Review: Aquaman Vol. 6: Kingslayer trade paperback (DC Comics)

Sunday, December 30, 2018

Aquaman Vol. 6: Kingslayer marks the final parts of what's been an impressive 14-part (et al) storyline in Dan Abnett's Rebirth Aquaman series. This kind of modular, long-form storyline (essentially continuous over three volumes) is almost unheard of in this day and age of easily digestible six-parters, reminding of Aquaman's own classic "Search for Mera" or "Zatanna's Search" from the 1960s, or the 1980s "Trial of the Flash" (if not quite that long). Abnett's even reflected the Atlantean civil war in a couple of other titles, as well as in the Mera, Queen of Atlantis tie-in miniseries.

This would also seem to be the last independent trade of Abnett's superlative Aquaman run, collecting issues #34-38. Issues #39-40 will appear in a Suicide Squad crossover volume and issues #41-42 are part of the "Drowned Earth" Justice League event; with issue #43, new Aquaman writer Kelly Sue DeConnick takes over. So in some respects, Kingslayer is the finale, though everything doesn't quite feel complete, and my fervent hope is that Abnett can still use these crossover issues to wrap up some of Aquaman's threads before he goes.

Review: Mera, Queen of Atlantis trade paperback (DC Comics)

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

In his introduction to the recent Aquaman: The Search for Mera collection of classic material, current Aquaman writer Dan Abnett calls Mera "neglected" and "undervalued" by the annals of comics lore. She has long been Aquaman's equal, and even of late a Justice Leaguer, but largely unknown by the general public (though the new Aquaman movie might change that). To that end, Abnett's Mera, Queen of Atlantis miniseries is deserved and long overdue.

It is not necessarily a pilot nor good argument for an ongoing Mera series, though I'm not sure separating Mera from the Aquaman title would be a service to either character anyway. The character arc of the book is predictable. But at a time when the most recent collection of Abnett's Aquaman title is involved in the good but esoteric conclusion of a long-running Atlantean civil war storyline with mostly new characters, Mera has familiarity going for it. The principal characters in Mera will be recognizable to Aquaman movie fans. Further, Mera serves to bridge unresolved elements from the New 52 Aquaman run to Rebirth, something the main Aquaman series might not have had time for but that's a good thing to take care of in a miniseries.

Review: Batman Vol. 8: Cold Days trade paperback (DC Comics)

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Sunday, December 23, 2018

It is another stellar volume of Tom King's Batman. In the aftermath of the wedding volume, Batman Vol. 8: Cold Days begins not with a bang but with a whimper (or a whimper-bang); in as many times as we think we've read this particular kind of story before, King finds a way to defy expectations and still deliver, and then follows with a second story that confuses and confounds the topics at play all the more. Nearing as we are 80 years of Batman, that any writer should find something new to say month in and month out is a minor miracle on its own; that King not only has new to say but also manages to toy with comics as a storytelling form at the same time is a real treat.

[Review contains spoilers]

After Jason Todd died, after Batman was branded murderer and fugitive, and surely a half dozen other times, we know full well we're in for a spate of "Batman can't control his anger and goes nuts" stories before the Bat-family of your current continuity talks him down from the belfry. Such might've been the case under most writers after Catwoman jilted Batman at the rooftop altar last time around. Instead, King tells a story that takes place largely in a jury deliberation room, a story that — while not completely absent punching and kicking — mostly involves Bruce Wayne and his jury duty cohorts sitting around and talking. It is a Batman play; clearly there's meant to be shades of 12 Angry Men here, but also it reads like a forgotten Gotham Central story with Lee Weeks providing the Michael Lark-esque realism (colorist Elizabeth Breitweiser's pastels deserve some credit, too).

Review: Nightwing Vol. 6: The Untouchable trade paperback (DC Comics)

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Nightwing is going through some changes right now. New regular writer Benjamin Percy, fresh from Green Arrow, departed after a couple of issues, replaced with Scott Lobdell. What I've been hearing about that run hasn't been glowing, though a recent interview I saw with Lobdell suggested his run was knowingly temporary, too. Apparently Eric Esquivel was supposed to follow, but DC has nixed that even before officially announcing it. Preface to all of that yet-unresolved uncertainty is Nightwing Vol. 6: The Untouchable, collecting an apparent guest-arc by Sam Humphries and Bernard Chang, plus a pair of one-off issues.

Humphries work has been hit-or-miss for me on Green Lanterns, but I liked very much his seven-part Nightwing story, which delves well into the Rebirth Nightwing's past and also does some smart world-building for the Rebirth Bludhaven. There's little knowledge required of what's taken place so far in the Rebirth Nightwing series; indeed, given this book's length, nine chapters total, this strikes me as one of those "read on an airplane and kill an hour or so" kind of books. I have at times been impatient with these kinds of interstitial trade-length stories not written by an ongoing creative team (see Wonder Woman Vol. 5: Heart of the Amazon), but given the upheaval in the Nightwing title these days, this kind of approachable, scene-setting story might not be such a bad thing.

Review: Flash Vol. 8: Flash War trade paperback (DC Comics)

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Sunday, December 16, 2018

Fifty issues in the making, Joshua Williamson's Flash Vol. 8: Flash War is finally here. I wonder how much more enthusiastic I'd be if one of this book's major developments hadn't been spoiled by an untimely social media post by one of the creators. As it is, without the glow of that bit of fan service, I find a Flash War that, while a fun read, does not alter the Flash landscape near so much as I had hoped. There is pathos here, but not many answers. I love that this book ties into the events of the post-Metal Justice League Vol. 1: The Totality, but that the book turns on something surely unplanned two years ago begs the question of how far we are from Williamson's intentions when the Rebirth Flash started and at what point, if ever, this book will deliver on some of the questions it's raised.

Review: Suicide Squad Vol. 7: Drain the Swamp trade paperback (DC Comics)

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

We know now that Rob Williams' Rebirth Suicide Squad will end with issue #50, though that still leaves two more volumes (plus or minus a crossover trade), and with one of those not scheduled until August 2019, it feels as though Williams' Suicide Squad will be around for a while yet. Still, Suicide Squad Vol. 7: Drain the Swamp does seem like the beginning of the end, resolving some of this series' earliest storylines.

Much of what is here feels done already — it seems the government is always trying to shut Amanda Waller's Task Force X down, it seems Waller is always yelling at someone how no one can make the hard decisions but her. Indeed, even the repetitious nature of the book's two main stories is unusual. But Williams has written a consistently good Suicide Squad for a while now, the characters real and lived in despite their often-buffoonish nature, a tough thing to do. Swamp is another fine addition, its lapses significantly smoothed over by the knowledge that Williams' Suicide Squad is now a finite commodity.

