It’s time to map the DC Universe! In June, I’ll be joining with Near Mint Condition to launch the Tigereyes Most Wanted DC Omnibus 2nd Annual Poll! This post explains every Green Lantern omnibus that does NOT exist – all of which will appear as options on the 2025 poll.
Through the end of May I’ll be covering DC entire publishing history by mapping missing omnibus volumes to fill in every gap in your DC oversize shelf! That’s all leading to the kickoff of the Tigereyes Most Wanted DC Omnibus 2nd Annual Poll on Near Mint Condition the first week of June.
If Batman is the obvious number one on the list of DC’s favorite comic lines to collect in omnibus, Green Lantern is in a race with The Flash for the number two spot.
Green Lantern got a relatively late start to the omnibus game, with his first modern material collected in 2015. Since then, we’ve had an explosion of books completely collecting Hal Jordan in the Silver Age, the Bronze Age, and in the decade from 2005-2015.
Yet, there’s still plenty left to vote on! We have a major Green Lantern gap in omnibus from 1979 to 2004, which includes Hal Jordan material as well as key stories for John Stewart, Guy Gardner, and Kyle Rayner. And, DC’s collections of that modern material have been slightly messy, so we need some companion volumes to clean up the orphaned material before we can start looking at comics from 2016 and beyond.
If you’re not sure of what to vote for, stick around for a list of books vetted by a gang of the biggest mapping nerds on the internet with explanations from yours truly – keeper of the most-definitive guides to collected editions on the planet.
Or, if you don’t care about omnibuses, just use this post to learn about DC history and find some great comics to read!
This post covers the following speculated omnibus volumes:
- Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Alan Scott, Golden Age Green Lantern
- Green Lantern: Alan Scott, The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 1 (1940 & on)
- JSA: The New Golden Age by Johns et al (2022 – 2024) [includes Stargirl, Wesley Dodds, Jay Garrick, & Alan Scott minis]
- Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Hal Jordan
- Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps Vol. 1 (1979 & on) [follows Hard Travelin’ Heroes; eventually includes Englehart]
- Green Lantern: Hal Jordan, Emerald Dawn, Vol. 1 (1988 & on)
- Spectre, Hal Jordan by J.M. DeMatteis (1996 – 2003) [includes Final Night & Day of Judgement material]
- Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps, The Rebirth Omnibus by Robert Venditti (2016 – 2018) [AKA by Venditti Vol. 3]
- Green Lantern: Hal Jordan by Grant Morrison & Liam Sharp (2019 – 2021)
- Green Lantern: The Dawn of DC Omnibus Vol. 1 (2023 – 2024) [by Adams, Xermanico, Kennedy Johnson, & Montos]
- Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Guy Gardner
- Green Lantern: Guy Gardner, Reborn & Warrior (1992 – 1996)
- Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – John Stewart
- Green Lantern: Jon Stewart, Green Lantern Mosaic (1992 – 1994) [includes Green Lantern Corps Quarterly]
- Green Lantern: Jon Stewart and The Darkstars (1992 – 1996) [includes Trinity crossover]
- Batman / Superman / Wonder Woman: Trinity by Kurt Busiek (2008 – 2009) [the weekly series]
- Green Lantern: The Dawn of DC Omnibus Vol. 1 (2023 – 2024) [by Adams, Xermanico, Kennedy Johnson, & Montos]
- Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Kyle Rayner
- Green Lantern: Kyle Rayner Vol. 1 (1994 & on) [eventually includes Winick, Ion, etc]
- Green Lantern: Kyle Rayner & The New Guardians, The New 52 Omnibus (2011 – 2015)
- DC Universe by Tom King – In-Continuity Stories (2015 & on) [continuity material, including Omega Men, Mister Miracle, Supergirl, Penguin, etc]
- Green Lantern Corps Omnibus Mapping
- Green Lantern Corps, Johns, Tomasi, & Gleason Companion (2006 – 2011) [skipped issues & orphaned material]
- Green Lanterns, The Rebirth Omnibus Vol. 1 by Humphries, Seeley, & Jurgens (2016 – 2018) [Baz & Cruz]
- Green Lanterns by Jemisin & Thorne (2019 – 2022) [includes Far Sector]
- Allies & Enemies of the Lanterns Omnibus Mapping
- Omega Men, The Classic Omnibus (1981 – 1986)
- L.E.G.I.O.N. & R.E.B.E.L.S. Vol. 1 (1989 & on)
- R.E.B.E.L.S. by Tony Bedard (2008 – 2011)
- Green Lantern: The New 52 Lanterns Companion, starring Larfleeze & Threshold (2010 – 2015) [could include orphaned material like Lost Army, Edge of Oblivion, etc]
- Green Lantern: Sinestro, The New 52 Omnibus by Cullen Bunn (2014 – 2016)
Remember: These titles and mappings are a suggestion of how DC could assemble these books. Your vote on the poll is a vote in favor of DC creating a book with that title or covering that period, NOT an endorsement of a specific map. Maps are presented as a proof of concept and to help you build your personal reading list.
