DC Comics
Author of The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told
About the Author
Image credit: DC Comics logo
Series
Works by DC Comics
DC Super Friends - Super Heroes in Action & Join the League - Children's Board Book (Set of 2 Books) (2019) 11 copies
House of Mystery: The Bronze Age Omnibus Vol. 3 (House of Mystery: the Bronze Age Omnibus, 3) (2022) 9 copies
Superman Board Book 4-Pack (Battle of the Galaxy, Fortress of Solitude, Hero of the Metropolis, (2010) 7 copies, 1 review
Showcase Presents Batman 3 7 copies
The Super Heroes Annual 1983 4 copies
Swamp Thing - Annual 2 copies
Batman Begins [2005 comic] 2 copies
Green Arrow 2 copies
DC Comics JLA Sonderband # 17 - DAS JÜNGSTE GERICHT - Comic 2000 (DC Comics, JLA, Sonderband) (2000) 2 copies
Batman Annual (1985) 2 copies
The Prisoner book #a 1 copy
DC Super Hero Girls 1 copy
Sandman Lives #1 1 copy
Sandman Lives #2 1 copy
Nouveau Batman Poche 1 copy
DC 2000 1 copy
Batman: Vigilantes de Gotham 1 copy
Super-Homen #2 (1a série) 1 copy
Batman (2a série) 1 copy
Batman Annual (1983) 1 copy
The Vertigo Launch Checklist 1 copy
Super Adventure (#11) 1 copy
Superman: poder absoluto 1 copy
Superman: A origem 1 copy
Lego Cosmic Clash 1 copy
LEGO Nexo Knights Handbook 1 copy
Lego Meet The Knights 1 copy
Superadventure Annual (1959) 1 copy
Batman Annual (1969) 1 copy
Batman Annual (1970) 1 copy
Super Heroes: Super-Villains 1 copy
Teen Titans Go! 1 copy
Super Heroes Color Book 1 copy
The Best of DC 1 copy
Unexpected 1 copy
Titans 1 copy
Justice League Adventures 1 copy
Superboy 1 copy
Static Shock (2011) 1 copy
Green Lantern New Guardians 1 copy
Catwoman (2011) 1 copy
Teen Titans 1 copy
Suicide Squad 1 copy
Birds of Prey 1 copy
Batwoman 1 copy
The Ravagers 1 copy
Rock Star's Girl 1 copy
Catwoman Journal 1 copy
Batman Annual (1979) 1 copy
The Joker - Comic Test 1 copy
Superman 1 copy
SECRET ORGINS OF SUPER-HEROS 1 copy
Batman Annual (1973) 1 copy
Star Trek #42 (DC Comics) 1 copy
Star Trek #53 (DC Comics) 1 copy
Star Trek #44 (DC Comics) 1 copy
Star Trek #45 (DC Comics) 1 copy
Star Trek #41 (DC Comics) 1 copy
DC Villains 1 copy
Nightwing 1 copy
Batman and Robin 1 copy
Fazeclan 1 copy
The Shadow #5 1 copy
Vertigo Defy Sampler 2014 #1 1 copy
Liga da Justiça 1 copy
Nightwing 201 Booklet 1 copy
Detective Comics #2 1 copy
Vertigo Defy Sampler 2015 1 copy
Superman Book of Valentines 1 copy
Hellblazer single issues 1 copy
Scooby-Doo Team Up 1 copy
All-American Comics #1 1 copy
Detective Comics #10 1 copy
Detective Comics #11 1 copy
Detective Comics #12 1 copy
Detective Comics #13 1 copy
Detective Comics #14 1 copy
Detective Comics #3 1 copy
Detective Comics #4 1 copy
Detective Comics #5 1 copy
Detective Comics #6 1 copy
Detective Comics #7 1 copy
Detective Comics #8 1 copy
Detective Comics #9 1 copy
More Fun Comics #30 1 copy
More Fun Comics #9 1 copy
More Fun Comics #25 1 copy
More Fun Comics #27 1 copy
New Adventure Comics #12 1 copy
New Adventure Comics #16 1 copy
New Fun Comics #2 1 copy
New Fun Comics #5 1 copy
Green Lantern (2011) 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
DC Super Heroes Storybook Collection
Harper Childrens,Comics,Super Heroes,Hardcover
My household is slowly becoming a friendly zone for children's books with real paper. My son is growing out of board books while my daughter is starting to gain an interest. This book turned out to be a good find (thanks mama!), showing classic super heroes in easy to understand battles of good vs evil. Batman, Wonderwoman, Superman.... Throw in some cameos and you are set.