Review: Deathstroke Vol. 5: The Fall of Slade trade paperback (DC Comics)

Sunday, December 09, 2018

It seems the chickens are always coming home to roost in Christopher Priest's Deathstroke, and again that's the case in Deathstroke Vol. 5: The Fall of Slade; there's so many storylines tiled over storylines here, so many bad deeds, that it seems something nefarious is always coming to light. The next volume collects Priest's "Deathstroke vs. Batman" miniseries-within-a-series, and on the chance that story will focus more on Deathstroke Slade Wilson than his compatriots, this present volume could be read as a conclusion of sorts — or, at least, some of this series' earliest secrets have now been aired, bringing us full circle by this book's conclusion. Priest's Deathstroke remains complicated and complex, an instant classic, surely due for perennial collection formats once it concludes.

Review: Justice League Vol. 1: The Totality trade paperback (DC Comics)

Wednesday, December 05, 2018

I'm still struggling to define "Snyder-esque." Surely if you encounter a "man of the people" Batman, aspirational hero to the lowest of Gotham, we can with certainty call that Scott Snyder-esque. And it's easy to differentiate that fallible Batman, often blind to conspiracies in his own midst, from Grant Morrison's "bat-god" Batman, always a step ahead of his enemies and always with a contingency plan.

But when it comes to DC Universe-wide epics, the differences are harder to pin down. Dark Nights: Metal, though fueled with a rock 'n' roll undercurrent, borrowed so many of Morrison's concepts (and even saw Morrison writing a tie-in) such that tonally the book was not so different from Final Crisis. In Snyder's Justice League Vol. 1: The Totality, we see shades of Morrison's JLA from start to finish; Morrison's "we are all superheroes" moral is not so far from this book's testament that we are all base creatures who inspire one another to greatness.

Review: Batgirl Vol. 3: Summer of Lies (Rebirth) trade paperback (DC Comics)

Sunday, December 02, 2018

Hope Larson's Rebirth Batgirl Vol. 3: Summer of Lies is a tick upward for this series, delving into some of the previously unexplored "lost" post-Flashpoint history of these characters. Artist Chris Wildgoose is a superstar in his depictions especially of a young Batgirl Barbara Gordon and Robin Dick Grayson. There are two issues of fluff before the main "Summer of Lies" story that are among the roughest this run has offered, and might suggest, ultimately, what's bringing this run to a close. But again, Larson contributes something important and compelling to the lapsed history of the latest DC Universe continuity, and that's very much worth a read.

[Review contains spoilers]

In the "Summer of Lies" story, Batgirl and Nightwing are being stalked by someone related to one of their first cases together, and so Larson tells simultaneous present and past-set stories. In the post-Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity, Robin and Batgirl's pre-Crisis team-ups more or less remained as their shared history, but from the New 52 forward, that hasn't been the case -- or at least, they sported new modern costumes and etc. "Summer of Lies" is among the first extended looks at the "long pants" Robin Dick Grayson and "no cowl" Batgirl Barbara Gordon in an adventure together.

Justice League: Zero Hour, Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Vol. 1, Flash/Impulse, Wonder Woman by Rucka Vol. 3, The Green Lantern by Morrison, Aquaman by David and DeConnick, Post-Metal Hawkman, Sandman Universe, more in DC Comics Summer 2019 solicitations

Thursday, November 29, 2018

As promised, looking at DC Comics' Summer 2019 catalog hardcover and trade paperback solicitations. As with the Spring 2019 catalog, not many super-big surprises — still hoping in vain to see Titans: The Wildebeest Saga.

[Get get news like this first by following Collected Editions on Facebook and Twitter. And don't miss our DC Comics Trade Paperback Timeline -- newly updated!]

I am glad that the Aquaman by Peter David series is continuing, along with Batman: Dark Knight Detective Vol. 3, and I know a lot of you are glad that DC's finally releasing Wonder Woman by Greg Rucka Vol. 3. The Justice League: Zero Hour book is pretty cool, following from a couple other recently released trades from that era, and maybe the biggest news on the list is the Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later collection. There's also collections of the new Grant Morrison Green Lantern, Kelly Sue Deconnick Aquaman, and Robert Venditti Hawkman series.

Not much more to say this time around — let's dig in. I'm eager to read your comments at the end. All of this information is subject to change before publication. Not all links may be functional yet.

Absolute Dark Knight (New Edition)

Dark Knight Returns and Dark Knight Strikes Again in absolute (back in print), with an extended Again sketch section.

Absolute Daytripper

Previously canceled and now resolicited, this is the 10-issue Vertigo miniseries by Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba from 2010.

Absolute Swamp Thing by Alan Moore Vol. 1

I don't know if we already know about this, but this is impressive and laudable, Alan Moore's Swamp Thing #20-34 and Annual #2 in Absolute format. Brand new coloring, too — I think that's new coloring exclusive to this edition, but I'm not sure. I saw the new coloring on a recent Sandman reprint and thought it was attractive.

All-Star Batman & Robin, the Boy Wonder Vol. 1 (DC Black Label Edition)

Issues #1-9 of the Frank Miller series, with Black Label branding. Don't I understand that this series basically ends unfinished? And people are cool with that in trades?

American Carnage

Issues #1-6 by Bryan Hill and Leandro Fernandez.

Aquaman by Peter David Book Three

Issues #21-34 and Annuals #2-3, including a Final Night tie-in, "Legends of the Dead Earth" and "Pulp Heroes" stories, and appearances by Martian Manhunter and Swamp Thing.

Aquaman Vol. 1: Unspoken Water

The first collection of the new Kelly Sue DeConnick run, issues #43-47 in paperback.

The Authority Omnibus

Collects The Authority #1-29, Planetary/The Authority: Rule the World #1, Jenny Sparks: The Secret History of the Authority #1-5, Authority Annual 2000 #1, and Wildstorm Summer Special #1.

Batman & Son (DC Essential Edition)

Essential Edition of Grant Morrison's Batman #665-658 and #663-666, originally in paperback almost ten years ago (read my Batman and Son review).

Batman and the Outsiders Vol. 1

Supposed to be issues #1-6 of the new series by Bryan Hill, but apparently the start of this series has been delayed, so probably this'll be canceled and resolicited. I'm curious to see if we can discern the apparent continuity reasons for the delay.

Batman Beyond Vol. 5: The Final Joke

Issues #25-29 by Dan Jurgens and Will Conrad.

