Warning: Potential SPOILERS forDC Pride 2024#1

Summary

ReadingDC Comics’annual Pride special is an emotional event for me every year, but this year’sDC Pride 2024#1had me holding back tears. This year’s one-shot includes stories that will please every kind of fan — including those like me who want to celebrate DC’s queer creators and history more than anything else.

Beyond telling fun stories about DC’s roster of LGBTQ+ characters — new and historical both —DC Pride 2024#1 includes a moving short storyby the iconic writer/artist Phil Jimenez, proving once again thatDC’s Pride offerings aren’t just about the characters but also about celebrating the history of queer creatorswho have touched DC through the decades — and who have been touched by DC’s world in return.

DC Pride 2024 1 Main Cover: costumed superheroes like Superman, Aquaman, Steel, Harley Quinn, and more pose together.

DC PRIDE 2024 #1

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves, as Jimenez’s story with artist Giulio Macaione concludes the 100-page one-shot. Before that, DC fans can travel the galaxy with our favorite characters and creators. We find ourselves in the furthest reaches of space with Poison Ivy and Janet-from-HR and the familiar streets of Metropolis' A-Town with Jon Kent and friends — all in search of a sense of belonging, a theme that unites each of these stories, up to and including Jimenez’s.

DC Pride 2023 Polaroid Cover

DC Pride 2023 Is an Earnest Tribute to All Kinds of Queer Love (Review)

With a grab-bag of stories, essays, pin-ups, and more, DC Pride 2023 #1 is the publisher’s third Pride anthology—and its most meaningful yet.

DC’s LGBTQ+ Characters Search for Belonging

With this fourth installment in the Pride anthology “series,” which began with 2021’sDC Pride#1,DC’s annual Pride one-shotis now an award-winning tradition, and one I know I’m not alone in eagerly anticipating every year.This year’s anthology is loosely themed around the idea of “travel,“but the best moments in these stories instead embrace travel as a metaphor for something far greater: a search for belonging that is often a shared experience within queer communities.

Among those best moments — and there’s a “best” to be found in every story here, even those that don’t stand among my personal favorites — the best-of-the-best latch on to even the smallest nuggets of these characters' histories to tell stories about finding belonging in unexpected places, even when those places are unexpectedly familiar.The two strongest pieces of fiction inDC Pride 2024are “Hello, Spaceboy” by Al Ewing and Stephen Byrne and “The Rivers and Lakes that You’re Used To” by Ngozi Ukazu, and not only because they’re by beloved creators who are making their mark on the DCU for the first time.

DC Pride 2024 1 Preview Page 2: a Table of Contents with a Pride rainbow and DC logo.

Ewing, Byrne, and Ukazu Offer Stand-Out Short Stories

Ewing and Byrne’s “Hello, Spaceboy” revampsthe ’90s version of Starman for the 2020s— a story notable both for Ewing’s DC debut and for howMikaal Tomas' Starman is one of DC’s earliest openly gay heroes. This story introduces Mikaal to a new generation of readers — myself included — just as it introduces Mikaal to a new and unexpected relationship with one of his rivals. Ukazu’s story, on the other hand, stars DC’s newest young Aquaman, Jackson Hyde, and the complex hero of the Fourth World, Orion.

Ngozi Ukazu, the best-selling author of the webcomic-turned-graphic-novelCheck, Please!from First Second, has more to say about the Fourth World: check out Ukazu’s new YA graphic novel,Barda, available June 4th from DC Comics.

Kevin Conroy DC Comics

This Aquaman/Orion team-up is made all the more compelling by how the story acknowledges Jackson’s unfamiliaritywith Orion and New Genesis— but also his willingness to meet and understand new people, finding belonging only through the process of experiencing something and someone new. I’ll always love character-focused stories above all else, andthe best of these stories often show character relationships in-progress— like Circuit Breaker struggling to rememberwho’s who in the Flash Familyin “Phantom Rodeo” by Calvin Kasulke and Len Gogou.

Phil Jimenez’s AutobiographicalDC PrideStory Is an Achievement (and a Tear-Jerker)

DC’s Spotlighting of Queer Creators Is the Best Part ofDC Pride

But the best-of-the-best inDC Pride 2024#1 is absolutely undeniable: “Spaces” by Phil Jimenez and Giulio Macaione.“Spaces” is an autobiographical story about Jimenez’s childhood and adult connection to Wonder Woman, the Amazons, and the idea of Paradise Island. Jimenez, knownespecially for his work onWonder Woman, is one of the most prominent out creators working in superhero comics, and this story is both a testament and a love letter to the fictional worlds that make queer children (and adults, for that matter) feel like anything is possible — including being ourselves.