Want to check out all of the other voting options for the 2025 Tigereyes Poll? Check out my 2025 Tigereyes poll options overview page that explains the poll, how to vote, and every title that will appear – including links to all of the posts in this series.
Intensely researched posts like this one are made possible via the support of Patrons of Crushing Krisis. For less than the cost of a single comic issue a month you can fuel my in-depth comics coverage, plus gain access to dozens of exclusive collecting guides & reading orders – including all of the Crushing Comics Guide to DC Comics.
Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Alan Scott, Golden Age Green Lantern
Green Lantern: Alan Scott, The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 1 (1940 & on)
This would begin to collect Alan Scott’s Golden Age material beginning in All-American Comics (1939) #16.
JSA: The New Golden Age by Johns et al (2022 – 2024) [includes Stargirl, Wesley Dodds, Jay Garrick, & Alan Scott minis]
This would collect the road to a JSA revival as well as several supporting mini-series set both in the present and the past for key JSA members – including a series expanding on Alan Scott’s civillian life during and after World War II.
This would collect Stargirl Spring Break Special (2021) #1, Flashpoint Beyond (2022) #0-6, The New Golden Age (2022) #1, Justice Society of America (2022) #1-12, Stargirl: The Lost Children (2022) #1-6, Wesley Dodds: The Sandman (2023) #1-6, Jay Garrick: The Flash (2023) #1-6, Alan Scott: The Green Lantern (2023) #1-6.
You might also want to add the arcs of Justice League (2018) that reintroduced the team, for context… or, even a few pages from Doomsday Clock (2018)!
Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Hal Jordan
Hal Jordon is one of DC’s biggest stars when it comes to Omnibus collections. His Silver Age and early Bronze Age series are entirely covered, as is all of Geoff Johns’ intense nearly decade-long run on him starting in the mid-00s. That means we don’t need many books to complete our Hal Jordan bookshelf! See Guide to Green Lantern – Hal Jordan for information on how this material is currently collected.
Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps Vol. 1 (1979 & on) [follows Hard Travelin’ Heroes; eventually includes Englehart]
This is the first omnibus of Hal Jordan material there is to collect, which means we already have twenty years of his comics in omnibus.
This line has over 120 issues left to collect, which means this would need to be three to four volumes to collect it all. That could be a pair of Hal Jordan volumes followed by one tidy Corps volume, but really both Hal and the Corps are present across both runs.
This would begin to collect Green Lantern (1960) #123-200 & Special #1-2, Tales of the Green Lantern Corps (1981) #1-3 & Annual 1, The Green Lantern Corps (1986) #201-224 & Annual 2-3.
It might make sense for this line to extend to also collect The New Guardians (1988) #1-12, which co-stars Kilowog, and Action Comics Weekly (1988) #601-635 & 642, which is where Hal appears the month after Corps ends. It could also add Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame (2000) #1, a cancelled Weekly story that was later completed.
Green Lantern: Hal Jordan, Emerald Dawn, Vol. 1 (1988 & on)
Hal Jordan was one of a few major DC heroes (along with Batman) whose stories continued relatively uninterrupted into the Post-Crisis era without a major reboot. That means there’s no major “Post-Crisis material BEGINS HERE!” line as there are with most other DC heroes. Hal is mostly the same character both before and after Crisis on Infinite Earths – though, his origin is retold and expanded after Crisis in a pair of Emerald Dawn series in 1989 and 1991.
