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Wikipedia

Detective Comics

Detective Comics is an American comic book series published by Detective Comics, later shortened to DC Comics. The first volume, published from 1937 to 2011 (and later continued in 2016), is best known for introducing the superhero Batman in Detective Comics #27 (cover-dated May 1939).

Detective Comics
Detective Comics #27 (May 1939).
Art by Bob Kane
Publication information
PublisherDetective Comics, Inc.: #1–119
National Comics Publications: #120–296
National Periodical Publications: #297–467
DC Comics: #468–current
Schedule
List
  • Monthly:
    #1–434, #446–466, #489–811
    Eight times a year:
    #469–474
    Bimonthly:
    #435–445, #467–468, #475–488
    Twice-monthly
    #934–current
    Weekly
    #1047–1058
FormatOngoing series
Publication date
List
  • (vol. 1)
    March 1937 – October 2011
    (vol. 2)
    November 2011 – July 2016
    (vol. 1 cont.)
    August 2016–present
No. of issues
List
  • (vol. 1): 883 (#1–881, plus issues numbered #0 and #1,000,000) and 12 Annuals
    (vol. 2): 57 (#1–52, plus issues numbered #0 and #23.1 through 23.4) and 3 Annuals
    (vol. 1 cont.): 128 (#934–1062) and 4 Annuals (as of September 2022 cover date)
Main character(s)
Creative team
Written by
Penciller(s)
Inker(s)
Colorist(s)

A second series of the same title was launched in September 2011, but in 2016, reverted to the original volume numbering. The series is the source of its publishing company's name, and—along with Action Comics, the series that launched with the debut of Superman—one of the medium's signature series. The series published 881 issues between 1937 and 2011 and is the longest continuously published comic book in the United States.[1][Note 1]

Publication history

 
Detective Comics #1 (March 1937). Art by Vin Sullivan.

Detective Comics was the final publication of the entrepreneur Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, whose comics company, National Allied Publications, would evolve into DC Comics, one of the world's two largest comic book publishers, though long after its founder had left it. Wheeler-Nicholson's first two titles were the landmark New Fun: The Big Comic-Magazine #1 (cover-dated Feb. 1935), colloquially called New Fun Comics #1 and the first such early comic book to contain all-original content, rather than a mix of newspaper comic strips and comic-strip-style new material. His second effort, New Comics #1, would be retitled twice to become Adventure Comics, another seminal series that ran for decades until issue #503 in 1983, and was later revived in 2009.

The third and final title published under his aegis would be Detective Comics, advertised with a cover illustration dated December 1936, but eventually premiering three months later, with a March 1937 cover date. Wheeler-Nicholson was in debt to printing-plant owner and magazine distributor Harry Donenfeld, who was, as well, a pulp-magazine publisher and a principal in the magazine distributorship Independent News. Wheeler-Nicholson took Donenfeld on as a partner in order to publish Detective Comics #1 through the newly formed Detective Comics, Inc., with Wheeler-Nicholson and Jack S. Liebowitz, Donenfeld's accountant, listed as owners.[2] Wheeler-Nicholson was forced out a year later.

Originally an anthology comic, in the manner of the times, Detective Comics #1 (March 1937) featured stories in the "hard-boiled detective" genre, with such stars as Ching Lung (a Fu Manchu-style "Yellow Peril" villain); Slam Bradley (created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster before their character Superman saw print two years later); and Speed Saunders, among others. Its first editor, Vin Sullivan, also drew the debut issue's cover. The Crimson Avenger debuted in issue #20 (October 1938).[3]

Early issues of the series have been criticized for their racism and xenophobia.[4][5][6][7]

Batman / Bruce Wayne

 
Cover of Detective Comics #140 (October 1948), the first appearance of the Riddler. Art by Win Mortimer.

Detective Comics #27 (March 1939 with a printed date of May 1939) first appearance of Batman.[8] That superhero would eventually become the star of the title, the cover logo of which is often written as "Detective Comics featuring Batman". Because of its significance, issue #27 is widely considered one of the most valuable comic books in existence, with one copy selling for $1,075,000 in a February 2010 auction.[9]

Batman's origin is first revealed in a two-page story in issue #33 (Nov. 1939).[10] Batman became the main cover feature of the title beginning with issue #35 (Jan. 1940).[11] Issue #38 (April 1940) introduced Batman's sidekick Robin, billed as "The Sensational Character Find of 1940" on the cover and the first of several characters that would make up the "Batman Family."[12] Robin's appearance and the subsequent increase in sales of the book soon led to the trend of superheroes and young sidekicks that characterize the era that fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books. Several of Batman's best known villains debuted in the pages of Detective Comics during this era, including the Penguin in issue #58,[13] Two-Face in issue #66,[14] and the Riddler in issue #140.[15]

