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The conflict between the New Gods cannot be resolved until Orion, the hero, confronts Darkseid, the black-helmeted supervillain who is secretly Orion's father
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I'd always kind of looked at Kirby as comics' version of, say, Bill Haley - an important player in the development of the artform, but not much else. His Thor, for example, I found atrocious. Reading New Gods, though, was a complete turn-around for me in regards to the man and his legacy.
The basic plot: Ragnarok has already happened, and the “old gods” have all died out. In their wake, however, the New Gods have formed on the twin planets of Apokolips and New Genesis. (Bonus points if you can guess which one is the ‘good' planet and which one is the ‘evil' one). The two planets are at war, and Earth has just become their latest battleground.
The series mainly focuses on Orion and Darkseid's battle for Earth, but throughout that, Kirby manages to throw out insane, cosmic ideas while still being able to muse on things like the nature/nurture debate and the impact that war has on a man's soul. Reading stuff like this makes me want to write big, goofy space opera stories; I suppose that providing inspiration like that is a bit of a testament to the strength of Kirby's work here, as well.