Batman by Grant Morrison Omnibus Vol. 2

Collects Batman #700-702, Batman & Robin #1-16, and Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne #1-6. I don't know that I found the reading order so confusing, but I believe some of you are interested to see in what order they place these books.

Batman Vol. 10

Issues #66-69 and the Batman Secret Files #1 by Tom King. I won't spoil it but the solicitation has some salient details if it's to be believed.

Batman: Arkham Asylum (DC Black Label Edition)

Paperback Black Label edition.

Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 1

The new run by Peter Tomasi and Doug Mahnke, collected in paperback; issues #994-999 plus a story from Detective Comics #1000. As with Action Comics, looks like DC is restarting the trade numbering even as the issue numbers keep on.

Batman: Kings of Fear

The new six-issue miniseries drawn by Kelley Jones and written by Scott Peterson.

Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Vol. 3

Includes issues #592-600 in the collection series of immediate post-Crisis Batman stories. Includes appearances by Cornelius Stirk and Joe Potato, plus an Invasion! tie-in and the three-issue "Blind Justice" story by Sam Hamm that introduced Henri Ducard to the Batman mythos.

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (DC Black Label Edition)

You can have the paperback Black Label edition of the four-issue miniseries ...

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (DC Modern Classics Edition)

... Or you can have the slipcase hardcover edition of the same.

Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition of the three-issue miniseries.

Batman: The Dark Knight: The Master Race (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition collecting the nine-issue miniseries.

Batman: The Endgame Saga (DC Essential Edition)

Batman #35-40 and the Annuals #2-3 plus all the tie-in specials, in paperback.

Batman: The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 7

Detective Comics #153-173, Batman #56-66, and stories from World's Finest Comics #43-53 from the 1940s and 1950s.

Batman: The Long Halloween (DC Modern Classics)

Modern Classics edition, so hardcover with slipcase, and with sketches, introductions by Christopher Nolan and David Goyer, and four previously-cut story pages.

Batman: The Rebirth Deluxe Edition Book 4

Issues #45-57 and the DC Nation #0 story, being the Wedding and Cold Days collections.

Batman: Year One (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label-branded edition.

Batman/Flash: The Button

The Rebirth story in paperback.

Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II

Issues #1-7 from DC and IDW.

Blackest Night Omnibus (10th Anniversary)

Blackest Night ... among books I should go back and read some day, this is one of them. I recall a strange imperialist sentiment to the text, mentioned in my review, and I'm curious if I still see it.

Collects Blackest Night #0-8, Adventure Comics #4, 5 and 7, Blackest Night: Batman #1-3, Blackest Night: The Flash #1-3, Blackest Night: JSA #1-3, Blackest Night: Superman #1-3, Blackest Night: Titans #1-3, Blackest Night: Wonder Woman #1-3, Catwoman #83, Green Arrow #40 (pretty sure this is supposed to be issue #30 of Green Arrow/Black Canary), Green Lantern #43-52, Green Lantern Corps #39-47, Phantom Stranger #42, Atom and Hawkman #46, Power of Shazam! #48, Question #37, and Weird Western Tales #71, if not more.

Books of Magic Vol. 1

First collection of the new Kat Howard Vertigo series, with issues #1-6 and the Sandman Universe Special #1 (wonder if they'll all have this).

Border Town

Issues #1-6.

The Curse of Brimstone Vol. 2

Issues #7-12, the end of the Justin Jordan series.

DC Bombshells: The Deluxe Edition Book Two

Issues #7-12 in deluxe hardcover.

DC Meets Hanna Barbera Vol. 3

Being Deathstroke/Yogi Bear Special #1, Green Lantern/Huckleberry Hound Special #1, Nightwing/Magilla Gorilla Special #1 and Superman/Top Cat Special #1.

DC Poster Portfolio: Stanley "Artgerm" Lau

First in a new series. Joshua Middleton's gorgeous variant Aquaman covers would be good for this, and timely, too.

DC Super Hero Girls: Spaced Out

Graphic novel by Shea Fontana, introducing Jessica Cruz to the series.

DC Universe Bronze Age Omnibus by Jack Kirby

Collects In the Days of the Mob #1, Spirit World #1, The Demon #1-16, The Sandman #1-6, OMAC #1-8, Our Fighting Forces #151-162, Super Powers #1-5 (1984), Super Powers #1-6 (1985), 1st Issue Special #1, 5 and 6, DC Comics Presents #84, Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter #3, Weird Mystery Tales #1-3, and Forbidden Tales of the Dark Mansion #6.

Dear Justice League

DC Zoom graphic novel by Michael Northrop.

Doom Patrol: The Silver Age Vol. 2

Doom Patrol #96-107, Challengers of the Unknown #48, and Brave and the Bold #65. The solicitation says this "completes writer Arnold Drake and artist Bruno Premiani's beloved 1960s series," but I think it ended with #121, no?

The Dreaming Vol. 1

Collects Dreaming #1-6 and, yes, the Sandman Universe Special #1.

Electric Warriors

The six-issue miniseries by Steve Orlando. He takes chances, I'll give him that.

The Flash by Geoff Johns Book Six

This goes farther than the original Flash by Geoff Johns Omnibus hardcovers, being now Johns' Barry instead of his Wally. This is said to contain Flash: Rebirth #1-6, Blackest Night: The Flash #1-3, and Flash #1-6, but the solicitation text very distinctly references Flashpoint, so I'm guessing Flash #8-12 and Flashpoint will also be in there.

The Flash by Mark Waid Book Six

Issues #119-128 and Green Lantern and the Flash: Faster Friends by Mark Waid, I'm actually guessing it'll end at #129 since that's the final part of a three-parter. There's a "Final Night" tie-in within. Issues #130-141 are by Grant Morrison and Mark Millar, and then Waid writes #142 to about #159-ish, and then returns again for a stint in the #200s.

The Flash Vol. 10: Force Quest

Issues #58-63 by Joshua Williamson. This ends just before the new "Coldest Case" crossover with Batman.

Flash/Impulse: Runs in the Family

We lost, as you'll recall, the Impulse Omnibus solicited a while back and then canceled, but DC promised they'd release this in another format. This first new volume collects issues #1-12, plus the Flash "Dead Heat" tie-in issues, #108-111. I don't really see a problem with DC continuing to call the book "Flash/Impulse" (or better, "Flash: Impulse") for future volumes.

Grayson by Tom King Omnibus

In the online stories this was called "Grayson Omnibus New Edition," which didn't make a lot of sense with the same contents, but now we see it labeled Grayson by Tom King Omnibus. Sure, whatever sells more books, though poor Tim Seeley.