The storybook collection covers eight show more individual stories, each taking no more than 10-18 pages to tell. It's like a superhero primer. The details of the stories are limited, not going into back story. It mainly keeps to the high points, just right for new reads who may know some characters visually, but not yet understand why they are so interesting as to warrant a big person page book. We all know big person page books mean important things are with in. In case your kiddo has questions and you yourself are not aware that Starro is a villain from space shaped like a starfish (go figure), check the handy hero and villain appendix and learn that he controls minds using probes and will not stop till he rules the universe..
Short example story synopsis:
Superman and the Mayhem of Metallo
Lex Luthor engages the half man/half robot Metallo to attack and destroy Superman. It is not mentioned why Luthor cares, nor how he knows Metallo, nor how he knows that the Kryptonite given to Metallo will harm Superman.
Clark Kent quick changes to Superman and is immediately blasted with radiation from the Kryptonite, Metallo's shiny metal skull in the background laughing.
Batman flies in his Bat Plane to save the day, helping Superman regain his powers. Between the two of them Metallo is flung into space and Luthor is tracked down as an accomplice.
See? Just right.
Kiddo perspective:
Apparently this book is good enough to carry around the house. It is not used as a door stop or a weapon, no animals were harmed in the reading of this book. The pages are not bent or torn.. Why? Because my son really really likes this book.
He is excited by the stories, though he can only read one at a time before needing to switch gears. Several of the bad guys are kind of creepy looking from a kid viewpoint, so i commonly find him watching for my reaction.
He knows that Clark Kent is Superman and that this is a secret.
Adult Perspective:
What the hell have I done wrong. Superman is NOT as cool as Batman. I tried sooooo hard to make sure that my son understood this. Batman is amazing but troubled, Wonderwoman is pretty incredible and world changing, Superman is an egotistical jerk. Somehow this lesson was missed and my son believes that the sun rises and sets with Superman.. Ugh. We hit up a local comic book store on Free Comic book day and he insisted in taking home a Superman action figure. Granted, Kal-El is still cool.. I just don't get his need to elevate him above Mr. Wayne.
This book is pretty cool regardless of the above. All eight stories are cool, they tell cool plot and are easy for attention span reasons. It uses full adult sentences so when reading you do not feel like Hodor from Game of Thrones, mumbling baby nonsense and wishing for something meatier.
[see website for photo]
Several panels from this book are patently ridiculous. One of the most off the wall panels was Batman climbing in the Batplane and heading to Washington DC. His jet quickly accelerates to light speed as he races to the white house. This page continually requires that I point out reality to my son. If the Batplane could fly at light speed, he would instantly arrive in DC. Alternately, if it could reach those speeds, he would need a computer processor that is FTL in order to stop in time. Absolutely silly. I mean I guess he could go FTL pop around the entire planet a million times in a second before slowing, but a fruit fly could knock him out unless he finds a way ro phase through matter.. I mean seriously? How can he accomplish that with a fuel rocket?
Big highlight, President Obama makes an appearance and I was quite pleased to talk about him. It was a great opportunity to teach that the POTUS is an office as well as a person.
[see website for photo]
This book is pretty cool folks, well worth the dollars, with good reread value. Was picked up at home goods or some similar store for $7, but isnt much different new through a big book retailer. show less
Harper Childrens,Comics,Super Heroes,Hardcover
My household is slowly becoming a friendly zone for children's books with real paper. My son is growing out of board books while my daughter is starting to gain an interest. This book turned out to be a good find (thanks mama!), showing classic super heroes in easy to understand battles of good vs evil. Batman, Wonderwoman, Superman.... Throw in some cameos and you are set.
