Dark Nights: Death Metal collections, Green Arrow Connor Hawke, Batman: Joker War, DCeased: Dead Planet, Gotham Knights Vol. 2, Crisis on Multiple Earths returns, Suicide Squad by Taylor, more in DC Comics Spring 2021 solicitations
Remember that the Red Cross has a critical need for blood donations, most all of the time but especially now.
It's some small comfort that the bigger comics companies, at least, seem largely unaffected after all the initial uncertainty, and that we can indeed be talking about the DC Comics Spring 2021 hardcover and trade paperback solicitations. Probably among the highest profile books on this list are the Dark Nights: Death Metal collections, numbering four so far, and due out in April and May. I'm concerned some of the lessons learned with the first Metal collections have not played out here, but we shall see.
The biggest flat-out surprise for me was a Green Arrow Connor Hawke collection, something I had no expectation of ever seeing ever, but I'm pleased Connor's getting some recognition. That's only the tip of the iceberg for those stories, so hopefully there's more behind it. And, y'know, any number of other cool stuff: more of Devin Grayson's Gotham Knights, Batman: The Joker War and related books, more DCeased, more of William Messner-Loebs' Wonder Woman, another attempt at the Silver Age JLA/JSA Crisis on Multiple Earths books, deep cuts from Legion of Super-Heroes and New Gods, and even more after that. All in all a strong couple of months.
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Let's take a look at the full list. Hopefully next time we do this, things will be better than they are now. Stay safe.
I’d have sworn this was already published, but I can’t see that it was. Reprints Flash: Rebirth #1-6 in Absolute format.
If I'm not mistaken, DC has released an Absolute Planetary before, but it only contained the preview from Gen 13 #33 and Planetary #1-12, whereas this has the preview, Planetary #1-27, Planetary/Batman: Night On Earth #1, Planetary/The Authority: Ruling the World #1, Planetary/JLA: Terra Occulta #1, and a pinup from WildStorm: A Celebration of 25 Years. That tracks closer to the Planetary Omnibus from 2014, though I don't believe that had the Wildstorm anniversary story.
• Adam Strange: Between Two Worlds Deluxe Edition
This was a famously “mature” and/or problematic take on Adam Strange by Richard Bruning, with art by Andy Kubert, kind of the original post-Crisis origin of Adam Strange (before it was revised a couple of times). Still I’ve wanted to read this and I’m excited about a Deluxe collection. This also includes Mark Waid’s Adam Strange stories from JLA #21-22 and the Andy Diggle/Pasqual Ferry 2004 miniseries that lead into the start of Infinite Crisis. All around this should be a book worth getting.
• Amazing World of Superman (Tabloid Edition)
This was published in 1973 in conjunction with Metropolis, Illinois, being designated the “hometown” of Superman. There’s a variety of reprints included, being stories from the ‘50s and ‘60s, plus a new telling of Superman’s origin by Nelson Bridwell, Carmine Infantino, and Curt Swan. In its “original, tabloid-size format.”
Issues #59-64 by Kelly Sue DeConnick. There’s a solicitation out there that dares to say “Underwater fishticuffs!”
By Mark Millar and Frank Quitely, Dustin Nguyen, Art Adams, and others, with the "uncensored, original" pages to Authority #13-29 (as seen, I believe, in the Wildstorm 25th anniverary book), Authority Annual 2000, and stories from the Wildstorm Summer Special.
By Cecil Castellucci, with ties to Tom King's "City of Bane."
Though it's almost hard to remember at this point, Gail Simone's New 52 Batgirl run really is significant, putting Barbara Gordon back in the cowl for the first time in forever, whereas nowadays Barbara as Batgirl (again) feels pretty natural. Equally, longtime Birds of Prey writer Simone also accomplished the transition from Oracle back to Batgirl. All of this makes for a run worth collecting in omnibus; it also bears mentioning that Simone channels the horror genre pretty heavily in this one — arguably too tonally dark for a Batgirl book, but effective nonetheless.
• Batman & the Outsiders Vol. 3
Issues #13-17 by Bryan Hill, the final collection of the newly cancelled series. The fact that this team is still fighting Ra’s al Ghul almost 20 issues in says about all that needs to be said.
• Batman Adventures: Riddle Me This!
Collects the animated tie-in Batman: Gotham Adventures #11, #28, #56-57, and Batman Adventures #11, featuring guess who.
• Batman Arkham: Talia al Ghul
Among other things, it’s nice that this collection acknowledges Talia’s graduation to a Batman villain separate from her father Ra’s. Collects Batman #232, Batman #656, Detective Comics #411, Batman: Son of the Demon #1, Batman: Death and the Maidens #9, President Luthor Secret Files #1, Batman Villains Secret Files 2005 #1, Red Hood: The Lost Days #1, Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #23, Batman and Robin #12, Batman Incorporated #2, Batman Incorporated #13, and Batman #34-35. I love that President Luthor is in there; I really enjoyed Joe Kelly writing Talia as a foe for Superman in his Action Comics run, and I’m glad that gets an acknowledgment.