Batwoman first appeared in Detective Comics #233 (July 1956).[16] Since the family formula had proven very successful for the Superman franchise, editor Jack Schiff suggested to Batman co-creator Bob Kane that he create one for the Batman. A female was chosen first, to offset the charges made by Fredric Wertham that Batman and Robin were homosexual.[17] Writer Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff introduced Bat-Mite in issue #267 (May 1959)[18] and Clayface in #298 (Dec. 1961).[19]

In 1964, Julius Schwartz was made responsible for reviving the fading Batman titles.[20] Writer John Broome and artist Carmine Infantino jettisoned the sillier aspects that had crept into the franchise such as Ace the Bathound and Bat-Mite and gave the character a "New Look" that premiered in Detective Comics #327 (May 1964).[21] Schwartz, Gardner Fox, and Infantino introduced, from the William Dozier produced TV series, Barbara Gordon as a new version of Batgirl in a story titled "The Million Dollar Debut of Batgirl!" in issue #359 (Jan. 1967).[22] Mike Friedrich wrote the 30th anniversary Batman story in Detective Comics #387 (May 1969) which was drawn by Bob Brown.[23]

Writer Dennis O'Neil and artist Neal Adams had their first collaboration on Batman on the story "The Secret of the Waiting Graves" in issue #395 (Jan. 1970).[24] The duo, under the direction of Schwartz,[25] would revitalize the character with a series of noteworthy stories reestablishing Batman's dark, brooding nature and taking the books away from the campy look and feel of the 1966–68 ABC TV series.[26] Comics historian Les Daniels observed that "O'Neil's interpretation of Batman as a vengeful obsessive-compulsive, which he modestly describes as a return to the roots, was actually an act of creative imagination that has influenced every subsequent version of the Dark Knight."[27] Adams introduced the Man-Bat with writer Frank Robbins in Detective Comics #400 (June 1970).[28] O'Neil and artist Bob Brown crafted Batman's first encounter with the League of Assassins in Detective Comics #405 (Nov. 1970)[29] and created Talia al Ghul in issue #411 (May 1971).[30]

After publishing on a monthly schedule throughout its run, Detective Comics became a bi-monthly book from issues #435 (June–July 1973) to #445 (Feb.-March 1975). Issues #438 (Dec. 1973-Jan. 1974) to #445 (Feb.–March 1975) of the series were in the 100 Page Super Spectacular format.[31] O'Neil and artist Dick Giordano created the Batman supporting character Leslie Thompkins in the story "There Is No Hope in Crime Alley" appearing in issue #457 (March 1976).[32] Writer Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers produced an acclaimed run of Batman stories in Detective Comics #471–476 (Aug. 1977 – April 1978),[33] and provided one of the definitive interpretations that influenced the 1989 Batman film and would be adapted for the 1990s animated series.[34] The Englehart and Rogers pairing, was described in 2009 by comics writer and historian Robert Greenberger as "one of the greatest" creative teams to work on the Batman character.[35] In their story "The Laughing Fish", the Joker is brazen enough to disfigure fish with a rictus grin, then expects to be granted a federal trademark on them, only to start killing the bureaucrats who try to explain to him that obtaining such a claim on a natural resource is legally impossible.[36] Writer Len Wein and Rogers co-created the third version of the supervillain Clayface in Detective Comics #478 (July–Aug. 1978).[37] From issue #481 (Dec. 1978 – Jan. 1979) through #495 (Oct. 1980), the magazine adopted the expanded Dollar Comics format used by the canceled Batman Family,[38] adding solo features including "Robin: the Teen Wonder", "Batgirl", the "Human Target" and the anthology "Tales of Gotham City", which featured stories of the city's ordinary people. Julius Schwartz, who had edited the title for most of its run since 1964, left the series as of issue #484 (June–July 1979)[20] The original Katherine Kane also known as "Batwoman" was killed in the lead story in issue #485 (Aug.–Sept. 1979) by the League of Assassins.[39]

The title's 500th issue (March 1981) featured stories by several well-known creators including television writer Alan Brennert and Walter B. Gibson best known for his work on the pulp fiction character The Shadow.[40][41] Also used during the 1980s was the use of serialization of the main Batman story, with stories from Detective Comics and Batman directly flowing from one book to another, with cliffhangers at the end of each book's monthly story that would be resolved in the other title of that month. A single writer handled both books during that time beginning with Gerry Conway and followed up by Doug Moench. The supervillain Killer Croc made a shadowy cameo in issue #523 (Feb. 1983).[42] Noted author Harlan Ellison wrote the Batman story in issue #567.[43]

