I must say, the DC Comics Fall 2021 hardcover and trade paperback catalog solicitations begin to feel like a return to form to me. I was rather concerned when the Summer 2021 solicitations only contained 62 books, but now we’re up to 114 — so, a rising trend — and I’m pleased to see the mix of old and new titles here.
We’re hardly back in the era of truly surprising releases, nothing like Aquaman: Sub-Diego or new volumes of Infinity, Inc. or like a series of Blue Devil collections or something. But I’ve got to give it to DC for what seems like the end of the Batman: The Caped Crusader volumes and the near-end of the Batman: The Dark Knight Detective volumes — give or take one or two, that’s every issue of Batman and Detective between Batman’s post-Crisis debut and “Knightfall” collected, and that’s a massive accomplishment (especially in about four years).
Along those reprint lines, Green Lantern: The Power of Ion suggests the Judd Winick reprints of his Kyle Rayner run are continuing (though unseating, it seems, the Ron Marz trades). Milestone Compendium looks to be a massive collection of most if not all of the Milestone series in one place. The Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters Saga Omnibus Vol. 2 has issues even not included in the recent Grell paperbacks, which, phooey, but maybe we’ll get one more paperback out of it. The Power of Shazam! collections of the Jerry Ordway series continue, and also I know some of you were hoping for the start of Batman: No Man’s Land omnibuses.
Other notables on my list include Batman '89 in October and Superman '78 in November, two wonderfully weird presents showcasing the power of comics. I’m awaiting Endless Winter for no good reason, just my love of crossovers, and I’m pleased to see the Inferior Five collection I didn’t think we’d get. Tom King’s Rorschach and Strange Adventures on the same day is a real treat, too.
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So, let’s take a look at the full list …
• Absolute Jack Kirby's Fourth World Vol. 2
The first Absolute volume contained the contents of the Fourth World Omnibus Vols. 1 and 2, so presumably this would be the third and fourth and end the collection series.
• Absolute Swamp Thing By Alan Moore Vol. 3
Collects the end of Alan Moore's Swamp Thing run, Saga of the Swamp Thing #51-64 and DC Comics Presents #85.
• 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.
[See the latest DC trade solicitations.]
• All-Star Superman: The Deluxe Edition
Perhaps kind of astounding this didn’t already exist, it’s a deluxe-size edition of the 12-issue miniseries by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely.
Scott Snyder and Rafael Albuquerque’s newest American Vampire miniseries, in hardcover.
• Amethyst: Princess of Gemworld
YA graphic novel by Sharon and Dale Hale and Asiah Fulmore.
• Aquaman: 80 Years of the King of the Seven Seas: The Deluxe Edition
Another of DC's anniversary hardcovers. The solicited contents for this are way off base, describing a range of 50 to 100 comics, though some of the quirky one-offs named are interesting — JLA: Our Worlds at War #1 and Outsiders: Five of a Kind - Metamorpho/Aquaman #1, for two. Coming in September.
Paperback collection of the seven-issue miniseries by Joe Hill and Leomacs, following the hardcover.
This was solicited back in 2019 and I thought we got it, but it appears not. Collects the latter part of Batgirl's New 52 adventures, the "Burnside era" — Batgirl #35-52, Batgirl Annual #3, Secret Origins #10 and DC Sneak Peek: Batgirl #1.
Well, Batman '66 was not my speed, but this sure is. I'm very excited to head back into the Tim Burton-verse and eager to see what Sam Hamm and Joe Quinones have cooked up. I'm perfectly open to spin-offs and crossovers, too. This is the first 12 chapters of the digital series.
• The Batman & Scooby-Doo Mysteries Vol. 1
Issues #1-12 of the new Sholly Fisch series.
• Batman and Robin ... and Howard
YA graphic novel by Jedi Academy’s Jeffrey Brown.
Said to collect Batman #1 and #355 (original series, first appearance and a well-regarded issue from the 1980s), Catwoman #54 (solicitation says the 1933 series, which doesn’t exist; there’s a #54 issue from Devin Grayson and Jim Balent in 1998 that has been reprinted before), Catwoman #25 (New 52 “Zero Year” issue), Catwoman #1–4 (four-issue late-1980s mini by Mindy Newell, following Batman: Year One and often collected as Catwoman: Her Sister’s Keeper), Catwoman Secret Files #1 (from the Ed Brubaker run; if I had to guess, it’s either “The Many Lives of Selina Kyle” or “Why Holly Isn’t Dead”), Superman’s Girlfriend Lois Lane #70–71 (hypnotized Lois becomes Catwoman’s partner and Superman is transformed into a cat[?!], from the 1960s), and the Catwoman entry from Who’s Who Update '87#2.
Hardcover collection of the new series, collecting issues #1-6. With James Tynion, J.H. Williams, Paul Dini, Andy Kubert, G. Willow Wilson, Tom King, Mitch Gerads, Gabriel Hardman, and Corinna Bechko, and more.
