While exploring the wonders of the multiverse, Swamp Thing yearns to return to his beloved Abby. But when three Magi summon a demon, Swamp Thing follows the disturbance in the time stream to Israel 2000 years ago. After preventing Belial's efforts to subvert Earth's history, Swamp Thing once again gets drawn into Earth's past. But along the way, he encounters someone who can carry a message home.
When John Constantine receives a dire summons, he abandons his home in London to visit King Arthur's birthplace along the rugged Cornwall coast. There, he meets a knight who arrived on a flying horse. Are Sir Justin's suspicions about Swamp Thing's inability to return correct? And as the momentous event draws nigh, can her friends in the swamp help Abby deliver Swamp Thing's child?
Here's all the info from DC Connect:
Swamp Thing 1989 #3 Preview
Writer: Rick Veitch
Artist: Tom Mandrake
Cover Artist: Rick Veitch
Publisher: DC Comics
Issue Length: 32 Pages
Series Length: 4 Issues
Price: $4.99 US/Foil Variant $7.99 US
Release Date: June 24, 2026
Before the beginning of time,
Swamp Thing must face the Source!
After three decades of controversy and cancellation, Rick Veitch’s finale to the Swamp Thing time-travel saga barrels toward its mind-bending conclusion! Swamp Thing’s journey back through time has finally led all the way to the Big Bang and beyond. There, in the presence of the Source of the Multiverse, Swamp Thing must make an impossible choice: join the Source of life itself or find his way home to Abby.
While 13 billion years in the future, John Constantine works his occult network, while Hell itself is ablaze with villains of yesteryears forging evil into a new and terrifying form! The child of Swamp Thing, Abby Arcane, and John Constantine, heir to the role of Earth’s Elemental, is about to be born. And everything hangs in the balance.
Now, let's take a look inside:
Thanks to DC Comics for sharing this preview with us.
For what happened last time, see my review of Swamp Thing 1989 #2.
For how this series started, see my review of Swamp Thing 1989 #1.




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