Because this omnibus necessarily begins with those two origin series, it likely makes sense to collect the Action Comics Weekly (1988) material in the prior omnibus line. That occurs the Post-Crisis present day for Hal, but it was written before this expansion of his origin and wouldn’t read as well alongside this material.
This would collect Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn (1989) #1-6 (Dec 1989 – May 1990), & Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn II (1991) #1-6 (Apr – Sept 1991), Green Lantern (1990) #1-55, 0, & Annual 1-3, material from Armageddon 2001 (1991), The Flash (1987) #69-70, the Trinity crossover (DC Universe: Trinity (1993) #1, Green Lantern (1990) #44, L.E.G.I.O.N. ’93 #57, Darkstars (1992) #11, Green Lantern (1990) #45, L.E.G.I.O.N. ’93 #58, Darkstars (1992) #12, DC Universe: Trinity (1993) #2), and material from Showcase ’93 (1993) #12.
To that, we likely need to excerpt some amount of material of the destruction of Coast City, even though Hal isn’t present for all of it(from Superman (1987) #80-82, Adventures of Superman (1987) #503-505, Action Comics (1937) #690-691, and Superman: The Man of Steel (1991) #25-26). That surrounds issue #46. Also, it might also make sense to collect some material from Zero Hour (1994) #4-0 (it is numbered in reverse), which run alongside #55 & 0 – the conclusion of Hal’s story.
No matter how you try to slice or squeeze that, it’s two omnibuses of material – even if you leave out all of the Trinity crossover, the Coast City material, and the final run of #48-55 & 0 – which also fit into a Kyle Rayner omnibus.
Zero Hour and Kyle Rayner taking over as Green Lantern happen here.
Spectre, Hal Jordan by J.M. DeMatteis (1996 – 2003) [includes Final Night & Day of Judgement material]
After several years spent completely out of contact with the DC Universe, Hal is gradually reintroduced not as a Lantern, but as The Spectre! Omar knows this material much better than I do, so he stepped in to help map the essential issues on this one.
This begins with Parallax: Emerald Night (1996) #1 and material from Final Night (1996) #4. Then, it would likely collect Day of Judgment (1999) #1-5, Day of Judgment Secret Files [& Origins] (1999) #1, JLA (1997) #35, Legends of the DC Universe (1997) #33-36, The Spectre (2001) #1-27, and JLA / The Spectre: Soul War (2003) #1-2.
Green Lantern by Geoff Johns Vol. 1-3 and Green Lantern by Robert Vendetti Vol. 1-2 fit here.
Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps, The Rebirth Omnibus by Robert Venditti (2016 – 2018) [AKA by Venditti Vol. 3]
After his time as the Spectre, Hal Jordan was reborn under the pen of Geoff Johns in 2004. Johns wrote Hal for the better part of a decade, continuing his stories into the first two years DC New 52 with little alteration of his character and history. From there, Robert Venditti picked up the reins of writing Hal, completing his run in New 52 and continuing on to DC Rebirth.
That’s where this book picks up after a pair of 2025 and early-2026 omnibuses collected the remainder of Hal’s New 52 run.
This would collect Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps (2016) Rebirth & #1-50, plus a crossover with Justice League (2016) #32-33.
Green Lantern: Hal Jordan by Grant Morrison & Liam Sharp (2019 – 2021)
Grant Morrison, Liam Sharp, Steve Oliff, & Tom Orzechowski created an epic, mind-bending, multi-year run on Hal Jordan!
It’s an oversimplification to say that Morrison & Co focused on Hal as a “space cop.” Instead, I’d say that this emphasized the the power and structure of the idea of “willpower.” Sometimes willpower taken to the extreme can mean rules, laws, and rigid control. At other times ti means knowing who you are in the center of a crisis. This run highlighted the power of Hal Jodan’s will to stand up to the most chaotic forces in the universe, even while being in a symbiotic relationship with them where he craves and sometimes even causes their chaos.
This would collect The Green Lantern (2019) #1-12, Green Lantern: Blackstars (2020) #1-3, and The Green Lantern: Season Two (2020) #1-12.