• Batman By Scott Snyder & Greg Capullo Omnibus Vol. 2
In hardcover, collecting Batman #34-52 (being the Joker "Endgame" event through "Superheavy" and the end of Snyder and Capullo's regular run), a story from Detective Comics #27, Batman Annual #3-4, Batman: Futures End #1, DC Sneak Peek: Batman #1, a story from Detective Comics #1000, and Batman: Last Knight on Earth #1-3. That inclusion of Last Knight is pretty key for bringing a lot of the other "flash forwards" in the series to fruition. I'd venture all that's missing for the full reading experience is Dark Knights: Metal given how that book tied together some of the other otherwise-random pieces of this series.
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.
• Batman Vol. 4: The Cowardly Lot Part One
Spinning off apparently from Infinite Frontier, this is James Tynion and Jorge Jimenez's Batman #106-111, plus apparently some/all of Infinite Frontier #1 (and not Infinite Frontier #0, unless this is a misprint).
Hardcover collection of the new Neal Adams six-issue miniseries.
• Batman: Arkham Asylum: The Deluxe Edition
Another deluxe-size collection of the story by Grant Morrison and Dave McKean; notably we also saw a recent 25th anniversary deluxe edition.
• Batman: Curse of the White Knight
Paperback collection of the eight-issue miniseries by Sean Murphy.
• Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 6: Road to Ruin
Peter Tomasi's final Detective Comics collection (and the final collection before Future State and Mariko Tamaki's run); this is issues #1028-1033, seeing Damian Wayne return to the title. In paperback in October.
• Batman: Last Knight on Earth
Paperback, following the hardcover, of the three-issue DC Black Label series by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo.
• Batman: Li'l Gotham: Calendar Daze
Collects the recent Li'l Gotham #1-6 by Dustin Nguyen and Derek Fridolfs.
• Batman: No Man's Land Omnibus Vol. 1
Collects the equivalent of the first two (of four) No Man's Land "complete" editions, being *Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #116-121, Azrael: Agent of the Bat #51-57, Batman #563-568, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #83-88, Detective Comics #730-735, Catwoman #72-74, Robin #67, Batman Chronicles #16-17, Nightwing #35-37, Batman: No Man's Land #1, Batman: No Man's Land Gallery #1, and Young Justice in No Man's Land #1.
New hardcover printing of the graphic novel by Lee Bermejo.
• Batman: The Brave And 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, Swamp Thing and more.
• Batman: The Caped Crusader Vol. 6
Collects Batman #475-483 and Detective Comics #642, including the Ventriloquist and Maxie Zeus, and creative teams including Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle, and Doug Moench and Jim Aparo. Notably, this book ends right where the Batman: Prelude to Knightfall collection begins; the solicitation doesn't call this the last volume, but I wouldn't be surprised if it is. If so, I'm so glad this collection series of Batman's post-Crisis adventures made it to its finish point, and what a wonderful set of books. I can only hope DC does the same thing with post-Crisis Superman at least up to "Death of Superman."
• Batman: The Court of Owls Deluxe Edition
Deluxe-size collection, but collecting — according to the solicitations — just issues #1-6 of Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo’s Batman.
• Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Vol. 6
Collects Detective Comics #622-633 from 1990-1991. Nothing particularly noteworthy I could discern about these issues, though they include stories by John Ostrander and by Marv Wolfman and Peter Milligan with art by Jim Aparo. Issue #627 is a multi-story "anniversary" issue of Batman's 600th appearance in Detective.
In comparison, this volume lines up with about Batman #455-466, or the contents of Batman: The Caped Crusader Vol. 4. See elsewhere in this list, where Batman: The Caped Crusader Vol. 6 appears to be ending that half of this series just before Prelude to Knightfall. That Caped Crusader book also includes Detective #642. If indeed "Knightfall" is where these books are ending and they collect about 10 issues per, then Dark Knight Detective probably has two more to go after this to end just before Detective #654.
• Batman: The Long Halloween Deluxe Edition
Deluxe edition of the 13-issue miniseries by Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale.
Paperback of James Tynion's first arc on Batman, issues #86-94. I tell you what, I liked this one a lot, and Batman Vol. 2: The Joker War was a surprising disappointment afterward. I'm hoping the third volume is a return to form.
• Batman: Urban Legends Vol. 1
Anthology of stories featuring Red Hood and Grifter by Chip Zdarsky and Matthew Rosenberg respectively. No word on whether the Harley Quinn or Outsiders stories are in here too. Said to be Batman: Urban Legends #1-6.
In hardcover, collecting the miniseries by Christos Gage and Reilly Brown.
Restarted numbering for Batman/Superman, though the individual issues keep on from the previous book (#16-21). I have high hopes for this from Gene Luen Yang; depicting the Golden Age Superman seems to have been where he's had the most success with DC, and indeed I've enjoyed Yang's superhero work far better when detached from the confines of the mainstream DCU. Having a powerhouse artist like Ivan Reis along for the ride shouldn't hurt either; here's hoping.
• Batman/Superman Vol. 2: World's Deadliest
Issues #7-15 and the first annual by Joshua Williamson, in paperback following the hardcover.
• Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Omnibus
Said to collect Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II, Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III, and material from the deluxe edition.
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 (the very endearing) Ryan Wilder 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.
• The Books of Magic Omnibus Vol. 2 (The Sandman Universe Classics)
Second omnibus by Peter Gross, including Books of Magic #33-75, Books of Magic Annuals #1-3, Books of Faerie #1-3, Vertigo: Winter’s Edge #1-3, Hellblazer: Books of Magic #1-2, Books of Faerie: Molly’s Story #1-4, and Vertigo Secret Files: Hellblazer #1. I wouldn't mind seeing these as a set of more affordably priced paperbacks.
• Catwoman Vol. 5: Valley of the Shadow of Death
Post-Future State, collecting Ram V and Fernando Blanco’s issues #29-33 in paperback.
The six-issue miniseries by Andy Schmidt and Kieran McKeown, spinning out of Dark Nights: Death Metal and Infinite Frontier.
• Crisis on Multiple Earths Book 2: Crisis Crossed
Pre-Crisis multiversal team-ups, including the Justice League, the Justice Society, Earth-X and the Freedom Fighters, Captain Marvel and the Marvel family, the Legion of Super-Heroes, Jonah Hex and more, being Justice League of America #91-92, #100-102, #107-108, #113-124, #135-137, #147-148, and #159-160. These are more-issue reprints of the former Crisis on Multiple Earths collections; this volume collects the third and fourth volumes of those and into the fifth.
Paperback of the six-issue Hill House miniseries by Larua Marks and Kelley Jones, following the hardcover.
• DC Comics: Girls Unite! Box Set
Includes four recent animated-series comics trades: Batman Adventures: Cat Got Your Tongue?, Supergirl Adventures: Girl of Steel, Batman Adventures: Batgirl: A League of Her Own, and Justice League Unlimited: Girl Power.
• DC Poster Portfolio: Jim Lee Vol. 2
Coming in November.
Covers just from the miniseries, which is really wild and unprecedented when you think about it.
• DC Super Hero Girls: Ghosting
YA graphic novel that introduces Katana to the series.
• DC Through the ‘80s: The Heroes
The final volume of the Paul Levitz series, and collecting titles like John Byrne's Man of Steel #1 and Marv Wolfman and George Perez's New Teen Titans #1 (being, let's note, a big pre-Crisis/post-Crisis split). Judging by the solicitation cover, looks like an issue of Crisis on Infinite Earths itself might be in there.
• DC Universe by Dwayne McDuffie
Stories by the late Dwayne McDuffie, including Action Comics #847; The Demon #26-29; Impulse #60; a story from JLA Showcase 80-Page Giant #1; the black-and-white backup from Batman: Gotham Knights #27; Sins of Youth: Kid Flash/Impulse #1, and Firestorm: The Nuclear Man #33-35.
• Deathstroke by Christopher Priest Omnibus
What I would call one of the best comics series of the past decade, a really wild and uncompromising take on Deathstroke and every friend is a foe and every foe is a friend (and both are family!) depending on the day. If you didn’t read this the first time around, no excuses for skipping it now. Collects Deathstroke: Rebirth #1, Titans #11, Teen Titans #28-29,Deathstroke #1-50, Titans: The Lazarus Contract Special #1, DC Holiday Special 2017 #1, Deathstroke Annual #1 (being among other things the “Lazarus Contract” and “Terminus Agenda” crossovers with two different iterations of Titans.
Issues #1-6 by Mike Carey and Peter Gross in paperback, following the hardcover.
In paperback, the 12-issue miniseries by G. Willow Wilson and Nick Robles.
Collects Fables #114-149. One more volume to collect the trade-sized Fables #150 and some extras?
The collection of Far Sector feels like it's been a long time coming and I'm eager to read it, especially since it's been getting such good reviews and that Green Lantern Jo Mullein will be appearing in the main title after Future State. By N.K. Jemisin and Jamal Campbell, in paperback in October.
• The Flash by Geoff Johns Omnibus Vol. 3
Arrives now at collecting Geoff Johns' post-Wally West work with Barry Allen. Said to collect Final Crisis: Rogue’s Revenge #1-3, Flash: Rebirth #1-6, Flash #1-12, Blackest Night: The Flash #1-3, Flash Secret Files and Origins 2010 #1, and Flashpoint #1-5.
• The Flash Vol. 15: Finish Line
Being the final collection of Flash by writer Joshua Williamson, this should be about issues #756-762, ahead of a short run by Kevin Shinick, “Endless Winter,” and Future State.
• Fourth World by Jack Kirby Omnibus (New Printing)
New printing of the omnibus containing the entirety of Jack Kirby’s “Fourth World” saga, being also the contents of the four original omnibus volumes. I’d darn well hope this won’t be cancelled just because of the unfortunate news about the New Gods movie.
• Gen 13: Starting Over: The Deluxe Edition
Someone else might know better, but this seems to be the earliest issues of the first Gen 13 miniseries and series by Jim Lee, Brandon Choi, and J. Scott Campbell. Collects Gen 13: Lost in Paradise #1, Gen 13 #1-5, Gen 13 European Vacation #1, Gen 13 Backlist #1, Gen 13 #0-5, Wildstorm Universe Sourcebook #1, and Gen 13: Encore No. 1.
• Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters Saga Omnibus Vol. 2
The latter half of Mike Grell's Green Arrow run, including Green Arrow #51-80, Green Arrow Annual #4-6, Who's Who #14, Brave and the Bold #1-6, Shado: Song of the Dragon #1-4, and Green Arrow: The Wonder Year #1-4. Yes, the recent Grell paperbacks did not include the Shado or Brave and the Bold miniseries and yes, I am annoyed.
• The Green Lantern Season Two Vol. 1
Paperback, following the hardcover, of issues #1-6.
• Green Lantern Vol 1: Invictus
In paperback and starring John Stewart, Teen Lantern Keli Quintela, and Far Sector's Jo Mullein. This collects Future State: Green Lantern #1-2 and Green Lantern #1-4; the solicitation mentions the presence of Jessica Cruz, but I think that's a reference to Future State and not the series itself.
• Green Lantern: The Power of Ion
Even as DC paused the Green Lantern: Kyle Rayner collections of Ron Marz's work after two volumes (at Green Lantern #65), it seems they've picked up again with the Judd Winick run. Following the recent Green Lantern: Circle of Fire collection (issues #129-136 and Brian Vaughan's "Circle of Fire" miniseries), this is issues #137-150 (including a "Joker's Last Laugh" tie-in issue) and Green Lantern: Our Worlds at War. Winick would remain on the book until issue #164.
• Harley Quinn Vol. 1: No Good Deed
The first post-Future State volume by Stephanie Nicole Phillips and Riley Rossmo.
Box set including Basketful of Heads, Low, Low Woods, Dollhouse Family, Daphne Byrne, Plunge, and Sea Dogs, in paperback. Now if DC could find a way to release all of these in one volume sans box, I might pick it up.
• House of El Book Two: The Enemy Delusion
YA graphic novel by Claudia Gray and Eric Zawadzski. Hey, did you see CW Seed has both seasons of Krypton for streaming?
There is a whole lot about an Inferior Five miniseries set in the midst of DC’s 1980s Invasion! crossover and with contributions by Keith Giffen and Jeff Lemire that I’m very interested in. But consider me part of the problem, because low sales (for the niche pitch and also people like me waiting for the trade) caused this to be cut down from 12 to six issues. Obviously, perhaps bizarrely, DC thinks there’s a market for the trade; if it comes out, I’ll get it, though I’m myself wary of a plotted miniseries that got cut in half.
In hardcover, collecting issues #1-6 by James Tynion and Guillem March. The promo art has Bane(!) in the background; I wonder if that's an index cover from "City of Bane" or if Tynion will be picking that character back up after the events of Tom King's run. Anyway, I'm most excited here to see James Gordon get the spotlight and also for the return of Bluebird Harper Row.
• Joker/Harley: Criminal Sanity
I’ve heard good things about this DC Black Label series. Collecting in hardcover Joker/Harley: Criminal Sanity #1–8 and the Joker/Harley: Criminal Sanity Secret Files by Kami Garcia and Mico Suayan.
• Justice League Dark: The New 52 Omnibus
Since this is called “The New 52 Omnibus” and the issues collected are from the New 52, I guess that’s what this is, though the solicitation copy is describing the Rebirth series.
What I'd say is pretty notable here is that this collects not just Peter Milligan's slow start to the series and Jeff Lemire's fantastic shot in the arm, but also all of the "Trinity of Sin" crossover with the other Justice League books of the time and also the "Forever Evil: Blight" crossover between a bunch of DC's magic books.
You should read my review of Blight, by the way, which makes the Herculean effort of trying to encapsulate this giant 18-issue crossover (about which I wrote, "As befits the menagerie of magical characters who populate the story, Blight is in part a wonder to behold and in part total chaos"). The oddly structured "Blight" is actually two stories, one 10 issues and one eight, the latter of which having nothing to do with the "Blight" of the first even though it shares the title. The quality waxes and wanes, but is for the most part good, and the old adage holds that even if it's not great, there's certainly a lot of it here. Oh my god you will have your fill of Constantine, Zatanna, Swamp Thing, Deadman, and the rest by the time you finish this.
Anyway, this is I, Vampire #7-8, Justice League Dark #0-40, Justice League #22-23, Justice League Dark Annual #1-2, Justice League of America #6-7, Trinity of Sin: The Phantom Stranger #14-17, Constantine #9-12, Trinity of Sin: Pandora #6-9, and Justice League Dark: Futures End #1.
Justice League #53–57 by Joshua Williamson and Xermanico, tying of course into Death Metal and being the final issues before “Endless Winter,” Future State, and the Brian Michael Bendis run of the title. Coming in September.
• Justice League: Endless Winter
Not that I really thought DC wasn't going to collect Endless Winter, but I'm glad to see it on the schedule. Good, bad, or indifferent, gotta love a real inter-title-based crossover, and especially by just one team. Collects Aquaman #66, Flash #767, Justice League #58, Justice League Dark #29, Justice League: Endless Winter #1-2, Teen Titans: Endless Winter Special #1, Black Adam: Endless Winter Special #1, and Superman: Endless Winter Special #1.
I just wish this was being released before the Future State collection, like the original publications, and not afterward (coming in November), though I imagine as close as DC can get this to the Black Adam movie, the better.
• Legends of the Dark Knight: Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez
Collects Batman #272, #311, #313-314, #318, #321, #336-337, #353 (1940s series), Batman ’66: The Lost Episode #1 (2006), Batman Confidential #26-28 (2006), Batman Family #3 (1975-1978), Batman: Gotham Knights #10 (2000), DC Comics Presents #31 and #41 (1978-1986), DC Special Series #21 (1977), Detective Comics #454, #458-459, #483, and #487 (1937), The Best of the Brave and the Bold #1-6 (1988), The Brave and the Bold #164 and #171 (1955), The Joker #4 (1975), The Untold Legend of the Batman #1-3 (1980), and World’s Finest Comics #244, #255, and #258 (1941 series).
• Legion of Super-Heroes: Before the Darkness Vol. 2
Collects Legion of Super-Heroes #272-283 and Best of DC: Blue Ribbon Digest #24, coming in January.
Paperback collecting issues #1-6 of the Hill House miniseries by Carmen Maria Machado, following the hardcover.
• Man-Bat
Can't get too excited about a five-issue Man-Bat miniseries that either ignores the character's portrayal in Justice League Dark or is out-and-out out of continuity.
I have thought from time to time about trying to pick up all the existing Milestone trades — here DC just made it easy for me. This is, at the least, Blood Syndicate #1-12, Hardware #1-12, Icon #1-10, Static #1-8, and Xombi #0-11. The solicitation doesn't make clear whether we might also see Shadow Cabinet, Kobalt, the Heroes miniseries or other crossovers and spin-offs. The Milestone character appearances from the late 2000s Brave and the Bold series would be icing on the cake.
Collects New Teen Titans (Volume 2) #24-31 and the New Teen Titans (Volume 2) Annual #2. Also mentioned are Tales of the Teen Titans #84-88, which would just be covers since they're reprints of New Teen Titans #24-27 (one wonders if the covers of issues #89-92 will be in there, too). These are by Marv Wolfman and Eduardo Barreto, with the Hybrid, the Brotherhood of Evil, Brother Blood, and Robin Jason Todd. We're in the midst of 2019's New Teen Titans Omnibus Vol. 4 now; the fifth omnibus (2021) collects up to New Teen Titans #49.
Update: The above is the contents of New Teen Titans Vol. 12, so looks like the solicitation has bad info. Contents are probably around half the distance between New Teen Titans #32 and #49.
In hardcover, collecting the digital series by John Ridley and Tony Akins, spinning out of (into?) Future State.
• Nightwing Vol. 1: Stepping Into the Light
The first Nightwing volume post-Future State, renumbered again, by Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo. Collects issues #78-83 in paperback, coming in December.
• Other History of the DC Universe
Also a long time coming, John Ridley's five-issue miniseries, in hardcover in November.
• Plunge
Six issue miniseries by Joe Hill and Stuart Immonen, in paperback following the hardcover.
• The 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?
In hardcover, collecting issues #1-12 by Tom King and Jorge Fornes. This is said to be released in December on the same day as King’s Strange Adventures hardcover — a good day for King fans.
• Saga of the Swamp Thing Box Set
Box set of six Alan Moore Swamp Thing collections. Not sure if these are hardcover or paperback but I’m pretty sure they won’t use the infamous sticky glossy covers.
• The Sandman: The Deluxe Edition Book Four
I would like these all to come out before the Netflix series debuts. Thank you and good night.
Arriving in November, this is issues #51-69 and Vertigo Jam #1, being the "World's End" and "Kindly Ones" collections. (Next and last, I would certainly hope, should be "The Wake," issues #70-75, plus Sandman: Overture, Endless Nights, and the two versions of Dream Hunters.)
Collects the digital first series with contributions from Stephanie Phillips, Alyssa Wong, Meghan Hetrick, Bruno Rodondo, and Eleonora Carlini.
In hardcover by Tom King, Mitch Gerads, and Doc Shaner, collecting Strange Adventures #1-12. Said to be released in December on the same day as King’s Rorschach collection.
• Suicide Squad Vol. 1: Give Peace a Chance
Robbie Thompson has done well on Teen Titans in partnership with Adam Glass; hopefully Suicide Squad gets a bump here just the same as Titans did. Certainly a Talon among the team, and Superboy Conner Kent, piques my interest. Interesting also that this book includes both Suicide Squad #1-6 and also Future State: Suicide Squad #1-2.
• Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes (Tabloid Edition)
A reprint of what was originally published as All-New Collectors' Edition #C-55, a new Legion story by Paul Levitz and Mike Grell printed in tabloid 10" x 14" size, featuring the wedding of Saturn Girl and Lightning Lad.
I can't decide if I'm more excited about this or Batman '89. Thinking about it is quite the nostalgia trip; there are times in my life where I'd have equally been more excited for one of these over the other. (Fortunately, I don't have to choose!) For the fact that Christopher Reeve is no longer with us, this one might win out in my heart, though it also seems the tougher to write for Robert Venditti, needing as it does (as I understand it) to slot between Superman and Superman II.
• Superman & Lois Lane: The 25th Wedding Anniversary Deluxe Edition
I don't think what I'm about to say is particularly controversial, but apologies in advance if I offend anyone: the entire 1990s Superman: The Wedding Album storyline was not very good.
We all know the story that the Triangle Titles Super-team wanted to marry Clark and Lois much earlier but were asked to hold off to mesh with the Lois & Clark TV show, which — to the benefit of all of us — ended up netting us "Death of Superman." But when the TV wedding did come, apparently it was without much notice for the comics teams. They had to scramble under inopportune circumstances — not only had Clark and Lois inartfully broken up at this time, but Superman currently had no powers (in the most high-profile storyline he'd probably see outside "Death") on account of the fallout from the Final Night crossover.
While artist Stuart Immonen gets a romantic reunion sequence in, this was not a strong tiem for the Triangle Titles artists overall — neither the Wedding Album nor the issues that followed are good-looking books overall. The larger story sees Clark and Lois going off on their honeymoon and running afoul of an international terrorist. Again, we're talking about a pretty high-profile Superman story here that by and large doesn't involve the superhero Superman nor any of his best-recognized enemies.
Strange as it sounds, I rather always hoped DC might re-do this story one day; it's a pretty big dropped football and squanders a lot of the good work that the earlier Triangle Titles teams did going in to the Lois/Clark engagement.
Happy 25th anniversary! Said to collect Superman #118, Adventures of Superman #541, Action Comics #728, Superman: The Man of Steel #63, and Superman: The Wedding Album #1.
Cat’s out of the bag apparently, and this seems pretty momentous given the writing power of Grant Morrison and the drawing power of Mikel Janin. I’m none too worried about “Superman changed forever” given this appears to be just a two-issue miniseries. And is that Kitty “Rampage” Faulkner as an OMAC? Sign me up.
Hardcover collecting issues #1-6, with stories by John Ridley, Brandon Easton and Steve Lieber, Wes Craig, and Marguerite Bennett and Jill Thompson. Someone really ought do a “Superman Red/Superman Blue” story for this series.
• Superman Vol. 1: The Man Who Fell
Collects Action Comics #1029 and Superman #29-32 in paperback in November, the start of the new run by Phillip Kennedy Johnson and Scott Godlewski. Jon Kent is front and center there, which wouldn't be my choice — I'd as soon keep him in the future with the Legion of Super-Heroes and let Lois and Clark keep doing what they were doing — but my sense is consensus goes the other way.
• Superman: Action Comics Volume 5: House of Kent
Brian Michael Bendis' final Action Comics collection, with John Romita, coming in September in paperback. Collects Action #1022-1028. Bendis' next Superman collection is out in May, said to collect issues #20-24; there, Bendis' run ends with issue #28, and I'm curious to see if Superman Vol. 4: Mythological will also include those final issues or if there'll be one more collection still to go.
• Superman: The Man of Steel Vol. 4
Said to collect Superman #16-22, Adventures of Superman #439-444, Action Comics #598-600, and the Superman Annual #2. Probably also the crossover issue Doom Patrol #10, which was included in the original Man of Steel paperbacks. Notably Superman #22 is where John Byrne's run ended, as well as the original Man of Steel paperbacks — whether these books continue on from here or not would really be telling.
• Superman/Batman Omnibus Vol. 2
Collects Superman/Batman issues #44-87 and Annuals #3-5. This is roughly the original collection volumes 7-12 (Search for Kryptonite, Finest Worlds, Night & Day, Big Noise, Worship, and Sorcerer Kings) and/or the new paperbacks from the middle of Vol. 4 through Vol. 7. With Mike Johnson and Michael Green, Joe Casey, Len Wein, Scott Kolins, Paul Levitz, Judd Winick, Joshua Williamson, Cullen Bunn, James Robinson, and Joshua Hale Fialkov, and tying in to Blackest Night and Final Crisis, among others.
• The Swamp Thing Volume 1: Becoming
The first collection of Ram V’s new Swamp Thing series, said to collect issues #1-4 and Future State: Swamp Thing #1-2.
• Tales of the DC Universe: Mark Waid Vol. 1
Collects Superman #114, Adventures of Superman #536, Action Comics #723, and Superman: The Man of Steel #58 ("Identity Crisis," Brainiac takes over Superman's body); Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight Annual #4 (Elseworlds, blending Batman with Citizen Kane); Action Comics #572, #576, #641, and #737; Detective Comics Annual #2, Adventures of Superboy #7, Green Lantern Corps Quarterly #2, Metamorpho #1-4, and a story from DC Universe Holiday Bash #1. And that's just volume one!
• Teen Titans Academy Vol. 1: X Marks His Spot
In hardcover, coming in January, the first collection by Tim Sheridan and Rafa Sandoval.
• Teen Titans: Beast Boy Loves Raven
New middle-grade graphic novel by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo.
• Teen Titans: Raven, Beast Boy, and Beast Boy Loves Raven Box Set
Box set of hardcovers, apparently, of the three YA graphic novels by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo.
In paperback — no word on contents so far. Presumably this is Alan Moore’s issues #1-22, but no word if #23-36 or the spin-offs are in there.
In paperback, said to include Top Ten #1-12, America's Best Comics Special #1, Smax #1-5, Top Ten: 49’ers #1, Top Ten: Beyond the Farthest Precinct #1-5, Top Ten: Season 2 #1-4, and Top Ten: Season 2 #1.
Paperback collecting the digital-first series with stories including Vixen and John Constantine, by Geoffrey Thorne and others.
• Unearthed: A Jessica Cruz Story
Cool to see relatively new character Jessica Cruz getting the spotlight in this immigration-focused YA graphic novel by Lilliam Rivera and Steph C. I appreciate that DC’s mining new classic characters for these as well as old favorites.
• 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!
• Wonder Woman by George Perez Vol. 6
The final of the smaller paperback cut-down collections of the Wonder Woman by George Perez omnibuses, collecting Wonder Woman #58–62 and War of the Gods #1–4. This maps exactly to the Wonder Woman: War of the Gods omnibus, but in comparison to the Wonder Woman by George Perez Omnibus Vol. 3 it leaves out the Wonder Woman issues #168–169 and #600 short story by Perez, unless they ultimately make it in.
• Wonder Woman Vol. 1: Afterworlds
In paperback, the first post-Future State volume (with new numbering) by Becky Cloonan, Michael Conrad, and Travis Moore. Collecting issues #770-779.
• Wonder Woman: Agent of Peace
Collects the 10-issue digital series by Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti, pitting Wonder Woman, Etta Candy, and Steve Trevor against Cheetah, Harley Quinn, Deadshot, Penguin, and more.
• Wonder Woman: Blood and Guts: The Deluxe Edition
The first 12 issues of the New 52 series by Brian Azzarello and Cliff Chiang. We have also already seen this reprinted as an Absolute.
• Wonder Woman: The Silver Age Omnibus Vol. 1
From the 1950s and '60s, Wonder Woman #98-123, including apparently the introduction of "Wonder Tot" and appearances by Hippolyta. The solicitation says this is the first time these have been reprinted in color.
• Wonder Woman: Who Is Wonder Woman? The Deluxe Edition
This was a kind-of notable post-Infinite Crisis Wonder Woman story which, as its main claim to fame, brought some of the super spy Diana Prince trappings back to Wonder Woman, but all of that was short-lived. To be sure, DC's draw for reprinting this now is that writer Allan Heinberg also wrote the screenplay for the first recent Wonder Woman movie.
• Wonderful Women of the World
As I understand it, a young adult graphic novel featuring illustrated biographies of prominent women, edited by Laurie Halse Anderson.
So many thoughts!
ReplyDelete*Batman: With Caped Crusader presumably over and Dark Knight Detective probably finishing soon, it'll be interesting to see which way they go next. I'd vote moving to HCs of the Denny O'Neil era - he didn't write consecutively for too many stretches or for very long, but they could put his name on a ton of volumes from the 70s.
The Burnside, Snyder, and Batwoman omnis basically finish off all the bat-properties in omnibus form for the New 52 (Morrison v3, Tomasi, Simone's Batgirl, Nightwing, and Grayson). There's Patrick Gleeson's Robin series (only 12 issues), Andreyko's Batwoman (exceedingly not good), and Talon, plus Batman and Robin Eternal outstanding, right? B&RE is the only thing in there that makes sense, I think, other than one last Snyder companion (All Star, & and the Signal, Black Mirror, Gates of Gotham(?), assorted anniversary shorts) to catch a bunch of minis (and seems inevitable).
That means DC is going to need another omnibus direction, as well! Tom King's Batman seems obvious, although I don't know if they'll want Bat/Cat finished for a bit before starting that. Maybe continue past NML for New Gotham/Officer Down/Murderer/Fugitive? Lots of good stories and big names (Brubaker, Rucka, Grayson, Vaughn) in that run. Dixon's Robin? I know they stopped the fat tpbs (hey, they should pick those back up, as well as Cassandra Cain Batgirl), but maybe omnis will give them the return they want? Bridging Knightfall to NML is the only other big idea - at least Contagion/Legacy would be worthwhile.
*Green Lantern: Should be one more fat tpb to finish out Winick's run, then 17 issues to the end of the title (Ben Raab for 11 and then Marz for 6 more leading into the Ion miniseries). I'd like to see a single-collection Ion tpb, if nothing else, but I'd be happy to see them run through the whole thing. I'd guess we're not going to go back to the abandoned Marz tpbs anytime soon, so finish something!
*Green Arrow: VERY happy about the second Grell omni. That'll be very satisfying. I wonder if they'll fill in the gap between this and the solicited-then-moved/abandoned Connor Hawke tpb series or not. It's just about 10 issues, so easily collected but perhaps very hard to market. I do hope the Connor collection does reappear in official solicits at some point.
Flash: Nice to see Flashpoint in the by Johns omni. I hope that means we'll get the last (v7, I think) Flash by Johns fat tpb at some point. I really do enjoy having them all across the shelf, and it'd be a shame if they ruin it right at the end.
It's a little disheartening to not see a continuation of the WW Flash series after Savage Velocity. I'd also love a hint as to whether or not the Death of Iris West is a one-off or that start of collecting the end of the pre-COIE Barry series.
LoSH: The Great Darkness Saga and The Curse have been collected in Delxue Edition and tpb - maybe we're heading towards getting them in HC to match the Superboy and the Legion + Before Darkness collections? And maybe we can continue those HCs into the rest of the basically-uncollected Levitz run on LOSH? Please? Or switch formats and give us an omnibus? Anything?
Superman: Superman and the Authority sounds like the proper swan song for Morrison (if it is his last title). I imagine DC can find some more material for a couple more Man of Steel collections - World of Krypton, etc.
New paragraph to once again voice my displeasure at Bendis's run no longer being collected in HC. My shelf OCD weeps at this, DC!
Tom King: Very happy to see Adam Strange and Rorschach coming on the same day. That's cool. Too bad they couldn't slip Bat/Cat in there, too, that's not really in the cards.
I'd like to see the Green Arrow collections continue — the rest of Ollie and then into Conner. Unfortunately DC hits some trouble trying to collect post-Crisis Hal Jordan stuff. Hawkworld? I'd read the heck out of trades of the John Ostrander series and into the Hawkman series that followed.
DeleteThank you for the blog post, it was an entertaining Sunday read.
ReplyDeleteI find it interesting the recent love that DC has for the compendiums. Do they sell better at bookstores or are they cheap to produce? I am disappointed with the format on the milestone books. I was looking forward to a deluxe hardcover similar to the Booster Gold ones that had a lot of extras and that would have been a plus for me on Milestone since there are the series bible, the memos and the original designs. so many extra things you can’t get on the DC infinity app.
About the inferior five, while it was cut from 12 to 6, issues 4 and 5 were never release. I think I heard the series (of was it the backup story?) was completed years ago so is possible the trade would include the whole thing. Is going to be interesting to look at it since the pacing of the series didn’t allow it to end after 6 issues.
Personally I'm not even clear on what a "compendium" is. Absolute are Absolute-size, deluxe are deluxe-size, but there's so many issues in that Milestone Compendium, why not call it an omnibus? Is it omnibus if it's hardcover, compendium if it's paperback?
DeleteReally enjoy the website, I've been following it for the last few years. I was really hoping that we'd see a rescheduled release date for the, what I'm going to assume was an omni, Robin Unmasked.
ReplyDeleteI'd as soon see the Dixon Robin collections be finished, too. Willingham is a big name but that era of Robin wasn't my favorite.
DeleteSome great books here.
ReplyDeleteThe NML vol 2 Omni that would seem inevitable off the back off this list should include the Harley Quinn one-shot that marked her first canon appearance. It was omitted from the trades, let’s hope that gets fixed
I had forgotten the Harley one-shot got dropped. That's back when DC explicitly wanted Harley to have super-strength, etc. Agreed it should be back in there.
DeleteI can't believe it took them over a decade to make a deluxe edition of All Star Superman! My budget for comics is very limited, but I'm picking that one up for sure, I've been hoping for it for ten years.
ReplyDeleteDo you know if paperbacks for Strange Adventures and Rorschach would be too long after the hardcovers? It's been hard to gauge whether DC opts for hardcover or softcovers first in their new releases. I could have sworn Mister Miracle was a softcover initially... but I could be remembering wrong?
ReplyDeleteYeah, looks like Mister Miracle went from paperback to hardcover then deluxe. That's unusual, but I think it also shows the evolution of DC's certainty on Tom King products; winning an Eisner will make the publisher more bold, I guess. And Strange Adventures and Rorschach reap the benefits; usually the gap between hardcover and paperback is about six months to a year. It'll happen, no doubt.
Delete", that’s every issue of Batman and Detective between Batman’s post-Crisis debut and “Knightfall” collected... "
ReplyDeleteNot quite. "Batman" 401, the very first post-Crisis issue was never collected.
Yes. And a Legends tie-in, no less!
DeleteHi, I had a question maybe you could answer: What is the paper of the Caped Crusader / Dark Detective TPBs like? Is it more like the TPBs of current stories, or is it the sort of more rough paper they used in collections like Hellblazer or Doom Patrol? Thanks for always doing these solicitations posts, they're very useful.
ReplyDeleteEdelweiss+ has already removed DC THROUGH THE '80s: THE HEROES from the Fall 2021 catalog, though I'm sure it will reappear in the Spring 2022 catalog.
ReplyDeleteI still continue to want a lot of pre-Crisis material to be collected. I recently read the three-volume Batman and the Outsiders by Mike W. Barr, Jim Aparo, and Alan Davis. I'd love to see DC follow those volumes up with the the stories from Adventures of the Outsiders and The Outsiders.
After reading the 80th anniversary Green Arrow volume, I want a deluxe edition of the fantastic Mike W. Barr, Trevor von Eeden, and Dick Giordano miniseries from 1983. Yes, it would be small, but the recent Manhunter deluxe edition didn't have that many more pages.
Then, because I'm an optimist, there are still the Mr. And Mrs. Superman, Blackhawk by Evanier and Spiegle, Nemesis by Burkett and Spiegle, All-Star Squadron, Infinity, Inc., Human Target, Huntress (a second volume), Jonni Thunder, and so many others. And the complete 1992 JSA series by Strazewski and Parobeck with the crossover with the Justice League included. I have a list of probably 25 series I'd buy.
Yes, Outsiders. Also that JSA material. Bronze Age Doom Patrol not in omnibus format.
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