Issues #43-48 by Dan Jurgens, with the revelation of Batwoman Beyond's identity.
• Batman in Brave & the Bold: The Bronze Age Omnibus Vol. 3
Brave and the Bold #157-200 from the 1980s, with Batman teaming up with Wonder Woman, Green Arrow, Black Lightning, Superboy, and Swamp Thing, among others.
Collects Batman #59, #62, #63, #81, #92, #105, #113, #114, #121, #122, and #128; Detective Comics #156, #168, #185, #187, #215, #216, #233, #235, #236, #241, #244, #252, #267, and #269; and World’s Finest Comics #81 and #89. No small amount of Black Casebook material here.
Paperback, following the hardcover, and collecting the six-issue miniseries plus the Grim Knight special.
• Batman's Grave: The Complete Collection
Hardcover of the 12-issue series by Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch.
• Batman/Superman Vol. 2: World's Deadliest
Collects the "Kandor Compromise" and "Atomic" stories, so this looks to be issues #7-11 or #12ish.
• Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III
Paperback of the six-issue miniseries by James Tynion and Freddie Williams, following the hardcover.
• Batman: A Death in the Family The Deluxe Edition
Collects “Death in the Family,” Batman #426-429, and also “A Lonely Place of Dying,” Batman #440-442 and New Titans #60-61, being both the death of Jason Todd and the early appearances of Tim Drake. Also a page from Batman Annual #25, originally drawn for “Death in the Family” had Jason lived. Some/all of this appeared in the DC Comics Classics Library edition of “Death in the Family” in 2009.
• Batman: Creature of the Night
Issues #1-4 by Kurt Busiek and John Paul Leon, in paperback following the hardcover.
• Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 5: Ugly Heart
Following the events of "City of Bane," this is Detective Comics #1020-1026, Detective Comics Annual #3, and Batman: Pennyworth R.I.P., by Peter Tomasi, Brad Walker, and crew. Solicitations have this in paperback first, but I'm skeptical. Presumably this contains the "Joker War" tie-in issues, #1022-1026.
• Batman: Gotham Knights: Contested
So, so glad to see more of Devin Grayson's Gotham Knights collected. Said to collect issues #14-24 and #29, which almost finishes out Grayson’s run short of some “Batman: Murderer/Fugitive” tie-in issues, except I think issue #32 needs to be in there too.
Paperback of the six-issue miniseries by Scott Peterson and Kelley Jones, previously in hardcover. Seems like this was previously solicited and then delayed.
• Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Vol. 5
Collects Detective Comics Annual #3, and Detective Comics #612-614 and #616-21 (issue #615, part of a crossover, is over in Batman: The Caped Crusader Vol. 3, which demonstrates these books are a little out of step with one another). Stories are largely by the super-team of Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle, and include appearances by Anarky and a big development in Robin Tim Drake's early life. We're still about forty issues away from "Knightfall."
In hardcover, James Tynion’s issues #95-100.
• Batman: The Joker War Companion Vol. 1
In hardcover, collecting Nightwing #70-73, Batgirl #47-48, and Detective Comics #1022-1024.
• Batman: The Joker War Companion Vol. 2
Said to collect Red Hood: Outlaw #48, Nightwing #75, Harley Quinn #75, Catwoman #25-26, and Batman: The Joker War Zone #1.
Paperback of the Brian Michael Bendis/Nick Derington story, following the hardcover.
Collects Detective Comics #854-864, Batwoman #0 (New 52), Batwoman #0-24, and Batwoman Annual #1, being Greg Rucka, JH Williams, and W. Haden Blackman's work on the character, stopping before Marc Andreyko's less-well-regarded run (short of the annual where Andreyko finished up Williams' unfinished run).
One does wonder what effect a new title character on TV will have on the DC Universe’s own Kate Kane.
• Birds of Prey: Fighters by Trade
Collects Gail Simone's Birds of Prey #81-91, so spanning the Battle Within and Perfect Pitch trades. This includes issue #91 by Jim Alexander, Brad Walker, and Jimmy Palmiotti that I don't believe has been collected before.
Collection of Black Canary’s Golden Age adventures, including Adventure Comics #399, Adventure Comics #418-419, Brave and the Bold #61-62, Flash Comics #86-104, DC Special #3, and Comic Cavalcade #25.
• Books of Magic Vol. 3 (The Sandman Universe)
Issues #14-18 and, I believe, the Sandman Universe Presents Hellblazer special. This series was newly announced as cancelled with issue #23, but whether issues will be added here or if it’ll get one more trade remains to be seen.
The next volume of the Joelle Jones series, issues #20-24. This will mean it ends right before the issues collected in Joker War Companion Vol. 2.
• Catwoman: Soulstealer (The Graphic Novel)
Comics edition of the young adult nove by Sarah J. Maas, adapted by Louise Simonson and drawn by Samantha Dodge. I never did catch before that this was Catwoman vs. Batwing Luke Fox.
• Crisis on Multiple Earths Book 1: Crossing Over
What appears to be a new start to the old often-incomplete, often-hard-to-find Crisis on Multiple Earths series of collections; I think this’ll make some people happy if indeed it gets down to the later volumes, which never ultimately collected all of the JLA/JSA “pre-Crisis” team-ups. This new volume actually collects the contents of the first two original books, so maybe that will shorten release time, too.