Writer Mike W. Barr and artists Alan Davis and Todd McFarlane crafted the "Batman: Year Two" storyline in Detective Comics #575–578 which followed up on Frank Miller's "Batman: Year One".[44] Writer Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle introduced the Ventriloquist in their first Batman story together[45] and the Ratcatcher in their third (#585).[46] Sam Hamm, who wrote the screenplay for Tim Burton's Batman, wrote the "Blind Justice" story in Detective Comics issues #598–600.[47] Chuck Dixon became the writer of the series with issue #644 (May 1992).[48] He and Tom Lyle co-created the Electrocutioner in Detective Comics #644 (May 1992)[49] and Stephanie Brown in Detective Comics #647 (August 1992).[50]

The "Batman: Legacy" storyline began in issue #700 (August 1996).[51] The "No Man's Land" storyline crossed over into Detective Comics in issues #730–741. Writer Greg Rucka and artist Shawn Martinbrough became the creative team as of issue #742 (March 2000)[52] and created the Sasha Bordeaux character in issue #751 (Dec. 2000).[53] Issue #800 (Jan. 2005) was written by Andersen Gabrych and drawn by Pete Woods.[54] Paul Dini became the writer of the series as of issue #821 (Sept. 2006)[55] and created a new version of the Ventriloquist in #827 (March 2007).[56] Scott Snyder became the writer of Detective Comics with issue #871 (Jan. 2011).[57]

Back-up features

In addition to the Batman stories, the title has had numerous back-up strips. The Boy Commandos by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby debuted in Detective Comics #64 (June 1942) and were then soon spun off into their own title.[58] The character Roy Raymond first appeared in issue #153 (Nov. 1949).[59] The Martian Manhunter was created by writer Joseph Samachson and artist Joe Certa in the back-up story "The Strange Experiment of Dr. Erdel" in Detective Comics #225 (Nov. 1955).[60] After issue #326 (April 1964), the Martian Manhunter was moved to House of Mystery and in issue #327 the Elongated Man and his wife, now remodeled after Dashiell Hammett's Nick and Nora Charles, took over. The characters crossed over with Batman three times. The Elongated Man run lasted until issue #383 (Jan. 1969) and his feature returned sporadically 15 times until issue #572, which celebrated the 50th anniversary of the title by teaming him up with Batman, Robin, Slam Bradley and Sherlock Holmes against Edgar Moriarty, the great-grandnephew of Professor Moriarty. After the Elongated Man back-up feature ended, Batgirl held the role until issue #424. After moving her to Batman Family, she returned from issues #481-519. Jason Bard appeared as the backup feature in the odd-numbered issues of Detective from #425-435.[61] The Manhunter was resurrected in a story by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson in issue #437 (Oct.-Nov. 1973).[62][63] With the last episode of the series, Manhunter moved to the front of the book in a full-length team-up with Batman. The Green Arrow became the back-up feature starting with issue #521 (Dec. 1982)[64] and running until #567 (Oct. 1986).[65] The Black Canary received a new costume in the back-up story in issue #554 (Sept. 1985).[66] DC Comics Bonus Books were included in issues #589 (August 1988)[67] and 595 (Jan. 1989).[68]

After a lengthy absence, the back-up features returned for issues #746–810. These were more closed-ended stories featuring new and established characters in the Batman mythos. The first was "The Jacobian" in issues #746–757, followed by a one-issue Batman story in #758. The following issues, #759–762, featured Slam Bradley and were a lead-in to the 2002 Catwoman series. Issues #763–772 featured Josephine "Josie Mac" MacDonald, a Gotham police detective. Issues #773–775 were titled "Tales of Gotham" and feature Detectives Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya. Batman starred in "Spore" from issues #776–780. #781 featured a special Elseworlds tale, while #782 featured a Batman solo tale. Issue #783 featured a prelude to the "Death and the Maidens" miniseries and issue #784 featured a Josie Mac tale. The "Tales of Gotham" stories resumed in issues #785–788 with "The Dogcatcher", and #789–794 featured "The Tailor". "Polished Stone", featuring the Green Arrow and Onyx, ran in issues #795–796. "Low", featuring the Riddler and Poison Ivy, ran from issues #797–799. Detective Comics #800 featured a short Batman back-up story under the "Tales of Gotham" banner. A four-issue (#801–805) story featuring the Barker entitled "When You're Strange" was next and "Mud" in issue #805. A two-issue story (#806–807) featuring Alfred was followed by the last back-up, a three-issue (#808–810) Killer Croc story.

The "Manhunter" series that ran as a backup in Detective Comics from 1973 to 1974 won the Shazam Award for "Best Individual Short Story (Dramatic)" in 1974 for the story "Cathedral Perilous" in issue #441, written by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson.