Green Arrow Vol. 7: Out of Your Element

This collection of issues #39-42 is still being billed as written by Benjamin Percy, but it's actually Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing, and Mairghread Scott in fill-in stories.

The Green Lantern Vol. 1: Intergalactic Lawman

Hardcover collection of issues #1-6 by Grant Morrison and Liam Sharp.

Green Lantern/Green Arrow: Hard Travelin' Heroes (New Edition)

New collection of Green Lantern #76-87 and #89 and the backups from Flash #217-219 and #226, with an introduction by Dennis O'Neil.

Green Lanterns Vol. 9: With This Ring ...

The final issues of this series ahead of the new Grant Morrison book, this is issues #50-57 by Dan Jurgens.

Harley Quinn Vol. 3

Issues #55-60 by Sam Humphries.

Hawkman Vol. 1: Awakening

In paperback, issues #1-6 by Robert Venditti and Bryan Hitch, due out (finally) in August.

House of Whispers Vol. 1

Issues #1-6 and, you guessed it, the Sandman Universe Special #1.

Imaginary Fiends

Issues #1-6 of the miniseries by Tim Seeley and Stephen Molnar.

Infinite Crisis (DC Essential Edition)

The seven-issue miniseries with scripts and sketches in the paperback Essential format.

Injustice 2 Vol. 5

Issues #25-30.

Injustice 2 Vol. 6

Issues #31-36 and the Annual #2. Starro and the Red Lanterns vs. the Titans, Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, and Lobo? Good for Tom Taylor.

JLA: Tower of Babel (DC Essential Edition)

Paperback by Mark Waid and Howard Porter collecting JLA #43-46 and stories from JLA Secret Files #3. I wouldn't be surprised if DC re-titles this so it's "Justice League" and not "JLA."

JLA: Year One (New Edition)

The 12-issue mini. The solicitation calls this an "often overlooked origin story" and they're not wrong. I'd have suggested this for Black Label; it's smart work by Mark Waid and Barry Kitson.

John Constantine: Hellblazer Vol. 21: The Laughing Machine

John Constantine: Hellblazer #239-249 and Hellblazer Special: Lady Constantine #1-4 by Mike Carey and Andy Diggle respectively.

Joker (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition by Brian Azzarello and Lee Bermejo.

The Joker: Lovers and Madmen

Collects Batman Confidential #7-12 by Michael Green and Denys Cowan, cleverly carrying "Joker" branding instead of "Batman" ahead of the movie.

The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus

Includes Batman #251, 260, 286, 291-294, 321, 353, 365-366, and 400; Brave and the Bold #111, 118, 129-130, 141, and 191; Joker #1-10; Detective Comics #475-476, 504, 526, and 532; Wonder Woman #280-283 and DC Comics Presents #41 and 72. Joker #10 has never before been published (the 1970s series was canceled with issue #9), but features Joker versus the Justice League.

JSA by Geoff Johns Book Three

JSA: All Stars #1-8, JSA Annual #1, JSA Secret Files and Origins #2, and JSA #26-31.

Justice League Vol. 3

Issues #13-17 and the first annual by Scott Snyder and Jorge Jimenez, just after "Drowned Earth."

Justice League: Zero Hour

After the Superman and Batman volumes, this was the most likely one if it was going to happen; maybe they could do a Justice League: Zero Hour Vol. 2 that collects various Leaguers' stories (Flash, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman, Hawkman, Aquaman, Green Arrow), but there's not another franchise all on its own, I don't think, that has enough issues to fill a trade like these do.

Another option is DC could call it, like, Deathstroke: Zero Hour and then collect the story that starts in Deathstroke, the Hunted #0 — like, it wouldn't be as time-travel Zero Hour-y connected as the others, but DC marketing could still make the case across a variety of titles that this "came out" of Zero Hour, so to speak. The Green Arrow title's another candidate for that.

This is Justice League America #92 and #0, Justice League International #67-68, Justice League Task Force #15-16 and #0, Ray #0, Extreme Justice #0, and Guy Gardner, Warrior #0, and fills a couple of interesting gaps — it comes immediately after both Wonder Woman and the Justice League of America Vol. 2 and Justice League Task Force Vol. 1: The Purification Plague. There is within here the three-part Zero Hour tie-in story "Return of the Hero" written by Christopher Priest that introduced time-lost hero Triumph, but also epilogues to "Judgment Day" (from that Wonder Woman trade), up to and including the first-ever collected issue of Extreme Justice. The Ray and Guy Gardner issues are welcome kind of oddball additions, maybe not entirely related to the main story except that the characters appear in the other books.

Writers here include Priest, Dan Vado, Mark Waid (the main writer credited, though he only does one JLTF issue), and Gerard Jones. As we've discussed before, DC is at a crossroads now where they've collected up to where they could do a Wonder Woman and the Justice League Vol. 3 collection (especially around the new movie), but it'd be totally written by Jones. On the other hand, they're well in place to release another Justice League Task Force trade now, totally written by Priest.

Justice: The Deluxe Edition

Deluxe-size hardcover of the 12-issue minisers by Alex Ross, Jim Krueger, and Doug Braithwaite.

Legends of the Dark Knight: Michael Golden

Admittedly I don't know Golden's work as well as some others. This is mostly 1970s work, including Batman Family #15-20, Batman #295, #303, DC Special Series #15, Detective Comics #482, Batman Special #1, and then Batman: Gotham Knights #22. There's covers, too, from Detective Comics #625-626, 628-631, 633, 644-646, Batman #484-485, Showcase ’93, Nightwing #66-77 and #129-130 and Man-Bat from Who’s Who in the DC Universe #12.

Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Vol. 1

The solicitation is way off, talking about post-Zero Hour (which came in the middle of this series), but it seems clear this is finally a hardcover collection of Keith Giffen and Tom and Mary Bierbaum's "five years later" Legion relaunch. One of DC's modern classics, a gritty, lauded take on the Legion, it's about time this was collected. Giffen was on the book until the mid-issue #30s, so if this is #1-12 and an annual, it can probably be done in three books.

Lucifer Vol. 1

Issues #1-6 of the new series and the Sandman Universe Special #1.

Luthor (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition by Brian Azzarello and Lee Bermejo.

The Man of Steel

Paperback of the Brian Michael Bendis miniseries, coming in July.