• Dark Nights: Death Metal: Deluxe Edition
Collects the six-issue miniseries in hardcover, due out in April 2021. I get a bad feeling about DC collecting just the mini on its own without any of the tie-ins; that’s how the Metal collections went wrong the first time out.
• Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Darkest Knight
Paperback collecting tie-ins to Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo’s sequel event, Dark Nights: Death Metal. I’d say last time the collection schema for Metal wasn’t fantastic and unfortunately this doesn’t look a whole lot different. Collects Dark Nights: Death Metal Legends of the Dark Knights #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal Speed Metal #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal Trinity Crisis #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal Multiverse's End #1, and Dark Nights Death Metal Guidebook #1.
• Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Multiverse Who Laughs
Collects a variety of Dark Nights: Death Metal tie-ins, including some that I don't think have been formally announced yet: Dark Nights: Death Metal: Infinite Hour Exxxtreme! #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal: Robin King #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal: Rise of the New God #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Multiverse Who Laughs #1, and Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Secret Origin #1.
• Dark Nights: Death Metal: War of the Multiverses
Solicitation says this just collects Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Last 52: War of the Multiverse #1 and Dark Nights: Death Metal: The Last Stories of the DCU #1, which seems a little slim, so I wonder if the Justice League tie-ins or something else will be in here.
• DC Poster Portfolio: Greg Capullo
Appropriate, in these Death Metal times — the selected covers of Greg Capullo.
• DC Through the '80s: The Experiments
This has been pitched a couple times and never quite made print, but now here again is this hardcover collection of DC comics from the early 1980s. I did worry this collection would be too grimdark, not reflecting for instance the comedy of the international Justice League that was side-by-side with some of the mature material. There is some Ambush Bug in here, and what seems to be either the Super Juniors or Sugar and Spike, though I'm still not quite sure that's sufficient. Said to collect Secret Origins #48, Swamp Thing #40, Sandman #8, Doom Patrol #25, Warlord #48 and #55, Legion of Super-Heroes #298, Nathaniel Dusk #1, Infinity, Inc. #14, New Teen Titans #16, Best of DC: Blue Ribbon Digest #58, Watchmen #1, Camelot 3000 #1, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns #2, Angel Love #1, and History of the DC Universe #1-2.
• DC's Greatest Science Fiction Stories Ever Told
Quite the interesting cross-section in this one, everything from WE3 by Grant Morrison to The Wake by Scott Snyder and Camelot 3000 by Mike Barr. Here's the full list: Action Comics #186, Transmetropolitan #1, WE3 #1, Strange Adventures #7, #9, #18, #31, #119, and #126; Camelot 3000 #1, Mystery in Space #1, #6, #19, #30, #35, #63, #69, #101, #103, #113-115, and #117; Time Warp #5, Real Fact Comics #1, #3, #6, #11, and #15; My Greatest Adventure #7, #12, and #15, The Wake #6, Trillium #1, and Strange Sports Stories #1.
• DCeased
Paperback collection of the six-issue miniseries and DCeased: A Good Day to Die, following the hardcover.
Hardcover collection of the sequel miniseries.
Young reader sequel to Dear Justice League by Michael Northrop and Gustavo Duarte.
Collects Batman: Earth One Vol. 1, Wonder Woman: Earth One Vol. 1, and Superman: Earth One Vol. 1.
Paperback collection of the Event Leviathan miniseries, following the hardcover.
Issues #26-50 and the Ex Machina Special #3-4 from Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris.
Collects Fables #42-81 and Peter & Max: A Fables Novel.
Brings Final Night back to print with the previously collected four-issue miniseries, the free preview story, the Parallax: Emerald Night #1, and new for this edition, the epilogue from Green Lantern #81 (which I remember mainly from a rare Jack Knight appearance).
Big Bang Theory's (and Blossom) Mayim Bialik writes the Flash expounding on science facts for young readers, with help from Supergirl, Cyborg, Green Lantern Jessica Cruz, and more.
• Flash Vol. 14: The Flash Age
Collects Flash #88, Flash #750-755, and Flash Annual #3. Long-time writer Joshua Williamson's run ends with issue #762, presumably the next trade. In paperback.
• Flash/Impulse: Runs in the Family
Another one that's been solicited before but keeps getting cancelled; let's try it again now that Impulse is part of a title. Collects Mark Waid's Impulse #1-12 and Flash #108-111, the "Dead Heat" crossover.
• Flashpoint: The 10th Anniversary Omnibus
Ten years since Flashpoint. It hardly seems that much, and if you want me up on my soapbox, I think in part that’s because we’ve been through two continuities since then and DC’s history remains very, very muddled — that is, it’s been 10 years, but mostly that reminds me we haven’t come all that far in 10 years.
That said, this is assuredly the completest complete collection of Flashpoint you’re going to find; I’m curious whether the editors will try to slot in the various miniseries in their relative right places between the Flashpoint miniseries or just shunt all the ancillary material to the end.
