personality from her faces that mostly fails to come across from the writing. It's delightful, I knew I would love it, I did love it, and it's the whole reason I bought this book as opposed to just reading the issues on DC Universe Infinite, and it was worth it. Get Amanda Conner to draw every comic book, please.

The Justice Society and Earth-Two: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (more)
 
Flagged
Stevil2001 | Nov 27, 2023 |
Wonder Woman helps the Bat-family out in Gotham and shows the Gotham villains what it's like to battle an Amazon.
 
Flagged
justgeekingby | Jun 6, 2023 |

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Jimmy Palmiotti Author, Illustrator, Contributor
Chad Hardin Illustrator
Darwyn Cooke Illustrator, Introduction, Author
Justin Gray Author, Contributor
John Timms Illustrator
Moritat Illustrator
Phil Hester Illustrator
Elsa Charretier Illustrator
Joe Staton Illustrator
Stéphane Roux Illustrator
Cliff Chiang Illustrator
Steve Bunche Contributor
Len Wein Author
Kurt Busiek Illustrator
Bob Burden Illustrator
Darko Macan Illustrator
Erik Larsen Illustrator
Evan Dorkin Illustrator
Scott Kolins Illustrator
Ron Frenz Illustrator
Paul Pelletier Illustrator
Juan Bobillo Illustrator
Rick Magyar Illustrator
Mike Mayhew Illustrator
Joe Sinnott Illustrator
Mike Vosburg Illustrator
Donald Simpson Illustrator
Tom Grummett Illustrator
Lee Weeks Illustrator
Gary Erskine Illustrator
Eric Powell Illustrator
Sal Buscema Illustrator
Paul Mounts Cover artist, Colorist, Contributor, , Illustrator
Adam Hughes Illustrator, Cover artist
Mark Waid Contributor
Walter Simonson Illustrator
Tradd Moore Illustrator
Stéphane Roux Illustrator
Tony S. Daniel Illustrator
Jim Lee Illustrator
Sam Kieth Illustrator
Bruce Timm Illustrator
Becky Cloonan Illustrator
Art Baltazar Illustrator
Dave Johnson Illustrator
Geoff Johns Contributor
Jill Thompson Illustrator
Barbara Kesel Contributor
André Coelho Illustrator
Terry Moore Contributor
Patton Oswalt Contributor
Judd Winick Contributor
Jai Nitz Contributor
Chuck Dixon Contributor
Joe Pruett Editor, Designer
Jae Lee Illustrator
J. G. Jones Illustrator
Eduardo Risso Illustrator
John Higgins Illustrator
Steve Rude Illustrator
Andy Kubert Illustrator
Joe Kubert Illustrator
Lee Bermejo Illustrator
Ray McCarthy Illustrator
Greg Horn Cover artist
John Scott Illustrator
John Romita, Jr. Cover artist

Statistics

Works
216
Also by
54
Members
2,903
Popularity
#8,824
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
129
ISBNs
143
Languages
9

Charts & Graphs