Dragonfly (AC Comics)

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Dragonfly
Superheroine
Publication date1986 – 1987
No. of issues8

Dragonfly is a fictional

superheroine. Created by Rik Levins
, she debuted in Americomics #4 (October 1983) and starred in her own self-titled series.

Publication history

After a one-page advertising insert that appeared in Americomics #3, Dragonfly made her first appearance in issue #4. She was spun off into her own eponymous title that ran for eight issues (1985-1987). Though published by

broke even.[1] After Dragonfly became a member of the Femforce, she appeared semi-regularly in that magazine's run.[2]

Fictional character biography

Dragonfly is the secret identity of Nancy Arazello, one-time friend of Ken Burton, an engineer obsessed with the occult. In his researches, Ken finds a coded diary belonging to John Gallegher, a male Dragonfly who died in 1957. Using his computer skills, Ken decodes the diary and arranges to perform the mystic ritual that summons Zzara. Nancy interrupts this ceremony at a critical moment and is transformed into Dragonfly.

Nancy later learns that Zzara is an extradimensional insect-god (or demon, opinions vary). Zzara used an image from Nancy's subconscious, "her ideal of perfect feminine beauty", a statuesque platinum blonde, and used it as the basis for Dragonfly. He modified it, stamping his identifying marks, which included compound eyes and diaphanous wings. Nancy's mind supplied more prosaic details, such as a zipper in the black body suit with a white dragonfly emblem on the chest, 4-inch heels, and sunglasses to hide the eyes. When Nancy does not inhabit the Dragonfly body, it is stored in an extradimensional crystal sphere that maintains the body's original specifications.

Powers and abilities

Thanks to the mystical rays of Zzara, Dragonfly is given an idealized body that can fly (she can reach speeds of Mach 4), super-strength, and the ability to

move objects with her mind
.

Reception

For The Slings & Arrows Comic Guide, Dragonfly had an "oddball opening", but it "quickly became a routine, if not badly done, superheroine feature".[2]

References

  1. ^
    Fictioneer Books
    . pp. 52–65.
  2. ^ .