Green Lantern: The Dawn of DC Omnibus Vol. 1 (2023 – 2024) [by Adams, Xermanico, Kennedy Johnson, & Montos]
What’s this? A current run on the Tigereyes omnibus poll?
That’s right – because this increasingly well-liked Jeremy Adams run had a very clear “Year One” storyline with an obvious breaking point for the end of a first omnibus. This run found Jon Stewart back and Earth and without a ring – but that’s never stopped him before. We see him wedge his way back into Carol Ferris’s life and into Green Lantern’s might as he reconnects with a splintered Corps.
This run spins off a separate journey for John Stewart as penned by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, which takes him on his own year-long journey before marrying it back into the main Adams plot.
This would collect Green Lantern (2023) #1-18, Knight Terrors: Green Lantern (2023) #1-2, Green Lantern: War Journal (2023) #1-12, and Green Lantern Civil Corps Special (2024) #1.
Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – John Stewart
John Stewart is a widely-known Lantern, thanks to his appearances in many Justice League cartoons of the past 30 years. However, he hasn’t spent too much time in comics as a solo character. Typically, John is a prominent member of the Corps during their runs.
Green Lantern: Jon Stewart, Green Lantern Mosaic (1992 – 1994) [includes Green Lantern Corps Quarterly]
In 1992, DC launched a whole line of Green Lantern titles. The one that could possibly be called a “co-flagship” was Green Lantern: Mosiac (1992), a John Stewart series that only lasted 18 issues.
Given the brief length of his series, we can also include another full series here – Green Lantern Corps Quarterly (1992), which highlighted a variety of different Lanterns and ran just a few months past the end of Mosiac.
Since this is a short omnibus, it could optionally include some other key early Jon Stewart material.
This would collect Green Lantern: Mosaic (1992) #1-18 and Green Lantern Corps Quarterly (1992) #1-8.
Green Lantern: Jon Stewart and The Darkstars (1992 – 1996) [includes Trinity crossover]
This title is a slight misnomer specifically for marketing purposes.
The Darkstars were a newly-invented space corps meant to fill in more coverage of DC’s cosmic stories between L.E.G.I.O.N. and the Green Lantern Corps. They crossed over with both of those titles at the end of their first year.
However, at the end of their second year DC made the Lantern connection more explicit, rebranding John Stewart (now without a book with Mosiac cancelled) as a “Darkstar” at the close of Zero Hour. He would go on to anchor the final year of the series.
This would collect Darkstars (1992) #1-38 & 0 and the “Trinity” mini-event crossover (from DC Universe: Trinity (1992) #1-2, Green Lantern (1990) #44-45, L.E.G.I.O.N. (1989) #57-58, The Darkstars (1992) #11-12).
Batman / Superman / Wonder Woman: Trinity by Kurt Busiek (2008 – 2009) [the weekly series]
This would collect all of the weekly series Trinity (2008) #1-52, including Trinity A-Stories and back-up features – one of which featured Jon Stewart throughout the series.
See below for Green Lantern Corps, Johns, Tomasi, & Gleason Companion (2006 – 2011) [orphaned material; could include Ion], which features John Stewart throughout.
Green Lantern Corps by Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason Vol. 2 fits here, followed by Green Lantern by Robert Venditti Vol. 1-2.
Then, see below for Green Lantern: The New 52 Lanterns Companion, starring Larfleeze & Threshold (2010 – 2015) [includes Edge of Oblivion], followed by Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps, The Rebirth Omnibus by Robert Venditti (2016 – 2018) [AKA by Venditti Vol. 3], above.
Green Lantern: The Dawn of DC Omnibus Vol. 1 (2023 – 2024) [by Adams, Xermanico, Kennedy Johnson, & Montos]
The Dawn of DC run of Green Lantern (2023) spins off a separate journey for John Stewart through a series of back-ups that launched into his own year-long series, as penned by Phillip Kennedy Johnson.
This would collect Green Lantern (2023) #1-18, Knight Terrors: Green Lantern (2023) #1-2, Green Lantern: War Journal (2023) #1-12, and Green Lantern Civil Corps Special (2024) #1.
Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Guy Gardner
The hot-headed Guy Gardner is about to get the DC Cinematic Universe spotlight, so maybe it’s a time for an omnibus of his own! Of course, we have plenty of coverage of him as the aggressive member of a team book who instigates internal conflict with other members, whether that’s on the Corps or in the Justice League.
Green Lantern: Guy Gardner, Reborn & Warrior (1992 – 1996)
This would collect Guy Gardner: Reborn (1992) #1-3, Guy Gardner (1992) #1-12, and Guy Gardner: Warrior (1994) #13-44, 0, & Annual 1-2, as well as required crossover issues.
Green Lantern Omnibus Mapping – Kyle Rayner
Kyle Rayner took over as the primary solo Green Lantern from Hal Jordan staring with Green Lantern (1990) #50 and serving through the end of that series. See Guide to Green Lantern – Kyle Rayner for more information.
Green Lantern: Kyle Rayner Vol. 1 (1994 & on) [eventually includes Winick, Ion, etc]
Kyle Rayner takes over as Earth’s primary Green Lantern in the lead-up to Zero Hour and maintains the title for over a decade of comics before transitioning to become “Ion” once Hal Jordan is back as the main Green Lantern.
This omnibus line would begin to collect Green Lantern (1990) #48, 50-181, 0, 1,000,000, & Annuals 4-9 and Ion (2006) #1-12, plus many one-shots and crossovers from that period.
Green Lantern: Kyle Rayner & The New Guardians, The New 52 Omnibus (2011 – 2015)
Kyle headlined one of three ongoing Green Lantern series during DC New 52, which weighed in at over 40 issues. While his title did participate in several major Green Lantern crossovers during New 52, they are already well-collected in the main Green Lantern omnibus line by Johns and Venditti.
This would collect Green Lantern: New Guardians (2011) #1-40, 0, & Annual 1-2, Green Lantern: New Guardians – Futures End (2014) #1, Blue Beetle (2011) #9, and Green Lantern (2011) #20 & Annual 2.
DC Universe by Tom King – In-Continuity Stories (2015 & on) [continuity material, including Omega Men, Mister Miracle, Supergirl, Penguin, etc]
This could begin to collect Tom King’s maxi-series and one-shots that would not be included in another book, like Batman or a Heroes in Crisis omnibus. That includes series like Omega Men (starring Kyle Rayner), Mister Miracle, Strange Adventures, Supergirl Woman of Tomorrow, Human Target, et cetera.
Green Lantern Corps Omnibus Mapping
The Green Lantern Corps were first mentioned in Hal Jordan’s Silver Age origin and grew through the Silver and Bronze Age until they were a full team of well-articulated characters in the 1980s when the main Lantern title was renamed to The Green Lantern Corps (1986). However, in the Post-Crisis world this extended cast mostly moved into the background of Green Lantern (1990).
That would change in a big way in Geoff Johns’ run on Hal Jordan, which was always accompanied by a Green Lantern Corps title as a co-flagship. We’ve seen most of that material collected in omnibus, but that left a few gaps that still need collecting. See Guide to Green Lantern Corps for more information.
See above for Green Lantern: Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps Vol. 1 (1979 & on) [follows Hard Travelin’ Heroes; eventually includes Englehart] and Green Lantern: Jon Stewart, Green Lantern Mosiac (1992 – 1994) [includes Green Lantern Corps Quarterly], the first two big chunks of Green Lantern Corps material.
Then, Green Lantern Corps by Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason Vol. 1 fits here.
Green Lantern Corps, Johns, Tomasi, & Gleason Companion (2006 – 2011) [skipped issues & orphaned material]
Our pithy marketing title for this book is “Those Left Behind,” a nod to the Corps but also to the fact that all of this material has been orphaned by the existing five omnibus volumes of mid-00s Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps material.
This would primarily collect Green Lantern Corps (2006) #4-6, 48-58, & 61-63 (and material from #19), Green Lantern (2005) #24-25 (for crossover purposes), Ion (2006) #1-12 (if it’s not in the Kyle Rayner omnibus line), Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special (2007) 1, Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Cyborg Superman (2007) #1, Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Parallax (2007) #1, Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Ion (2008) #1, Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors (2010) #11-13 (collected elsewhere, but needed here for the “War of the Green Lantern” crossover), and War of the Green Lantern: Aftermath (2011) #1-2, plus any other material left behind by either the Johns or Tomasi/Gleason omnibuses.