Nightwing by Peter Tomasi

This was the end of the original Nightwing series (the one started by Chuck Dixon), issues #140-153, and collected in the books Freefall and The Great Leap (see my 2009 reviews). Obviously this is being collected in paperback in one volume because of Tomasi, but art is no slouch here either, by Rags Morales and Don Kramer. I liked these, saying almost ten years ago that "Peter J. Tomasi offers the most respectful, appropriate rendition of Nightwing that we've seen in a long, long time" and that "The Great Leap cements Peter Tomasi as a writer to watch."

Nightwing Vol. 8: Knight Terrors

Issues #50-55; the solicitation still says Benjamin Percy but we know Scott Lobdell is taking over.

Old Lady Harley

Collects the Rebirth Harley Quinn #42 and the five-issue miniseries by Frank Tieri.

Powers Book Five

Issues #19-30 and Annual #1 by Brian Michael Bendis and Michael Avon Oeming.

Raven: Daughter of Darkness Vol. 2

Issues #7-12 of the second Marv Wolfman miniseries. I have not been much interested in the Rebirth version of Raven, though tying this into another Wolfman property, Night Force, is a great idea.

Red Hood & the Outlaws Vol. 5: The Outlaw

New direction for the series by Scott Lobdell, collecting the second annual and issues #26-31.

Sandman Vol. 10: The Wake 30th Anniversary Edition

Issues #70-75, the end of the regular series.

Sandman Vol. 11: Endless Nights 30th Anniversary Edition

Newly branded as volume 11, this was one of Neil Gaiman's graphic novel follow-ups to the series.

Sandman Vol. 9: The Kindly Ones 30th Anniversary Edition

Issues #57-69

Scooby-Doo Team-Up Vol. 7

Zatanna, Space Ghost, and Harley Quinn. Sholly Fisch is a national treasure.

Shazam by Geoff Johns & Gary Frank Deluxe Edition

Pushing this pretty hard as DC's definitive Captain Marvel origin du jour, this is a hardcover deluxe-size edition of the New 52 Justice League backup story, due in August, whereas a paperback of the same will be out in February.

Shazam: The World's Greatest Mortal Vol. 1

The 1970s Shazam! #1-18 by Dennis O'Neil. Paging a Jerry Ordway collection ...

Sideways Vol. 2

Said to be issues #7-12 and the annual, but with Dan DiDio's Sideways ending with issue #13, surely that'll be in there too. With guest-writing by Grant Morrison and appearances by the Seven Soldiers and other significant multiversal characters.

Suicide Squad: Black Files: El Diablo

Collects the El Diablo stories by Jai Nitz and Scot Eaton from the recent Suicide Squad: Black Files miniseries.

This was, in essence, a part sequel to the Suicide Squad: Secret Files anthology miniseries from a couple years ago, with Jai Nitz writing the "Suicide Squad Black" story (after his El Diablo story in the previous) and Mike W. Barr writing another Katana story (also after the previous). While I appreciate Barr and Nitz writing the (version of the) characters they created, both previous stories were relatively troubled, such not to make me run out to get these two new trades.

It's interesting that DC labeled this one "El Diablo" when it's supposedly a Suicide Squad Black story proper (which includes El Diablo); I'm surprised they think El Diablo's name carries that much cache, I'm guessing after the movie, but good if it does.

Suicide Squad: Black Files: Katana

The Katana half of the recent Suicide Squad: Black Files miniseries, by Mike W. Barr. Solicitations suggest Barr is writing within his own continuity (or major elements of former Outsiders history have been grafted on Rebirth).

Superman - Action Comics: The Oz Effect

Issues #985-992.

Superman: The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 6

Action Comics #106-124, Superman #44-54, and World's Finest Comics #26-36.

Swamp Thing: Roots of Terror

Collects stories from Swamp Thing Winter Special 2018 and Swamp Thing Halloween Horror Giant. Tom King and Brian Azzarello are here, plus Len Wein's final Swamp Thing story with art by Kelley Jones. I think this'll mark the first collection of a story from the Walmart-exclusive books.

Teen Titans: Raven

The DC Ink graphic novel by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo.

The Terrifics Vol. 2: Tom Strong and the Terrifics

The sizzle's right up there in the name, isn't it? Said to collect issues #7-12 of the Jeff Lemire series, but if he's leaving with issue #14, maybe they'll up the count.

Titans Book Two: Deathtrap

Continuing DC's new collections of the 2008 Titans series (not my favorite but maybe most like the new TV series?), this is issues #12-23 by Sean McKeever (also JT Krul), the Deathtrap and Fractured trades, with crossover to Vigilante #4-6 and the Teen Titans Annual #1. That issue #23 is by Eddie Berganza; with issue #24, Titans became a villains-focused team book by Eric Wallace; hard to say if the collections are going to continue beyond this one.

Titans Vol. 6

Issues #28-32 by Dan Abnett in the wake of Justice League: Drowned Earth.

The Trials of Shazam: The Complete Series

Judd Winick's twelve-issue miniseries, following in some respects his Superman/Shazam: First Thunder mini, plus the Brave New World story in the wake of Infinite Crisis. This is when Freddy Freeman was "Shazam" and Billy Batson took on the Wizard's role, with a painterly style by Howard Porter. Not a bad miniseries necessarily, but at this point DC is collecting so much Captain Marvel minutia that they really need to do something special with Jerry Ordway's Power of Shazam.

United States vs. Murder, Inc. Vol. 1

By Brian Michael Bendis.

The Wild Storm Vol. 4

Solicitations for this collection of #19-24 suggest it's the final trade of the series.

Wonder Woman by George Perez Vol. 4

Paperback cutdown finishes out the second omnibus, collecting issues #36-45 and the second annual. At this rate they'll need two more volumes to finish the third omnibus material.

Wonder Woman by Greg Rucka Vol. 3

Your patience has paid off, because here's Wonder Woman #218-226, completing this re-collection series, plus Blackest Night: Wonder Woman #1-3.

Wonder Woman by John Byrne Vol. 3

This does not, as I'd hoped, include John Byrne's Wonder Woman-connected Genesis event miniseries, though it does include the Wonder Woman tie-in issue, plus significant JSA and Donna Troy material. Issues #125-136, finishing this collection set. Hey, who knew Christopher Priest did two issues right after Byrne?

Wonder Woman Vol. 9: The Enemy of Both Sides

Collects issues #51-55. This is advertised as being written by James Robinson, but it's actually all of Steve Orlando's stories between Robinson and G. Willow Wilson.

Wonder Woman: Goddess of War (DC Essential Edition)

Just the first 12 issues of the Brian Azzarello/Cliff Chiang run, the Blood and Guts trades. It is a good introduction to the Azzrello run, though far from complete and it ends on a cliffhanger; maybe that's right for these introductory Essential Editions.