The storybook collection covers eight show more individual stories, each taking no more than 10-18 pages to tell. It's like a superhero primer. The details of the stories are limited, not going into back story. It mainly keeps to the high points, just right for new reads who may know some characters visually, but not yet understand why they are so interesting as to warrant a big person page book. We all know big person page books mean important things are with in. In case your kiddo has questions and you yourself are not aware that Starro is a villain from space shaped like a starfish (go figure), check the handy hero and villain appendix and learn that he controls minds using probes and will not stop till he rules the universe..
Short example story synopsis:
Superman and the Mayhem of Metallo
Lex Luthor engages the half man/half robot Metallo to attack and destroy Superman. It is not mentioned why Luthor cares, nor how he knows Metallo, nor how he knows that the Kryptonite given to Metallo will harm Superman.
Clark Kent quick changes to Superman and is immediately blasted with radiation from the Kryptonite, Metallo's shiny metal skull in the background laughing.
Batman flies in his Bat Plane to save the day, helping Superman regain his powers. Between the two of them Metallo is flung into space and Luthor is tracked down as an accomplice.
See? Just right.
Kiddo perspective:
Apparently this book is good enough to carry around the house. It is not used as a door stop or a weapon, no animals were harmed in the reading of this book. The pages are not bent or torn.. Why? Because my son really really likes this book.
He is excited by the stories, though he can only read one at a time before needing to switch gears. Several of the bad guys are kind of creepy looking from a kid viewpoint, so i commonly find him watching for my reaction.
He knows that Clark Kent is Superman and that this is a secret.
Adult Perspective:
What the hell have I done wrong. Superman is NOT as cool as Batman. I tried sooooo hard to make sure that my son understood this. Batman is amazing but troubled, Wonderwoman is pretty incredible and world changing, Superman is an egotistical jerk. Somehow this lesson was missed and my son believes that the sun rises and sets with Superman.. Ugh. We hit up a local comic book store on Free Comic book day and he insisted in taking home a Superman action figure. Granted, Kal-El is still cool.. I just don't get his need to elevate him above Mr. Wayne.
This book is pretty cool regardless of the above. All eight stories are cool, they tell cool plot and are easy for attention span reasons. It uses full adult sentences so when reading you do not feel like Hodor from Game of Thrones, mumbling baby nonsense and wishing for something meatier.
[see website for photo]
Several panels from this book are patently ridiculous. One of the most off the wall panels was Batman climbing in the Batplane and heading to Washington DC. His jet quickly accelerates to light speed as he races to the white house. This page continually requires that I point out reality to my son. If the Batplane could fly at light speed, he would instantly arrive in DC. Alternately, if it could reach those speeds, he would need a computer processor that is FTL in order to stop in time. Absolutely silly. I mean I guess he could go FTL pop around the entire planet a million times in a second before slowing, but a fruit fly could knock him out unless he finds a way ro phase through matter.. I mean seriously? How can he accomplish that with a fuel rocket?
Big highlight, President Obama makes an appearance and I was quite pleased to talk about him. It was a great opportunity to teach that the POTUS is an office as well as a person.
[see website for photo]
This book is pretty cool folks, well worth the dollars, with good reread value. Was picked up at home goods or some similar store for $7, but isnt much different new through a big book retailer. show less
Four two-issue mini-series by 10 writers and 11 artists are collected in this anthology of superhero gobbledygook. Following the most recent big crossover event -- Dark Nights: Death Metal, which I haven't read yet -- we're given an epilogue of a possible future peopled with new people taking up the mantles of classic heroes like Wonder Woman, Batman, Superman, Aquaman, etc. Everything is all dark and bleak, but the new heroes hammer home the theme of hope in the face of doom.
The art is a show more fine enough example of house style adherence, but the writing is pretty mediocre, with the Flash chapters being almost unreadable.
I know there's a complex history of aborted storylines and editorial 180s behind this, but it mostly stinks of the old let's throw everything at the wall and see what sticks approach to comic book publishing. It's a funny coincidence that I'm currently posting #ThrowbackThursday reviews from DC's similar Tangent Comics event from the 1990s that imagined a world of new characters bearing familiar old names. show less
The art is a show more fine enough example of house style adherence, but the writing is pretty mediocre, with the Flash chapters being almost unreadable.
I know there's a complex history of aborted storylines and editorial 180s behind this, but it mostly stinks of the old let's throw everything at the wall and see what sticks approach to comic book publishing. It's a funny coincidence that I'm currently posting #ThrowbackThursday reviews from DC's similar Tangent Comics event from the 1990s that imagined a world of new characters bearing familiar old names. show less
¿Como se sentirá Alan Moore cuando noté que, aunque a él no le guste, es el escritor más importante que DC Comics ha tenido? lo digo porque lo primero que te muestra esté libro son las 25 novelas gráficas esenciales y el se llevó el primer lugar con tres apariciones (Watchmen, V for Vendetta y Batman: The Killing Joke).
Bueno dejando esa pregunta de lado ¿Cómo se sentirá DC Comics al ver que, aunque nos han vendido a Superman como la joya de su corona, Batman es la major serie que show more tiene? En los 25 esenciales Batman y sus villanos son los más recurrentes.
Y ahora, sí se lo preguntan sí, leí más que los 25 esenciales pero esa es la parte que más se destaca seguida del "orden de lectura sugerido", lo cual considero que sí quieres adentrarte en el mundo de DC comics es de bastante ayuda.
En sí lo que este lbro presenta es las historias más importantes de sus personajes y Vertigo comics, no limitando a historias recientes pero si a las más populafres. Para todas se incluye una breve sinopsis y los datos para localizar el número si es que te interesa. show less
Bueno dejando esa pregunta de lado ¿Cómo se sentirá DC Comics al ver que, aunque nos han vendido a Superman como la joya de su corona, Batman es la major serie que show more tiene? En los 25 esenciales Batman y sus villanos son los más recurrentes.
Y ahora, sí se lo preguntan sí, leí más que los 25 esenciales pero esa es la parte que más se destaca seguida del "orden de lectura sugerido", lo cual considero que sí quieres adentrarte en el mundo de DC comics es de bastante ayuda.
En sí lo que este lbro presenta es las historias más importantes de sus personajes y Vertigo comics, no limitando a historias recientes pero si a las más populafres. Para todas se incluye una breve sinopsis y los datos para localizar el número si es que te interesa. show less
Eighty percent garbage, like most of the other Future State collections, but I did like the manga-esque treatment of Legion of Super-Heroes and the tantalizing glimpse of Superman's descendants in the House of El.
But all the side character stories featuring Lex Luthor and Midnighter (why is he in a Superman book?) and new versions of Mister Miracle, Guardian, and Black Racer were all but unreadable. The Jon Kent segments and Superman on Warworld story at least look nice. I don't understand show more why the Kara Zor-El version of Superwoman looks like she's dressed to make a guest appearance on "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel."
What really annoyed me though was the story order: most of the two-parters appear back-to-back but others are separated by dozens of pages or more. Do not ask me to try to remember what dumb thing Mister Miracle was doing twenty minutes ago. show less
But all the side character stories featuring Lex Luthor and Midnighter (why is he in a Superman book?) and new versions of Mister Miracle, Guardian, and Black Racer were all but unreadable. The Jon Kent segments and Superman on Warworld story at least look nice. I don't understand show more why the Kara Zor-El version of Superwoman looks like she's dressed to make a guest appearance on "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel."
What really annoyed me though was the story order: most of the two-parters appear back-to-back but others are separated by dozens of pages or more. Do not ask me to try to remember what dumb thing Mister Miracle was doing twenty minutes ago. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 334
- Members
- 1,944
- Popularity
- #13,234
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 25
- ISBNs
- 136
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