It could also include Rann Thanager War (2005) #1-6 and Infinite Crisis: Rann Thangar War Special #1.
Green Lantern Corps by Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason Vol. 2 fits here.
Green Lanterns, The Rebirth Omnibus Vol. 1 by Humphries, Seeley, & Jurgens (2016 – 2018) [Baz & Cruz]
While Hal Jordan headed up the Corps in DC Rebirth, this title largely focused on Jessica Cruz & Simon Baz, the newest Green Lanterns of Earth.
This would collect Green Lanterns (2016) Rebirth, #1-57 & Annual 1, plus necessary crossover issues. That comes right up to the edge of what can fit in a singe omnibus, so this might split into two volumes at the end of Humphries run with issue #32.
Green Lanterns by Jemisin & Thorne (2019 – 2022) [includes Far Sector]
Despite having a singular “Green Lantern” title, the Green Lantern (2021) Infinite Frontier series was really a Green Lantern Corps title, co-starring John Stewart and Sojourner Mullein, among many other characters.
This would collect Geoffrey Thorne’s Future State: Green Lantern (2021) #1-2 and Green Lantern (2021) #1-12 & Annual 1. Since that run is so short, I think this should also add all of Mullein’s bombastic introduction in NK Jemisin’s Far Sector (2019) #1-12. Otherwise, she just doesn’t make any sense showing up in this title out of nowhere!
See above for Green Lantern: The Dawn of DC Omnibus Vol. 1 (2023 – 2024) [by Adams, Xermanico, Kennedy Johnson, & Montos]. After that, Green Lantern Corps (2025) is just wrapping up its first arc – too soon to map an omnibus!
Allies & Enemies of the Lanterns Omnibus Mapping
We’ve had many other Lantern-adjacent titles from the 1980s to today. That included other space-faring teams in the 80s and 90s. Then, Geoff Johns vastly expanded the color spectrum of the Lanterns in his massive run, which yielded a number of alternate Lantern titles from the “ROY” section of the ROY G BIV rainbow during DC New 52.
Omega Men, The Classic Omnibus (1981 – 1986)
This would collect Green Lantern (1960) #141-144, Action Comics (1938) #535-536, The New Teen Titans (1980) #24-25 & Annual 1, Green Lantern (1960) #160-161, and The Omega Men (1983) #1-38 & Annual 1-2. See Guide to Omega Men for more information.
L.E.G.I.O.N. & R.E.B.E.L.S. Vol. 1 (1989 & on)
This would begin to collect L.E.G.I.O.N. (1989) #1-70 & Annual 1-5 (Feb 1989 – Sept 1994) & R.E.B.E.L.S. ’94 (1994) #1-17 & 0
R.E.B.E.L.S. by Tony Bedard (2008 – 2011)
This would collect R.E.B.E.L.S. (2009) #1-28
Green Lantern: The New 52 Lanterns Companion, starring Larfleeze & Threshold (2010 – 2015) [could include orphaned material like Lost Army, Edge of Oblivion, etc]
This would collect Larfleeze’s first appearance in Green Lantern (2005) #25, material from DC Universe (2008) #0, Green Lantern: Larfleeze Christmas Special (2010) #1, back-up stories from Threshold (2013) #1-5, and Larfleeze (2013) #1-12.
It would also grab all of the Lantern material from New 52 abandoned by other omnibuses, including Threshold (2013) #1-8 (and Threshold backups from Larfleeze #1-5), Green Lantern Corps: Futures End (2014) #1; Green Lantern Corps: The Lost Army (2015) #1-6; Green Lantern Corps: Edge of Oblivion (2016) #1-6.
Green Lantern: Sinestro, The New 52 Omnibus by Cullen Bunn (2014 – 2016)
This would collect Green Lantern (2011) #23.4 (Sinestro), Sinestro (2014) #1-23, Annual 1, Sinestro: Futures End (2014) #1, Lobo (2014) #10-13 & Annual 1, and material from Secret Origins (2014) #6 and Sinestro: DC Sneak Peek (2015).
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