Wonder Woman: The Golden Age Vol. 3

Sensation Comics #49-71 and Wonder Woman #16-23.

Wonder Woman: Year One Deluxe Edition

This is interesting, a deluxe edition of just the past-set issues of Greg Rucka's Rebirth Wonder Woman run, with art by Nicola Scott in deluxe hardcover format. They should follow this with a collection of the sequentially ordered parts of the other half of the story in the same format.

DC Trade Solicitations for February 2019 - Batman vs Deathstroke, Batman Vol. 9: Tyrant Wing, Detective Comics: 80 Years of Batman, Catwoman by Balent Vol. 2, new Justice League Dark, classic New Teen Titans Vol. 10

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

DC Comics has released their trade paperback and hardcover solicitations for February 2019, which is well and good and contains such interesting things as the ninth volume of Tom King's Batman (hard to believe we're already one away from the number Scott Snyder did), plus Christopher Priest's Batman vs. Deathstroke, Catwoman by Jim Balent Vol. 2, the first volume of the new Justice League Dark, and the next paperback collection of Marv Wolfman's New Teen Titans.

But surely what you really want to hear about are the brand-new releases in DC Comics's Summer 2019 catalog, which contains such shiny new things as Kelly Sue DeConnick's Aquaman, Grant Morrison's Green Lantern, Robert Venditti's Hawkman, Bryan Hill's Batman and the Outsiders, and Peter Tomasi's Detective Comics. There's also an Impulse trade (replacing the canceled omnibus), more Aquaman by Peter David, Justice League: Zero Hour, finally finally a collection of Keith Giffen's Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later, and the third Wonder Woman collection each by Greg Rucka and John Byrne.

I've got both of those below — all the February releases and some of the summer releases. The full list of summer releases will get their own post soon, but hey, why wait to start talking about them?

February 2019

Absolute Batman: Arkham Asylum (30th Anniversary Edition) HC

Absolute edition of the Grant Morrison/Dave McKean book.

Absolute Dark Knight New Edition HC

Dark Knight Returns and Dark Knight Strikes Again in absolute (back in print), with an extended Again sketch section.

Absolute Daytripper HC

Previously canceled and now resolicited, this is the 10-issue Vertigo miniseries by Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba from 2010.

The Authority by Ed Brubaker & Dustin Nguyen TP

Collects The Authority: Revolution #1-12.

Batman and Harley Quinn TP

Paperback of the digital-first Batman and Harley Quinn #1-7 and Harley Quinn and Batman #1-5 by Ty Templeton and Rick Burchett ahead of the recent animated movie.

Batman: Arkham: Ra's Al Ghul TP

Another one so obvious I think I thought they already did it. Collects Batman:#232, Batman #243-244, DC Special Series #15, The Brave & the Bold #159, Detective Comics #750, Batman Annual #26, Nightwing #152, Batman & Robin #23.3, and Who’s Who in the DC Universe: #13. I like that this is single issue material and not the more noted graphic novels.

Batman vs. Deathstroke HC

In hardcover, because DC's not playing here. Issues #30-35 (used to be #30-36) by Christopher Priest.

Batman Vol. 9: The Tyrant Wing TP

Now titled The Tyrant Wing, this is said to be issues #58-63, updated from #57-62.

Batman: The Brave and the Bold: The Bronze Age Omnibus Vol. 3 HC

Issues #157-200 from the 1980s, as Batman teams up with Wonder Woman, Supergirl, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, Swamp Thing, and the Joker, among others.

Batman: The Long Halloween (DC Modern Classic) HC

Hardcover with slipcase.

Catwoman by Jim Balent Book Two TP

Jo Duffy, Chuck Dixon, Deborah Pomerantz, and Jim Balent's Catwoman #14-24, #0, Catwoman Annual #2, and Showcase ’95 #4, including Zero Hour and "Year One" material.

Dark Nights: Metal: Dark Knights Rising TP

Paperback of the recent hardcover with the same contents (Metal proper will get some of the issues from Dark Knights: Metal: The Resistance).

DC Meets Looney Tunes Vol. 2 TP

Collects Catwoman/Sylvester and Tweety Special #1, Harley Quinn/Gossamer Special #1, The Joker/Daffy Duck Special #1, and Lex Luthor/Porky Pig Special #1.

Detective Comics: 80 Years of Batman Deluxe Edition HC

With a cover by Jim Lee, this is out in March 2019, same time as Detective Comics #1000. Said to also include the first appearances of Robin, Batwoman, Bat-Mite, Batgirl, Two_Face, Riddler, Clayface, and Man-Bat, plus Martian Manhunter and more.

The Flash: Reckoning of the Forces Vol. 9 TP

Issues #52-57 (changes from #52-56), following "Flash War."

The Flash: The Silver Age Vol. 4 TP

Flash #148-163 (previously said to be #133-147).

Grayson: The Superspy Omnibus New Edition HC

Not sure why this is getting a new edition as I don't see any content changes, but y'know, good book anyway.

Harley Quinn Vol. 2: Harley Destroys the Universe TP

The newly renumbered trade run (while the series keeps its same numbering) by Sam Humphries, which hopefully will as promised tie more closely to the DCU. Issues #50-54 (previously #50-56).

JLA: New World Order (DC Essential Edition) TP

Previously said to be JLA #1-5, but now at JLA #1-9 and the first Secret File, which makes more sense. That's the New World Order and American Dreams trades, or the first deluxe edition.

Justice League Dark Vol. 1: The Last Age of Magic TP

Issues #1-3 and #5-6 by James Tynion (previously issues #1-6). Good news is you don't have to double dip for the "Witching Hour" issues; bad news is it's awful strange to skip a chunk in the very first trade.

Justice League of America: The Bronze Age Vol. 1 TP

Justice League of America #77-95

Promethea: The Deluxe Edition Book One HC

Deluxe size of the Alan Moore/J. H. Williams series, collecting issues #1-12.

The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus HC

Includes Batman #251, 260, 286, 291-294, 321, 353, 365-366, and 400; Brave and the Bold #111, 118, 129-130, 141, and 191; Joker #1-10; Detective Comics #475-476, 504, 526, and 532; Wonder Woman #280-283 and DC Comics Presents #41 and 72. Joker #10 has never before been published (the 1970s series was canceled with issue #9), but features Joker versus the Justice League.

New Teen Titans Vol. 10 TP

The classic New Teen Titans paperbacks keep rocking and rolling like they should have done from the beginning. Collects issues #10-15 and Annual #1, including the book's tie-in to Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Sandman Vol. 6: Fables & Reflections 30th Anniversary New Edition TP

Issues #29-31, #38-50, Sandman Special #1, and a story from Vertigo Preview New cover by Dave McKean.