Batwoman

In 2009, as part of a planned reorganization of the Batman universe due to the events shown in Batman R.I.P. and Final Crisis, Detective Comics went on hiatus for three months while DC Comics published the Battle for the Cowl miniseries. Upon its return, the series featured the newly reintroduced (in 52) Batwoman as the new star of the book, as well as a 10-page back-up feature starring Renee Montoya as the new Question.[69] The series returned Batman to a starring role in early 2010.

The New 52

DC Comics relaunched Detective Comics with issue #1 in September 2011, as part of an initiative called The New 52.[70] The series was written and drawn by Tony Daniel until the 12th issue, with the team of John Layman and Jason Fabok beginning with issue #13.[71][72]

The first issue of the relaunched Detective Comics has received six printings, second only to the relaunched Justice League which had seven printings.[73] The series' 7th issue was also DC Comic's 6th highest selling digital comic, ranking above many other series in the Batman category.[74] Scott West of Sciencefiction.com gave the series' third arc a positive review, stating that "After last month's disappointing ‘Night of the Owls’ tie-in issue, it's nice to see ‘Detective Comics’ getting back to where it should be...good detective stories."[75] The relaunched Detective Comics received the award for "Best Series" at the 2012 Stan Lee Awards.[76] The series' first collected edition would reach the number 1 spot on The New York Times Best Seller list in the category of "Hardcover Graphic Books".[77]

Daniel wrote and penciled the series until the Night of the Owls crossover, at which point Ed Benes, Julio Ferreira, and Eduardo Pansica began drawing the series for a three-issue arc.[78][79] The price of Detective Comics was increased due to the addition of a backup feature starring Batman villain Two-Face, which was written by Daniel and illustrated by Syzmon Kudranski, this followed a similar backup featuring Professor Hugo Strange.[80] Daniel left the series with issue #12 being his last as writer and the "0" issue his last as penciller.[81]

DC celebrated the first anniversary of The New 52 in September 2012 by publishing a number "0" of each original New 52 title which act as prequels to the series and reveal previously unexplained plot elements.[82] Gregg Hurwitz wrote the "0" issue.[83] Hurwitz was approached by Daniel to write the "0" issue due to Daniel's busy schedule.[84][85] To follow up on the Night of the Owls elements in Detective Comics, Daniel wrote Detective Comics Annual #1, which was pencilled by Romano Molenaar and inked by Sandu Florea.[86]

Following Daniel's tenure on the series, John Layman became the new writer and Jason Fabok the new artist[87] with James Tynion IV writing the backup features and Syzmon Kudranski remaining as artist for Tynion's first feature. With issue #19 of Detective Comics vol. 2, released on April 3, 2013, the series reached 900 issues as combined with the first volume of the series, and was a special oversized celebratory issue. Under Layman, the series featured its first crossover, Gothtopia after which Layman and Fabok moved to the Batman Eternal series and Detective Comics was taken over by Brain Buccalleto and Francis Manapul.[88]

In commemoration of the second anniversary of The New 52, DC Comics announced "Villains Month" with Detective Comics getting four issues. The issues starred Poison Ivy, Harley Quinn, the Scarecrow, and the Man-Bat, and, respectively, being numbered #23.1, #23.2, #23.3, and #23.4, by an ensemble of writers and artists.[89]

For the 75th anniversary of Batman, issue #27 was a larger-sized issue featuring new stories by Brad Meltzer and Bryan Hitch,[90] Scott Snyder and Sean Murphy, Peter Tomasi and Ian Bertram, John Layman and Jason Fabok, Gregg Hurwitz and Neal Adams, Mike W. Barr and Guillem March, and one written and drawn by Francesco Francavilla. In addition, variant covers to the issue were by Greg Capullo, Frank Miller, Chris Burnham, Jim Lee, Jason Fabok, and Tony Daniel. Single page artwork included work by Kelley Jones, Mike Allred, Patrick Gleason, and Jock.

2016 – present

 
Writer Peter Tomasi at a 2019 signing for the series' 1,000th issue at Midtown Comics in Manhattan

In February 2016, DC Comics announced that as part of the company's continuity relaunch called DC Rebirth, Detective Comics would resume its original numbering system with June 2016's issue #934. The 52 issues of Detective Comics volume 2 (2011-2016) were added to the original count of 881 issues from Detective Comics volume 1 (1937-2011), making Detective Comics #934 the premier issue following the end of the DC Rebirth initiative. The series was published twice-monthly.[91]

The creative team beginning with issue #934 included writer James Tynion IV and artists Eddy Barrows and Alvaro Martinez.[92] The series featured a team led by Batman and Batwoman (Kate Kane), operating out of a secondary base in the heart of Gotham known as the Belfry. Team members initially included Red Robin (Tim Drake), Spoiler (Stephanie Brown), Orphan (Cassandra Cain) and Clayface (Basil Karlo), with Batwing (Luke Fox) and Azrael (Jean-Paul Valley) later recruited as new members.[93] Zatanna also briefly joins the team as a guest star in several issues. This status quo ended with the conclusion of Tynion's run on the series in issue #981, published May 2018. During the interim period without a permanent writer, Bryan Edward Hill wrote the story arc "On the Outside" starring Batman, Orphan, Signal, Katana and Black Lightning over issues #983-987 as a prelude to his ongoing series Batman and the Outsiders. The next regular writer, Peter Tomasi, began on the series with issue #994, published December 2018. Tomasi's run as writer continued for two years until issue #1033, published December 2020.