Each iteration ofDC Pridetakes essential time to honor not only its extremely fictional characters and stories, but to honor the people who have made those characters and stories possible.

I won’t lie: the story made me cry. I’m a crier; I wouldn’t be able to count the number of superhero comics that have had me clutching my tissue box over the years. ButJimenez and Macaione’s story is a crystalline example of why the DC Pride celebration — including the annual anthology — matters, and why it has never felt like an empty “celebration” designed to appease queer fans. LikeKevin Conroy’s story fromDC Pride 2022and last year’s extensive tribute to trans icon andDoom Patrolwriter Rachel Pollack, DC editorial continues to spotlight real queer stories — of both struggle and triumph — from real queer people who have made major marks on our favorite characters.

DC’s Rachel Pollack tribute continues in this year’s second Pride special,DC Pride: A Celebration of Rachel Pollack, available June 4th from DC Comics.

“Spaces” may be muted in tone and almost philosophical in its thinking, but by standing in stark contrast to the brightly-colored superhero fiction that comes before it, it practically sparkles — and not because baby Phil’s eyes quite literally shine in the first panel. Each iteration ofDC Pridetakes essential time to honor not only its extremely fictional characters and stories, but to honor the people who have made those characters and stories possible, most especially in the decades before the industry — and world — would accept such a public celebration.

Batman’s Kevin Conroy Shares Heartfelt Message Over DC Pride Story

Batman voice actor Kevin Conroy shared a touching message in response to the ongoing support he received following his recent story.

DC Pride 2024#1 Insists that LGBTQ+ Stories Have Always Mattered

DC Pride Variant Covers Available Throughout June

Some may see the critic’s job as telling an audience whether the subject is “good” or “bad,” whether it’s worth the audience’s time and money. I disagree, and I have disagreed for as long as I’ve been writing: my job as a critic is to tell you whether my subject matters, and why, and how. As a regular-old DC fan, one who’s loved these characters since childhood, I have my favorite and not-so-favorite stories inDC Pride 2024#1, and I couldn’t necessarily say this is my favorite of the four anthologies.

Why does DC Pride matter? Because it makes public what has, in decades past, been a private truth: queer heroes are an important, essential part of superhero history, both on the page and in the metaphorical bullpen.

There are perhaps one too many moments where queer characters are lumped together as “friends” without having any real reason to know each other — an admittedly personal pet peeve in continuity-based storytelling. I love seeing my newer favorites like the magic-user Xantheand my more obscure favorites like the Ray, but I have a lot of trouble understanding how they could have come to know the other characters in the stories where they appear. I don’t want to be told characters are friends; I want to see those friendships grow in real, organic time, even in limited page space. Such is the joy of interconnected storytelling.

But as a critic — one with inescapable subjectivity, especially as a queer reader — I still believe wholeheartedly thatthis anthology matters, and it matters deeply. The stories inDC Pride2024#1 are in constant search for belonging: the characters find their belonging within each other and themselves, the creators find belonging within their work, and the readers — or, rather, this reader — find belonging in the utter breadth of possibility within the DC Universe and superhero fiction more broadly, from obscure ’90s heroes to the Fourth World to Paradise Island and far beyond.

DC Pride 2024#1 Is a Worthy Addition to the Award-Winning Anthology Series

Now to Wait Until Next Year…

Why does DC Pride matter? Because it makes public what has, in decades past, been a private truth:queer heroes are an important, essential part of superhero history, both on the page and in the metaphorical bullpen.ThatDC Pride 2024#1, along with the anthologies before it, makes space for that history marks it as important reading; that it also makes space for the future of superhero storytelling and its storytellers, too, marks it as essential reading for fans of all kinds.

There’s room for everyone to belong in DC’s latest Pride special, readers most of all. This one-shot is a genuinely worthy addition to what’s fast becoming one of the publisher’s most important traditions. And if you’re anything like me, you’ll want to have a few tissues on hand when you pick upDC Pride 2024#1, available now from DC Comics.