10 Comic Books To Read If You Love Young Justice

9. Young Justice: Sins Of Youth

Young Justice Peter David
DC Comics

We’ve heard from the start that these supposed sidekicks will one day take their place as the hero they’re being mentored by. Yet these teens aren’t “kids” technically, and feel they should be treated as the heir-apparents they deem themselves to be.

Wonder Girl, more than most, feels this especially. That leads her to air her grievances on television. It makes a lot of news, and thus a rally is held in Washington, D.C. to address things. The Justice League, Justice Society, and Teen Titans are all present.

This is where Klarion the Witch Boy pulls a switch-a-roo if you will. He turns all the adults into kids, while the teens turn into the adults. Unprepared for being the hero their mentors were, things become very difficult for the team to handle.

Plus, they did not automatically get better or more powerful as they're still the same as they were before, only now they have to take their respective mentors' place. One question then arises: were the mentors right to treat them as the kids they actually were?

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Joe Burgett hasn't written a bio just yet, but if they had... it would appear here.