On March 27, 2019, DC Comics released the series' 1,000th issue,[94] marking the second American comic book in history to reach that milestone after Action Comics in 2018.[95][96][97] The issue, which coincided with Batman's 80th anniversary,[98] is an anthology featuring several stories from a variety of different creative teams.[94]

Writer Mariko Tamaki began on the series with issue #1034 as part of the Infinite Frontier line-wide relaunch.[citation needed] In April 2022, it was announced that Ram V and Rafael Albuquerque would serve as the new creative team starting with issue #1062.[99]

Character debuts

Character Issue Publication
Slam Bradley and Speed Saunders #1 March 1937
The Crimson Avenger and Wing How #20 October 1938
Batman (Bruce Wayne) and Commissioner Gordon #27 May 1939
Doctor Death #29 July 1939
The Monk, Julie Madison #31 Sept. 1939
Dala #32 Oct. 1939
Joe Chill, Thomas Wayne, Martha Wayne #33 Nov. 1939
Professor Hugo Strange #36 Feb. 1940
Robin #38 April 1940
Clayface (Basil Karlo) #40 June 1940
The Penguin #58 December 1941
Air Wave #60 February 1942
Mister Baffle #63 May 1942
The Boy Commandos #64 June 1942
Two-Face #66 Aug. 1942
Tweedledum and Tweedledee #74 April 1943
The Cavalier #81 Nov. 1943
The Riddler #140 October 1948
Pow Wow Smith #151 Sept. 1949
Roy Raymond #153 Nov. 1949
The Red Hood #168 Feb. 1951
The Firefly #184 June 1952
Mysto #203 January 1954
Mirror Man #213 Nov. 1954
The Batmen of All Nations #215 Jan. 1955
The Martian Manhunter #225 Nov. 1955
The Impostor Mad Hatter #230 April 1956
Batwoman (Kathy Kane) #233 July 1956
Diane Meade #246 Aug. 1957
The Terrible Trio #253 March 1958
The Calendar Man #259 Sept. 1958
Doctor Double X #261 Nov. 1958
Bat-Mite #267 May 1959
Clayface (Matt Hagen) #298 Dec. 1961
The Catman, Zook #311 Jan. 1963
The Idol Head of Diabolu #326 April 1964
The Outsider #334 Dec. 1964
The Blockbuster #345 Nov. 1965
The Cluemaster #351 May 1966
Batgirl (Barbara Gordon) #359 Jan. 1967
Jason Bard #392 Oct. 1969
The Man-Bat #400 June 1970
Talia al Ghul #411 May 1971
Harvey Bullock #441 July 1974
Leslie Thompkins #457 March 1976
The Calculator #463 Sept. 1976
Doctor Phosphorus, "Boss" Rupert Thorne #469 May 1977
Silver St. Cloud #470 June 1977
Clayface (Preston Payne) #478 July 1978
Maxie Zeus #483 May 1979
The Odd Man #487 December 1979
The Swashbuckler #493 March 1980
Killer Croc #523[Note 2] Feb. 1983
Onyx #546 Jan. 1985
The Ventriloquist (Arnold Wesker) #583 Feb. 1988
The Ratcatcher #585 April 1988
Anarky (Lonnie Machin) #608 Nov. 1989
Renee Montoya #642 March 1992
Stephanie Brown #647 Jun. 1992
Cypher #657 March 1993
Crispus Allen #742 March 2000
Sasha Bordeaux #751 Dec. 2000
Nyssa Raatko #783 Aug. 2003
The Ventriloquist (Peyton Riley) #827 March 2007
The Dollmaker (vol. 2) #1 Sept. 2011
Dollhouse, Mister Toxic (vol. 2) #2 Oct. 2011
Eli Strange (vol. 2) #5 March 2012
Emperor Blackgate (vol. 2) #13 Nov. 2012
The Merrymaker (vol. 2) #17 Feb. 2013
Anarky (Sam Young) (vol. 2) #37 Feb. 2015
The Arkham Knight #1000 May 2019
The Silver Ghost #1027 November 2020

Notes

  1. ^ Action Comics amassed more individual issues, 904 in total, despite launching a year after Detective due to 42 issues (#601–642) in 1988–89 that were published weekly, and because of Detective Comics' bimonthly run from 1973 to 1975. The American record-holder for most issues published is Dell Comics' Four Color series, which amassed more than 1,300 issues over a 23-year run.
  2. ^ There was a shadowy cameo in Detective Comics #523 (Feb. 1983)[42] and his first full appearance is credited to Batman #357 (March 1983)

Collected editions

Volume 1 (1937-2011)

The Detective Comics series has been collected into a number of trade paperbacks and hardback collections.