The Wild Storm Vol. 3 TP

Issues #13-18.

Summer 2019

Aquaman by Peter David Book Three

Issues #21-34 and Annuals #2-3, including a Final Night tie-in, "Legends of the Dead Earth" and "Pulp Heroes" stories, and appearances by Martian Manhunter and Swamp Thing.

Aquaman Vol. 1: Unspoken Water

The first collection of the new Kelly Sue DeConnick run, issues #43-47 in paperback.

Batman & Son (DC Essential Edition)

Essential Edition of Grant Morrison's Batman #665-658 and #663-666, originally in paperback almost ten years ago (read my Batman and Son review).

Batman and the Outsiders Vol. 1

Issues #1-6 of the new series by Bryan Hill.

Batman Beyond Vol. 5: The Final Joke

Issues #25-29 by Dan Jurgens and Will Conrad.

Batman by Grant Morrison Omnibus Vol. 2

This should start to get into Morrison's Batman and Robin series.

Batman Vol. 10: Tom King

Issues #66-69 and the Batman Secret Files #1 by Tom King. I won't spoil it but the solicitation has some salient details if it's to be believed.

Batman: Arkham Asylum (DC Black Label Edition)

Paperback Black Label edition.

Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 1

The new run by Peter Tomasi and Doug Mahnke, collected in paperback; issues #994-999 plus a story from Detective Comics #1000. As with Action Comics, looks like DC is restarting the trade numbering even as the issue numbers keep on.

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition of the four-issue miniseries.

Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition of the three-issue miniseries.

Batman: The Dark Knight: The Master Race (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition collecting the nine-issue miniseries.

Batman: The Endgame Saga (DC Essential Edition)

Batman #35-40 and the Annuals #2-3 plus all the tie-in specials, in paperback.

Batman: The Long Halloween (DC Modern Classics)

Modern Classics edition, so hardcover with slipcase, and with sketches, introductions by Christopher Nolan and David Goyer, and four previously-cut story pages.

Batman: The Rebirth Deluxe Edition Book 4

Issues #45-57 and the DC Nation #0 story, being the Wedding and Cold Days collections.

Batman/Flash: The Button

The Rebirth story in paperback.

DC Universe Bronze Age Omnibus by Jack Kirby

Collects In the Days of the Mob #1, Spirit World #1, The Demon #1-16, The Sandman #1-6, OMAC #1-8, Our Fighting Forces #151-162, Super Powers #1-5 (1984), Super Powers #1-6 (1985), 1st Issue Special #1, 5 and 6, DC Comics Presents #84, Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter #3, Weird Mystery Tales #1-3, and Forbidden Tales of the Dark Mansion #6.

The Flash by Mark Waid Book Six

Issues #119-128 and Green Lantern and the Flash: Faster Friends by Mark Waid, I'm actually guessing it'll end at #129 since that's the final part of a three-parter. There's a "Final Night" tie-in within. Issues #130-141 are by Grant Morrison and Mark Millar, and then Waid writes #142 to about #159-ish, and then returns again for a stint in the #200s.

The Flash Vol. 10: Force Quest

Issues #58-63 by Joshua Williamson. This ends just before the new "Coldest Case" crossover with Batman.

Flash/Impulse: Runs in the Family

We lost, as you'll recall, the Impulse Omnibus solicited a while back and then canceled, but DC promised they'd release this in another format. This first new volume collects issues #1-12, plus the Flash "Dead Heat" tie-in issues, #108-111.

The Green Lantern Vol. 1: Intergalactic Lawman

Hardcover collection of issues #1-6 by Grant Morrison and Liam Sharp.

Green Lantern/Green Arrow: Hard Travelin' Heroes (New Edition)

New collection of Green Lantern #76-87 and #89 and the backups from Flash #217-219 and #226, with an introduction by Dennis O'Neil.

Green Lanterns Vol. 9: With This Ring ...

The final issues of this series ahead of the new Grant Morrison book, this is issues #50-57 by Dan Jurgens.

Harley Quinn Vol. 3

Issues #55-60 by Sam Humphries.

Hawkman Vol. 1: Awakening

In paperback, issues #1-6 by Robert Venditti and Bryan Hitch, due out (finally) in August.

Infinite Crisis (DC Essential Edition)

The seven-issue miniseries with scripts and sketches in the paperback Essential format.

JLA: Tower of Babel (DC Essential Edition)

Paperback by Mark Waid and Howard Porter collecting JLA #43-46 and stories from JLA Secret Files #3. I wouldn't be surprised if DC re-titles this so it's "Justice League" and not "JLA."

Joker (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition by Brian Azzarello and Lee Bermejo.

JSA by Geoff Johns Book Three

JSA: All Stars #1-8, JSA Annual #1, JSA Secret Files and Origins #2, and JSA #26-31.

Justice League Vol. 3

Issues #13-17 and the first annual by Scott Snyder and Jorge Jimenez, just after "Drowned Earth."

Justice League: Zero Hour

After the Superman and Batman volumes, this was the most likely one if it was going to happen; maybe they could do a Justice League: Zero Hour Vol. 2 that collects various Leaguers' stories (Flash, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman, Hawkman, Aquaman, Green Arrow), but there's not another franchise all on its own, I don't think, that has enough issues to fill a trade like these do.

Another option is DC could call it, like, Deathstroke: Zero Hour and then collect the story that starts in Deathstroke, the Hunted #0 — like, it wouldn't be as time-travel Zero Hour-y connected as the others, but DC marketing could still make the case across a variety of titles that this "came out" of Zero Hour, so to speak. The Green Arrow title's another candidate for that.

This is Justice League America #92 and #0, Justice League International #67-68, Justice League Task Force #15-16 and #0, Ray #0, Extreme Justice #0, and Guy Gardner, Warrior #0, and fills a couple of interesting gaps — it comes immediately after both Wonder Woman and the Justice League of America Vol. 2 and Justice League Task Force Vol. 1: The Purification Plague. There is within here the three-part Zero Hour tie-in story "Return of the Hero" written by Christopher Priest that introduced time-lost hero Triumph, but also epilogues to "Judgment Day" (from that Wonder Woman trade), up to and including the first-ever collected issue of Extreme Justice. The Ray and Guy Gardner issues are welcome kind of oddball additions, maybe not entirely related to the main story except that the characters appear in the other books.

Writers here include Priest, Dan Vado, Mark Waid (the main writer credited, though he only does one JLTF issue), and Gerard Jones. As we've discussed before, DC is at a crossroads now where they've collected up to where they could do a Wonder Woman and the Justice League Vol. 3 collection (especially around the new movie), but it'd be totally written by Jones. On the other hand, they're well in place to release another Justice League Task Force trade now, totally written by Priest.

Justice: The Deluxe Edition

Deluxe-size hardcover of the 12-issue minisers by Alex Ross, Jim Krueger, and Doug Braithwaite.

Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Vol. 1

The solicitation is way off, talking about post-Zero Hour (which came in the middle of this series), but it seems clear this is finally a hardcover collection of Keith Giffen and Tom and Mary Bierbaum's "five years later" Legion relaunch. One of DC's modern classics, a gritty, lauded take on the Legion, it's about time this was collected. Giffen was on the book until the mid-issue #30s, so if this is #1-12 and an annual, it can probably be done in three books.

Luthor (DC Black Label Edition)

Black Label edition by Brian Azzarello and Lee Bermejo.

The Man of Steel

Paperback of the Brian Michael Bendis miniseries, coming in July.

Nightwing by Peter Tomasi

This was the end of the original Nightwing series (the one started by Chuck Dixon), issues #140-153, and collected in the books Freefall and The Great Leap (see my 2009 reviews). Obviously this is being collected in paperback in one volume because of Tomasi, but art is no slouch here either, by Rags Morales and Don Kramer. I liked these, saying almost ten years ago that "Peter J. Tomasi offers the most respectful, appropriate rendition of Nightwing that we've seen in a long, long time" and that "The Great Leap cements Peter Tomasi as a writer to watch."

Nightwing Vol. 8: Knight Terrors

Issues #50-55; the solicitation still says Benjamin Percy but we know Scott Lobdell is taking over.

Old Lady Harley

Collects the Rebirth Harley Quinn #42 and the five-issue miniseries by Frank Tieri.

Red Hood & the Outlaws Vol. 5: The Outlaw

New direction for the series by Scott Lobdell, collecting the second annual and issues #26-31.

Shazam by Geoff Johns & Gary Frank Deluxe Edition

Pushing this pretty hard as DC's definitive Captain Marvel origin du jour, this is a hardcover deluxe-size edition of the New 52 Justice League backup story, due in August, whereas a paperback of the same will be out in February.

Shazam: The World's Greatest Mortal Vol. 1

The 1970s Shazam! #1-18 by Dennis O'Neil. Paging a Jerry Ordway collection ...

Sideways Vol. 2

Said to be issues #7-12 and the annual, but with Dan DiDio's Sideways ending with issue #13, surely that'll be in there too. With guest-writing by Grant Morrison and appearances by the Seven Soldiers and other significant multiversal characters.

Suicide Squad: Black Files: El Diablo

Collects the El Diablo stories by Jai Nitz and Scot Eaton from the recent Suicide Squad: Black Files miniseries.

This was, in essence, a part sequel to the Suicide Squad: Secret Files anthology miniseries from a couple years ago, with Jai Nitz writing the "Suicide Squad Black" story (after his El Diablo story in the previous) and Mike W. Barr writing another Katana story (also after the previous). While I appreciate Barr and Nitz writing the (version of the) characters they created, both previous stories were relatively troubled, such not to make me run out to get these two new trades.

It's interesting that DC labeled this one "El Diablo" when it's supposedly a Suicide Squad Black story proper (which includes El Diablo); I'm surprised they think El Diablo's name carries that much cache, I'm guessing after the movie, but good if it does.

Suicide Squad: Black Files: Katana

The Katana half of the recent Suicide Squad: Black Files miniseries, by Mike W. Barr. Solicitations suggest Barr is writing within his own continuity (or major elements of former Outsiders history have been grafted on Rebirth).

Swamp Thing: Roots of Terror

Collects stories from Swamp Thing Winter Special 2018 and Swamp Thing Halloween Horror Giant. Tom King and Brian Azzarello are here, plus Len Wein's final Swamp Thing story with art by Kelley Jones. I think this'll mark the first collection of a story from the Walmart-exclusive books.

The Terrifics Vol. 2: Tom Strong and the Terrifics

The sizzle's right up there in the name, isn't it? Said to collect issues #7-12 of the Jeff Lemire series, but if he's leaving with issue #14, maybe they'll up the count.

Titans Book Two: Deathtrap

Continuing DC's new collections of the 2008 Titans series (not my favorite but maybe most like the new TV series?), this is issues #12-23 by Sean McKeever (also JT Krul), the Deathtrap and Fractured trades. That issue #23 is by Eddie Berganza; with issue #24, Titans became a villains-focused team book by Eric Wallace; hard to say if the collections are going to continue beyond this one.

Titans Vol. 6

Issues #28-32 by Dan Abnett in the wake of Justice League: Drowned Earth.

The Trials of Shazam: The Complete Series

Judd Winick's twelve-issue miniseries, following in some respects his Superman/Shazam: First Thunder mini, plus the Brave New World story in the wake of Infinite Crisis. This is when Freddy Freeman was "Shazam" and Billy Batson took on the Wizard's role, with a painterly style by Howard Porter. Not a bad miniseries necessarily, but at this point DC is collecting so much Captain Marvel minutia that they really need to do something special with Jerry Ordway's Power of Shazam.

Wonder Woman by George Perez Vol. 4

Paperback cutdown finishes out the second omnibus, collecting issues #36-45 and the second annual. At this rate they'll need two more volumes to finish the third omnibus material.

Wonder Woman by Greg Rucka Vol. 3

Your patience has paid off, because here's Wonder Woman #218-226, completing this re-collection series, plus Blackest Night: Wonder Woman #1-3.

Wonder Woman by John Byrne Vol. 3

This does not, as I'd hoped, include John Byrne's Wonder Woman-connected Genesis event miniseries, though it does include the Wonder Woman tie-in issue, plus significant JSA and Donna Troy material. Issues #125-136, finishing this collection set. Hey, who knew Christopher Priest did two issues right after Byrne?

Wonder Woman Vol. 9: The Enemy of Both Sides

Collects issues #51-55. This is advertised as being written by James Robinson, but it's actually all of Steve Orlando's stories between Robinson and G. Willow Wilson.

Wonder Woman: Goddess of War (DC Essential Edition)

Just the first 12 issues of the Brian Azzarello/Cliff Chiang run, the Blood and Guts trades. It is a good introduction to the Azzrello run, though far from complete and it ends on a cliffhanger; maybe that's right for these introductory Essential Editions.

Wow, that's a lot! What have you got to say?