Anyway, this is (deep breath) Booster Gold #44-47, Flash #9-12, Flashpoint #1-5, Flashpoint: Reverse-Flash #1, Flashpoint: Abin Sur the Green Lantern #1-3, Flashpoint: Emperor Aquaman #1-3, Flashpoint: Batman Knight of Vengeance #1-3, Flashpoint: Citizen Cold #1-3, Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint #1-3, Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1-3, Flashpoint: Deathstroke & the Curse of the Ravager #1-3, Flashpoint: Lois Lane and the Resistance #1-3, Flashpoint: The Outsider #1-3, Flashpoint: Secret Seven #1-3, Flashpoint: The Canterbury Cricket #1, Flashpoint: Wonder Woman and the Furies #1-3, Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #1-3, Flashpoint: Project Superman #1-3, Flashpoint: Frankenstein & the Creatures of the Unknown #1-3, Flashpoint: Green Arrow Industries #1, Flashpoint: Grodd of War #1, Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #1-3, Flashpoint: The Legion of Doom #1-3, and material from Absolute Flashpoint.
• Fourth World: A Celebration of 50 Years
Here’s a fun, unexpected one; nice that Jack Kirby’s Fourth World is getting the same kind of recognition as with soem of these other volumes. There’s a nice run of the gamut in terms of non-Kirby New Gods stories, including parts of Cosmic Odyssey and Final Crisis; I’d be interested to see what the essays are like in this one.
• Gen13: Starting Over: The Deluxe Edition
Someone else might know better, but this seems to be the earliest issues of the first Gen13 miniseries and series by Jim Lee, Brandon Choi, and J. Scott Campbell. Collects Gen13: Lost in Paradise #1, Gen13 #1-5, Gen13 European Vacation #1, Gen13 Backlist #1, Gen13 #0-5, Wildstorm Universe Sourcebook #1, and Gen13: Encore No. 1.
• Green Arrow/Black Canary: Till Death Do They Part
In paperback, collecting the beginning of Judd Winick and Cliff Chiang's Green Arrow/Black Canary series, which I liked a lot. This is the Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special and Green Arrow/ Black Canary #1-14. Connor Hawke is featured prominently here, as well as in his own collection on this list.
• Green Arrow: 80 Years of the Emerald Archer
Collects More Fun Comics #73, Adventure Comics #246 and #259, Green Lantern #85 and #86, Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1, Green Arrow #100-101 (1994), JLA #8-9 (1996), Green Arrow #1, #17, and #75 (2001), Green Arrow and Black Canary #4 (2007), Secret Origins #4 (2014), Arrow: Season 2.5 #1, and Green Arrow: Rebirth #1. I think it’s a really nice thing that they got a TV Arrow tie-in story in there.
• Green Arrow: Connor Hawke Where Angels Fear to Tread
Well, this is a fantastic surprise, a collection fans have been wanting for a while now (only 30 years later!). If you’re familiar with the saga of Oliver Queen and his son Connor Hawke, you know what happens here — Green Arrow issues #0 and #91-101 — and that this is only the very, very start of Connor’s adventures; he’d go on to appear all over the DC Universe in the next years. Hopefully another collection will follow this one. Seems to me there’s a Showcase story that intersects with this and ought to be included too.
• Green Lantern: Circle of Fire
Being now both Judd Winick’s first arc on Green Lantern, issues #129-136 starring Kyle Rayner, previously collected as New Journey, Old Path, and also the contemporaneous (but not necessarily related) “Circle of Fire” miniseries lead by Brian K. Vaughan, being Green Lantern #129-136, Green Lantern/Firestorm #1, Green Lantern/Adam Strange #1, Green Lantern/Atom #1, Green Lantern/Green Lantern #1, Green Lantern/Power Girl #1, and Green Lantern: Circle of Fire #1-2. There was to be a set of Kyle Rayner collections that I don’t think progressed; remains to be seen if this is a one-off or if DC is jumping ahead to the Winick run.
• Harley Quinn & the Birds of Prey: The Hunt for Harley
Collects the four-issue miniseries in hardcover. Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti picking up where they left off can’t come fast enough for me.
Paperback, following the hardcover, by Jody Houser and Adriana Melo.
• Harley Quinn Black + White + Red
Collects the 14-chapter digital series in paperback. The solicitation lists Harley Quinn #1-7 and Harley Quinn: Futures' End #1, which is the contents of the New 52 Harley Quinn Vol. 1: Hot in the City collection.
• Harley Quinn Vol. 5: Hollywood or Die
The solicitation mentions both "Year of the Villain" and also a trip to Los Angeles; my sense is this one is about the latter and not the former. Said to collect Harley Quinn #67-72, but since Sam Humphries’ run ends at issue #75, I wonder if maybe this will get expanded.
Issues #20-29, an awfully big trade, by Robert Venditti and Fernando Pasarin.
• Indestructibles: The First Fracture
Young readers graphic novel by Ridley Pearson, focusing on an all-new super-team but set in some of the same locations as his Super Sons books.
• JLA: The Tower of Babel The Deluxe Edition
Collects a number of Mark Waid's JLA stories, including issues #18-21, #32-33, and "Tower of Babel," issues #43-46. Also, randomly, Len Kaminski and Jason Orfalas' "JLApe" JLA Annual #3.
• John Constantine, Hellblazer Vol. 2
Second collection by Si Spurrier, even as the Sandman Universe titles are dropping precipitously. Collects issues #7-12.
• John Constantine, Hellblazer Vol. 24: Sectioned
Hellblazer #267-275 and the five-issue City of Demons miniseries, by Peter Milligan.
• John Constantine, Hellblazer: Rise and Fall
In hardcover, collecting the three-issue Black Label miniseries by Tom Taylor. I tell you what, one side-effect of following Taylor on Twitter these days to find out about the next Injustice project is seeing a lot of praise for his Suicide Squad, which I'm eager to read. Taylor's star is on the rise and I'm optimistic for his Hellblazer as well.
• Justice League Odyssey Vol. 4
Collects issues #19-25 by Dan Abnett, being the final issues of the series.
• Justice League Unlimited: Hocus Pocus
Continuing the new recent collections of the animated Justice League Unlimited comic, this time with a magic theme. It’s Justice League Unlimited #11, Justice League Unlimited #14, Justice League Unlimited #25, Justice League Unlimited #33, Justice League Unlimited #37, and Justice League Unlimited #40.
• Justice League: Galaxy of Terrors
Collects the "Rule of War" story, Justice League #48-50, by Si Spurrier and Aaron Lopresti, and then the two-part "Garden of Mercy" by Jeff Loveness in #51-52, ahead of the Death Metal tie-in story by Joshua Williamson.
• Legends of the DC Universe: Carmine Infantino Vol. 1
Includes stories from Secret Origins, Detective Comics, Flash, and All-Star Comics among others.
• Legion of Super-Heroes Vol. 2
Hardcover collection of issues #7-12 by Brian Michael Bendis.
• Legion of Super-Heroes: Before the Darkness Vol. 1
In hardcover, 1980s Legion of Super-Heroes stories from just before “Great Darkness Saga,” being issues #260-271 and Secrets of the Legion of Super-Heroes #1-3. This is an era of Legion I find pretty accessible and iconic, so I’m excited about this one. You all can tell me better but it seems there’s at least some never-before-collected material in here.
Issues #20-24 by Dan Watters and Sebastian Fiumara. Apparently none of these were published as single issues, only digital, so this "graphic novel" will be the first time they see print, and marking the end of the Sandman Universe series.
The solicitation says issues #1-6, but we know this is a 12-issue miniseries by Dan DiDio and Shane Davis. I would hope DC collects this all together and not in multiple volumes.
Aside, but I think a collection of modern Metal Men appearances would be cool — mainly I’m thinking of the never-collected Dan Jurgens series, but maybe the Len Wein or Duncan Roleau minis can get in there with it.
Young adult graphic novel by Drew Brockington, set in the Metropolis suburbs. Sounds like it has kind of a Goonies vibe, except the kids end up finding Bizarro.
• New Gods Book One: Bloodlines
Collection of the 1980s New Gods stories by Mark Evanier in the wake of Cosmic Odyssey; collects issues #1-14. There were 28 issues of this series total.
• New Teen Titans Omnibus Vol. 6
I don't think I even realized, but the New Teen Titans Omnibus Vol. 5 (due out in January) collected to the end of the New Teen Titans title, issue #49, before the title was renamed New Titans. This sixth omnibus collects various "ancillary" material: The New Teen Titans: Games graphic novel, World’s Finest Comics #300, Teen Titans Spotlight #1-21 (including Millennium tie-ins), and The New Teen Titans (Drug Awareness) #1-3. Big question now is, will DC start a New Titans collection series?
Beginning a collection of Devin Grayson's Nightwing run with issues #71-83; Grayson's run goes to #117 with a couple of gaps. I know this run was controversial and I'm pleased that DC is willing to collect it, though I do feel a little "wait and see" as to whether they'll really collect the whole thing.
• Nightwing: The Return of Dick Grayson
I haven’t heard, but I’ll be curious if this book delivers on its title. By Dan Jurgens and, supposedly, Graham Nolan, though I hadn’t heard he was collaborating with Jurgens on the title.
Wonder Woman-related young adult graphic novel by L. L. McKinney (A Blade So Black) and Robyn Smith.
• Power of Shazam! Book 2: The Worm Turns
So excited to see these collections of Jerry Ordway’s Power of Shazam! continuing. This collects The Power of Shazam! #13-23, Superman: The Man of Tomorrow #4, Showcase '96 #7, The Power of Shazam! Annual #1, Superboy Plus #1, and Supergirl Plus #1. Indeed we’ve got Mr. Mind here, plus a couple appearances by Superman, Plastic Man, Batman, Gangbuster, and a Final Night tie-in. This series went 48 issues, so about two more collections, maybe three?
Paperback collection by Scott Lobdell.
• Revolver
Paperback reprinting of the 2010 graphic novel by Matt Kindt, in which a man seems to travel between two realities each time he goes to sleep.
• Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter: Coming of the Dragon!
One must obviously be sorry Dennis O’Neil didn’t live to see this come out. Collects O’Neil’s Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter #1-18, The Brave and the Bold #132, and DC Comics Presents #39.
The solicitation suggests this is just five issues by Fables' Bill Willingham, Robin #121-125, though for the price and page count, it seems a lot more than that. Willingham wrote about 25 issues of Robin, including Spoiler/Batgirl Stephanie Brown's tenure as Robin, so I wouldn't be surprised if this collects all of that — spanning Identity Crisis to Infinite Crisis and including some of Willingham's Shadowpact characters.
• Sandman: The Deluxe Edition Book Two
I'm increasingly interested in these new deluxe-size Sandman collections with tertiary material placed in context. This is issues #17-31, so the Dream Country (vol. 3) and Seasons of Mists (vol. 4) collections, plus issues later collected in Fables and Reflections (vol. 6). Additionally, there's “Fear of Falling” from Vertigo Preview #1 and Sandman Special #1 (both collected in Fables and Reflections), and stories from Vertigo: Winter’s Edge #1-3: “Flowers of Romance,” “A Winter’s Tale,” and “How They Met Themselves," which I think only so far appeared in the Absolute Sandman and Absolute Death volumes.
• Sgt. Rock: Between Hell & a Hard Place Deluxe Edition
Deluxe-size reprint of the murder mystery/war graphic novel by Brian Azzarello and Joe Kubert.
• Shazam!: The World's Mightiest Mortal Vol. 3
Collecting 1970s adventures of Captain Marvel in hardcover; this is World’s Finest Comics #253-270 and #272-282, and Adventure Comics #491 and #492.
Seems to be issues #1-12 of the first Sheriff of Babylon miniseries by Tom King and Mitch Gerads, with the extras from the recent Deluxe edition.
New collection of James Robinson's Starman, collecting about half the series: Starman #0-42, Starman 80-Page Giant #1, Starman Annual #1-2, Starman Secret Files #1, Showcase ’95 #12, Showcase ’96 #4, Showcase ’96 #5, Power of Shazam! #35-36, and The Shade #1-4.
The first collection of Tom Taylor and Bruno Rendondo's new Suicide Squad, which appears to be getting rave reviews. In hardcover, collecting issues #1-6.
• Superman & Batman: Generations Omnibus
Collects the two four-issue miniseries and the third 12-issue miniseries by John Byrne.
• Superman Adventures: Lex Luthor, Man of Metropolis
Collects issues #27, #54-55, and #65-66 of the animated tie-in series.
• Superman by Grant Morrison Omnibus
Being the start of the New 52 Action Comics, issues #0-18 and the Annual #1 by Grant Morrison, Rags Morales, and Andy Kubert.
• Superman by Peter J. Tomasi & Patrick Gleason Omnibus
This is a surprise (I think), the whole of Peter Tomasi and Patrick Gleason's well-received Superman run, which introduced Super Son Jon Kent. Collects Superman: Rebirth #1, Superman #1-39 and #42-45, Teen Titans #15, Action Comics #975-976, likely just Tomasi's story from Action Comics #1000, Super Sons #11-12, and Superman Annual #1.
• Superman Vol. 3: The Truth Revealed
Paperback, following the hardcover, of Brian Michael Bendis' Superman #16-19, and the Heroes and Villains specials.
In hardcover, said to be issues #20-24 by Brian Michael Bendis.
Collects a variety of Superman and Captain Marvel team-ups (or face-offs): Superman #216, The Power of Shazam! #46, Kingdom Come #4, Kingdom Come #1, DC Comics Presents #33, DC Comics Presents #34, DC Comics Presents #49, All-New Collectors' Edition #58, and DC Comics Presents Annual #3.
• Superman's Greatest Team-Ups
From the 1980s, collects DC Comics Presents #5, #9-12, #14, #19, #28, #30, #35, #38, #39, #45, #50, #58, #63, #67, #71, and #97 by Martin Pasko, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Steve Englehart, Dan Mishkin, Steve Gerber, Gary Cohn, and more. In these stories, Superman teams up with Wonder Woman, Bizarro, Aquaman, Sgt. Rock, Hawkman, Mister Miracle, Batgirl, Man-Bat, Black Canary, Plastic Man, Amethyst, Firestorm, the Flash, Elongated Man, Robin, and apparently even Santa Claus, vs. Mongul and the Atomic Skull, among others.
• Superman: Action Comics Vol. 4: Metropolis Burning
Issues #1017-1022 by Brian Michael Bendis and John Romita, which include tie-ins to “Year of the Villain” and appearances by Young Justice.
• Superman: The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 7
Action Comics #125-143, Superman #55-65, and World’s Finest Comics #37-47.
• Superman: The Last Son The Deluxe Edition
Geoff Johns, Richard Donner, Adam Kubert, and Gary Frank’s stories from Johns’ run on Action Comics, previously the Superman: Last Son and Superman: Brainiac collections. This is Action Comics #844-846, #851, #866-870, and the Action Comics Annual #11.
Paperback of the Walmart exclusive stories, following the hardcover.
• Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Vol. 3
Ahead of Alan Moore's run, this is The Saga of the Swamp Thing #6-19 and Saga of the Swamp Thing Annual #1 by Martin Pasko and Tom Yeates.
• Swamp Thing: The New 52 Omnibus
An omnibus collecting both Scott Snyder's and Charles Soule's New 52 runs on Swamp Thing, both of which were quite good. Collects Swamp Thing #0-40, the Swamp Thing Annual #1-3, Swamp Thing: Futures End #1, Swamp Thing Featuring Arcane #23.1, Animal Man #12 and #17, and Aquaman #31.*
• Tales from the DC Dark Multiverse
Paperback, following the hardcover, and collecting Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Batman: Knightfall , Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Death of Superman, Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Blackest Night, Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Infinite Crisis , Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Teen Titans The Judas Contract, Superman #75, Batman #497, Infinite Crisis #1, Blackest Night #1, and Tales of the Teen Titans Annual #3.
• Teen Titans: Beast Boy Loves Raven
New middle-grade graphic novel by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo.
In a reversal of what we’re used to seeing, this is a hardcover of the young adult graphic novel by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo, following the paperback (instead of the other way around).
Collects Art Baltazar and Franco’s Tiny Titans #3, #5-6, #8-9, #11, #13-15, #17, #19-21, #23, and #28.
• Whistle: A New Gotham City Hero
So much in this young adult graphic novel by E. Lockhart and Manuel Preitano — 17-year-old community advocate Willow Zimmerman, running into Killer Croc outsider her local synagogue, the sudden ability to read her dog’s mind, “Pammie” Isley as a science teacher, and on. Sounds interesting!
This is assuredly something that should exist, what seems like it’s going to be a collection of all of DC’s Who’s Who series, though this particular volume is the original post-Crisis Who’s Who, updates, and material from the annuals, ending before the loose-leaf Who’s Who that we’ll probably see in the second volume.
Like ... this is cool, and it definitely should be preserved in collections. I can’t necessarily imagine reading this whole thing now, given how far the characters are from what’s portrayed here (and once upon a time, I did read this kind of thing forward and backward and forward again). Mostly it makes me feel disenchanted, as with the Flashpoint Omnibus, that we’re so far from cohesion these days that a new Who’s Who hardly seems possible.
Collects Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #1-26 (1985), Who's Who Update 1987 #1-5, Who's Who Update 1988 #1-4, and the Who’s Who pages from Action Comics Annual #2, Batman Annual #13, Blackhawk Annual #1, Detective Comics Annual #2, Dr. Fate Annual #1, Green Arrow Annual #2, Justice League Annual #3, Secret Origins Annual #3, Swamp Thing Annual #5, Flash Annual #3, The New Titans Annual #5, The Question Annual #2, and Wonder Woman Annual #2.
• Wonder Woman Book 2: Ares Rising
Pleased to see the new collections of William Messner-Loebs’ Wonder Woman run continuing. This is issues #77-89, with some Lee Moder art in there; issues #88-89 are actually by Christopher Priest. The 2016 Wonder Woman by Mike Deodato book collects issues #90-100, after which John Byrne replaces Messner-Loebs on the title — so it remains to be seen if this is the last collection in this series or if DC will see fit to reprint the “Content” storyline again.
• Wonder Woman Vol. 4: The Four Horsewomen
Issues #82-83, #750-758, and Wonder Woman Annual #3, being the return of Steve Orlando to the title after the departure of G. Willow Wilson. I’d have guessed the entire issue #750 wouldn’t be in here, since it’s getting its own deluxe edition, and instead just Orlando’s relevant bit, but the solicitation talks about contributions from Colleen Doran, Mariko Tamaki, Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo, and Gail Simone and Greg Rucka, so maybe it’s got it all.
• Wonder Woman: The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 5
In hardcover, Action Comics #142, Wonder Woman #35-47, and Sensation Comics #90-104.
• Young Justice Book 2: Growing Up
In paperback, issues #14-25 of the animated tie-in comic by Greg Weisman.
• Young Romance: Have a Fling The Deluxe Edition
Deluxe-size collection of stories from the 1950s through the 1970s: Millennium Editions: Young Romance #1; Falling in Love #99; Heart Throbs #56, #75, and #83; Secret Hearts #30, #41, and #67; and Young Romance #125, #127, #134, #137, #144, #150, #154, #157, #159, #167, #170, #190-191, #196-197, and #208.
• Zatanna: The Jewel of Gravesend
Young adult graphic novel by Alys Arden and Jacquelin de Leon, setting Zatanna in New York.
Flash/Impulse, WW by WML v2, GL: Circle of Fire, Green Arrow (Connor Hawke), Final Night, Birds of Prey by Simone v2(?), GK: Contested, JLA by Waid Deluxe, Flashpoint Omnibus (FINALLY), and Legion Before Darkness (will we get GDS reprinted after the second volume of Before Darkness please??), Batman's Grave, WW by Orlando, JLO's last volume, and maybe Power of Shazam.
ReplyDeleteCan someone explain what's going on with Simone's Birds of Prey new collections? There's a listing in the database for a reprint of Blood and Circuits (which is not particularly compatible with the above listing), and there's a gap between Fighters by Trade and the first big volume released around the movie (Murder and Mystery or something like that).
My best guess is that when they actually solicit the second thick Birds of Prey by Simone trade, they'll change its subtitle so it actually matches its contents, which should be issues #68-80. And after the Fighters by Trade TPB, I'll be curious to see if they'll just finish Simone's run with a 17-issue trade or collect her last arc (issues #104-108) along with the beginning of Bedard's run.
DeleteThanks. That was kind of my guess, but I have given up expecting the best from DC's trade department.
DeleteSince they aren't titling these w/Simone's name, my guess is they'll just keep rolling into Bedard's run.
A second "Before Darkness" trade would completely bridge the gap between Legion Archives 13 and the Great Darkness deluxe, giving us a complete Legion collection from 1958 to 1984!
ReplyDeleteThe two Superboy and the Legion of Superheroes trades from 2017-2018 cover that gap. Would be nice if the dccp, jla, and worlds finest appearances could get collected, but otherwise we'll be good with this volume.
DeleteNo third volume of City of Tomorrow and Man
ReplyDeleteof Steel HCs feels like a letdown
I didn't think that there would be a 3rd City of Tomorrow, given that there have been new editions of Emperor Joker and President Lex recently.
DeleteThe absence of a follow up to the Exile and other stories omnibus disappoints me, though.
For modern collections, there are probably 2 Omnibuses needed to cover the gap between Silver Age v3 and Superboy and the Legion v1
ReplyDeleteThat Green Arrow trade is a sight for sore eyes. I have been thinking of getting my Connor Hawke issues bound but the solicitation gives me hope that they will collect his whole run. I'm surprised they are skipping the storyline between this story and the end of Grell's run. That just seems silly to me.
ReplyDeleteI really hope the Impulse book comes out. This is the 3rd time they have gotten my hopes out. Waid at one point said the issues were the quality of the scans and that is why they couldn't make an omnibus. I wonder if that is still an issue. The digital copies look great on my iPad .
Wow, lots of good stuff here. I'm a huge Connor Hawke fan, so this is a must buy for me. I just love that character. Hoping to see a complete run eventually.
ReplyDeleteThe Legion in the new collection may be accessible, but I find it one of the worst Legion runs out there. Gerry Conway really dialed in some stories that didn't know how to take in the Legion's history and futuristic setting. Right out the bat is a really silly space circus story. Anyway, I think the only issues in this run leading up to GDS that have been collected are the handful of issues drawn by Steve Ditko. I'll get this volume and re-read these stories, but they've seared into mind even after all these years.
I checked that Black Canary volume with the Black Canary Archive and I'm pretty sure the contents are the same, so if anyone has that Archive they'll know they're double dipping.
The Superman team-ups book looks great, but I wish they'd just collected the full fun of DCCP. And super relieved to see that final volume of B&B.
And I tried to figure out the angle of that Romance comics collection but I couldn't find any, although that cover is by Kirby.
They've come really close to covering all of the crisis crossovers; between the trades series and the crisis on infinite Earth's companions I think all that got left out was Family Crisis.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, there's a lot of room for more volumes of the Team-ups. Most of the DCCP annuals would have gone there, some Ultraa stories, probably more I'm not aware of.
Is Crisis in the Thunderbolt Dimension traded somewhere? I know the last team-up is in the Justice League Detroit omnibus (in addition to the COIE companion).
DeleteCollected in DC Comics Classics Library: Justice League of America by George Perez Vol.2.
DeleteWait, really? Perez didn't draw JLA 219 & 220.
DeleteHmmm....My fault, sorry. Just double checked and only the cover is collected. Looks like it hasn't been.
DeleteCouple more things: Excited about the Richard Dragon book, and hope the early 2000s series gets collected soon.
ReplyDeleteThe DC Experiments book look pretty good, but not sure why they're putting the super hero stuff there unless it's to boost sales. But a book like this without Thriller or Wasteland? Nope. Not cool.
Just popping in to say John Byrne's Generations is a fantastic series and I will be buying that book! That Starman compendium is pretty crazy too. I blew tons of money on those out of print omnibuses way back when.
ReplyDeleteMy guess is, that the Tower of Babel HC will not inlcude JLA Annual #3, but JLA Secret Files and Origins #3 which uncluded a Tower of Babel tie-in.
ReplyDeleteLooking at the solicit for Flash v14, it's hitting me that Joshua Williamson will have written more issues of the Flash than Waid or Johns. Who'd have believed?
ReplyDeleteWent and pre-ordered that Gen13 trade. I was just a little too young to be reading it when it first came out.
ReplyDeleteAny word on when the Justice League tie in to death metal are going to be released?
ReplyDeleteThe collection of issues #48-52 isn't out until May. This list takes us through the summer, so I'd guess toward the end of 2021 unless it gets retro-solicited.
DeleteEnd of September is your answer.
Delete