Batman Archive editions

All DC Archive Editions are hardback only and printed on high quality archival paper.

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Batman Archives Vol. 1 Stories from Detective Comics #27–50 November 1997 HC: 978-0930289607
Batman Archives Vol. 2 Stories from Detective Comics #51–70 November 1997 HC: 978-1563890000
Batman Archives Vol. 3 Stories from Detective Comics #71–86 November 1997 HC: 978-1563890994
Batman Archives Vol. 4 Stories from Detective Comics #87–102 December 1998 HC: 978-1563894145
Batman Archives Vol. 5 Stories from Detective Comics #103–119 April 2001 HC: 978-1563897252
Batman Archives Vol. 6 Stories from Detective Comics #120–135 August 2005 HC: 978-1401204099
Batman Archives Vol. 7 Stories from Detective Comics #136–154 November 2007 HC: 978-1401214937
Batman Archives Vol. 8 Stories from Detective Comics #155–170 July 2012 HC: 978-1401233761
Batman: The Dynamic Duo Archives Vol. 1 Batman #164–166; Detective Comics #327–333 March 2003 HC: 978-1563899324
Batman: The Dynamic Duo Archives Vol. 2 Batman #168–171; Detective Comics #334–339 June 2006 HC: 978-1401207724

Batman Chronicles

The Batman Chronicles series plans to reprint every Batman adventure in color, in chronological order, in affordable trade paperbacks. It is not to be confused with the now-finished series of the same name.

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Batman Chronicles Vol. 1 Detective Comics #27–38; Batman #1 April 2005 SC: 978-1401204457
Batman Chronicles Vol. 2 Detective Comics #39–45; Batman #2–3; New York World's Fair Comics #2 September 2006 SC: 978-1401207908
Batman Chronicles Vol. 3 Detective Comics #46–50; Batman #4–5; World's Best Comics #1 May 2007 SC: 978-1401213473
Batman Chronicles Vol. 4 Detective Comics #51–56; World's Finest Comics #2–3; Batman #6–7 October 2007 SC: 978-1401214623
Batman Chronicles Vol. 5 Detective Comics #57–61; World's Finest Comics #4; Batman #8–9 April 2008 SC: 978-1401216825
Batman Chronicles Vol. 6 Detective Comics #62–66; World's Finest Comics #5–6; Batman #10–11 October 2008 SC: 978-1401219611
Batman Chronicles Vol. 7 Detective Comics #67–70; World's Finest Comics #7; Batman #12–13 March 2009 SC: 978-1401221348
Batman Chronicles Vol. 8 Detective Comics #71–74; World's Finest Comics #8–9; Batman #14–15 October 2009 SC: 978-1401224844
Batman Chronicles Vol. 9 Detective Comics #75–77; World's Finest Comics #10; Batman #16–17 March 2010 SC: 978-1401226459
Batman Chronicles Vol. 10 Detective Comics #78–81; World's Finest Comics #11; Batman #18–19 December 2010 SC: 978-1401228958
Batman Chronicles Vol. 11 Detective Comics #82–85; World's Finest Comics #12; Batman #20–21 January 2013 SC: 978-1401237394

Showcase Presents

All Showcase Presents collections are large (over 500 pages), softcover, black and white only reprints.

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 1 Detective Comics #327–342; Batman #164–174 August 2006 SC: 978-1401210861
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 2 Detective Comics #343–358; Batman #175, #177–181, #183–184, #188 June 2007 SC: 978-1401213626
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 3 Detective Comics #359–375; Batman #189–192, #194–197, #199–201 July 2008 SC: 978-1401217198
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 4 Detective Comics #376–390; Batman #202–215 July 2009 SC: 978-1401223144
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 5 Detective Comics #391–404; Batman #216–228 December 2011 SC: 978-1401232368
Showcase Presents: Batman Vol. 6 Detective Comics #408–426; Batman #229–244 January 2016 SC: 978-1401251536
Showcase Presents: Martian Manhunter Vol. 1 Detective Comics #225–304 July 2007 SC: 978-1401213688
Showcase Presents: Martian Manhunter Vol. 2 Detective Comics #305–326 May 2009 SC: 978-1401222567
Showcase Presents: Robin the Boy Wonder Vol. 1 Robin stories from Detective Comics #386, 390, 394–395, 398–403, 445, 447, 450–451 January 2008 SC: 978-1401216764
Showcase Presents: Batgirl Vol. 1 Batgirl stories from Detective Comics #359, 363, 369, 371, 384–385, 388–389, 392–393, 396–397, 400–401, 404–424 July 2007 SC: 978-1401213671
Showcase Presents: Enemy Ace Vol. 1 includes Enemy Ace story from Detective Comics #404 February 2008 SC: 978-1401217211

Celebration hardcovers

Starting in 2014, DC began releasing character retrospective anthologies, several of which feature issues of Detective Comics

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Batman: A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics #27, 83, 211, 216, 327, 359, 395, 442, 474, 574, 633, 711, 757, 821;
Batman #1, 49, 181, 497 Batman (vol. 2) #2, World's Finest Comics #94, DC Special Series #21, Batman Special #1
July 2014 978-1401247584
Robin the Boy Wonder: A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics #38, 342; Batman #20, 107, 156, 408, 428, 442, 657; Star-Spangled Comics #82, 86, 103;
Batman Family #1; Nightwing #25, 101; Superman/Batman #7, 77; Robin (vol. 4) #46, 126; Batman & Robin Annual #1; Justice League of America #55; DC One Million 80-Page Giant #1,000,000
May 2015 978-1401255367
The Joker: A Celebration of 75 Years Batman #1, 5, 25, 32, 85, 163, 251, 427, Batman (vol. 2) #15, Detective Comics #64, 168, 180, 475, 476, 726, 741, 826,
Detective Comics (vol. 2) #1, World's Finest Comics #61, Superman (vol. 2) #9, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #66
July 2014 978-1401247591
Two-Face: A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics #66, 68, 80, 739; Batman #50, 81, 234, 410–411, 572, Annual #14; The Brave and the Bold #106; The Joker #1; Secret Origins #1; Batman: Black and White #1; Gotham Central #10; Joker's Asylum: Two-Face #1; Batman and Robin #23 November 2017 978-1-4012-7438-2
Green Arrow: A Celebration of 75 Years More Fun Comics #73, 89; Leading Comics #1; Adventure Comics #256; Justice League of America #4; The Brave and the Bold #85;
Green Lantern/Green Arrow #85, 86, 90; Detective Comics #549–550; 559; Green Arrow (vol. 2) #24, 100–101; Green Arrow (vol. 3) #4, 18; Green Arrow Year One #2;
Green Arrow and Black Canary Wedding Special #1; Justice League #8; Green Arrow (vol. 4) #24
July 2016 978-1401263867

Tales of The Batman/Legends of the Dark Knight

These hardcover books reprint issues by particular creators and contain many issues of Detective Comics, as well as other Batman titles.

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Tales of the Batman: Carmine Infantino Detective Comics #327–347, 349, 351–371, 500, Batman #166–175, 181, 183–184, 188–192, 194–199, The Brave and the Bold #172, 183, 190, 194, DC Comics Presents: Batman #1. June 2014 9781401247553
Tales of the Batman: Len Wein Detective Comics #408, 444–448, 466, 478–479, 500, 514, Batman #307–310, 312–319, 321–324, 326–327,
World's Finest Comics #207, DC Retroactive Batman – The 70s, Untold Legends of the Batman #1–3, Batman Black and White #5
December 2014 978-1401251543
Tales of the Batman: Archie Goodwin Batman stories from Detective Comics #437–438 and #440–442, the Manhunter stories from #437–442,
and the Batman/Manhunter team-up from #443; Detective Comics Annual #3; Showcase '95 #11; Batman Black and White #1 and 4;
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #132–136; the Batman: Night Cries graphic novel
July 2013 978-1401238292
Legends of the Dark Knight: Jim Aparo Volume 3 Detective Comics #444–446, Batman Family #17, The Brave and the Bold #152, 154, 155, 157–162, 168–170, 173–178, 180–182,
The Untold Legend of the Batman #1–3
September 2017 978-1401271619
Legends of the Dark Knight: Michael Golden Batman Family #15-20, Batman #295, 303, DC Special Series #15, Detective Comics #482, Batman Special #1, Batman: Gotham Knights #22
Covers from Detective Comics #625-626, 628-631, 633, 644-646, Batman #484-485, Showcase '93,
Nightwing #66-77 & #129-130 and the Man-Bat entry from Who's Who in the DC Universe #12
June 2019 978-1401289614
Legends of the Dark Knight: Marshall Rogers Detective Comics #468, 471–476, 478–479, 481; DC Special Series #15; Secret Origins #6;
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #132–136; Batman: Dark Detective #1–6
November 2011 978-1401232276
Tales of the Batman: Don Newton Detective Comics #480, 483–497; Batman #305–306, 328; The Brave and the Bold #153, 156 and 165 December 2011 978-1401232948
Tales of the Batman: Alan Brennert The Brave and the Bold #178, 181, 182 and 197, Detective Comics #500, Batman: Holy Terror July 2016 978-1401263492
Tales of the Batman: Gerry Conway Volume 1 Detective Comics #463, 464, 497–499, 501–504, The Brave And The Bold #158, 161, 171–174, Batman #295, 305, 306,
Batman Family #17, Man-Bat #1, World's Finest Comics #250, #269
July 2017 978-1401272555
Tales of the Batman: Gerry Conway Volume 2 Detective Comics #505–513, Batman #337–346, 348; World's Finest Comics #270 August 2018 978-1401281632
Tales of the Batman: Gerry Conway Volume 3 Detective Comics #515-526, Batman #349-359 September 2019 978-1401292737
Tales of the Batman: Gene Colan Volume One Detective Comics #517, 520, 523, 528–529 and Batman #340, 343–345, 348–351 August 2011 978-1401231019
Tales of the Batman: Gene Colan Volume Two Batman #373, Detective Comics #530–538 and #540–544, World's Finest Comics #297 and #299 March 2018 978-1401277697
Legends of the Dark Knight: Alan Davis Detective Comics #569–575, Batman: Full Circle, Batman: Gotham Knights #25 February 2013 978-1401236816
Legends of the Dark Knight: Norm Breyfogle Volume One Detective Comics #579, 582–594, 601–607, stories from Batman Annual #11–12 July 2015 978-1401258986
Legends of the Dark Knight: Norm Breyfogle Volume Two Detective Comics #608-621 and Batman #455-459 November 2018 978-1401285128
Tales of the Batman: J.H. Williams Batman #526,550, 667–669, Batman Annual #21, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #86–88, 192–196, Chase #7–8, Detective Comics #821 July 2014 978-1401247621
Legends of the Dark Knight: Matt Wagner Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #28-30; Batman: Riddler—the Riddle Factory; Batman Black and White #3;
Batman: the Monster Men #1-6; Batman: The Mad Monk #1-6; Batman #54, Robin II #1, Robin III #5, Detective Comics #647-649, Batman #626-641
June 2020 978-1779502599

Other editions

Many of these other editions are anthologies containing comics from titles other than Detective Comics. Titles here are presented as close to chronologically as possible.

Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Batgirl: The Bronze Age Omnibus Volume 1 Detective Comics #359, 363, 369, 371, 384–386, 388–389, 392–393, 396–397, 400–401, 404–424, 481–499, 501–502, 505–506, 508–510, 512–519,
Batman #197 and Batman Family #1, 3–7 and 9–20.
December 2017 978-1401276409
Manhunter: The Special Edition Manhunter backup stories from #437–442 and the Batman/Manhunter crossover in #443,
Manhunter #1, and Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #100
June 1999 978-1-56389-374-2
Batman: Strange Apparitions Detective Comics #469–476, #478–479 December 1999 978-1-56389-500-5
DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore Includes Night Olympics featuring Green Arrow and Black Canary from Detective Comics #549–550 January 2006 978-1-4012-0927-8
Batman: Year Two Detective Comics #575–578
(later printing includes Batman: Full Circle)
January 1990
December 2002
978-0-930289-49-2
978-1563899676
Batman: Year Two 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Detective Comics #575–578; Batman: Full Circle November 2017 978-1401274566
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume 1 Detective Comics #568-574; 579-582 April 2018 978-1401271084
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume 2 Detective Comics #583-591, Annual #1 October 2018 978-1401284688
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume 3 Detective Comics #592-600 February 2020 978-1779501011
Batman: Blind Justice Detective Comics #598–600 May 2005 978-1-56389-047-5
Batman: Anarky Detective Comics #608–609, Batman Chronicles #1, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #40–41, and Anarky #1–4 February 1999 978-1-56389-437-4
Batman: Knightfall Volume 1 Batman: Vengeance of Bane #1, Batman #491–500, Detective Comics #659–666,
Showcase '93 #7–8 Batman: Shadow of the Bat #16–18
May 2012 978-1401233792
Batman: Knightfall Volume 2: Knightquest Detective Comics #667–675, Shadow of the Bat #19–20, 24–28, Batman #501–508, Catwoman #6–7 Robin #7 May 2012 978-1401235369
Batman: Knightfall Volume 3: KnightsEnd Batman #509–510, 512–514, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #29–30, 32–34, Detective Comics #676–677, 679–681,
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #62–63, Robin #8–9, 11–13, Catwoman #12–13
September 2012 978-1401237219
Batman: Prelude to Knightfall Batman: Vengeance of Bane #1, