Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne
A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERA time-spanning graphic novel featuring Bruce Wayne's return to Gotham City to take back the mantle of Batman written byaward-winning writer Grant Morrison and illustrated by a stable to today's hottest artists including Chris Sprouse, Frazer Irvingand Yannick Paquette....
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A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERA time-spanning graphic novel featuring Bruce Wayne's return to Gotham City to take back the mantle of Batman written byaward-winning writer Grant Morrison and illustrated by a stable to today's hottest artists including Chris Sprouse, Frazer Irvingand Yannick Paquette. This is the final chapter of the epic storyline that began in the best-selling graphic novels, BATMAN:R.I.P. and FINAL CRISIS where the original Batman was lost in time after being bombarded with the omega beams of evil Des-pot,Darkseid and continued in BATMAN & ROBIN: BATMAN REBORN where Dick Grayson, the original Robin, tookover wearing the cape and cowl of the Dark Knight after the world's heroes believed his mentor to have died.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781401233822 (1401233821)
ASIN: 1401233821
Publish date: January 10th 2012
Publisher: DC Comics
Pages no: 232
Edition language: English
Category:
Science Fiction,
Time Travel,
Sequential Art,
Graphic Novels,
Comics,
Graphic Novels Comics,
Comic Book,
Superheroes,
Dc Comics,
Comics Manga,
Batman
Series: Batman
Never liked multiple artists on one series, even if I can understand why it was done. So far, least favourite Morrison Batman stuff, but I still liked and enjoyed it.
Not so much a cohesive story chronicling how Batman returned to life, or at least his own time, so much as it is an excuse for Grant Morrison to write Batman as a caveman, a pirate, etc. The individual stories are entertaining enough that I'd like to see Morrison on an anthology series like this. (G...
Not the greatest Batman comic in my opinion and by far not the worst. The major problem with this in the end was that it ended up feeling more along the lines of a Justice League or maybe a Superman comic. What really sets Batman comics apart is the battle with himself not to kill any of his extensi...
Neither the best nor the worst comic I've read by this author. I was confused through a lot of it, a fact that might have been alleviated if I read it closer and more carefully, but every time I tried to really give it a deep perusal, I lost interest because the secondary characters in this were by ...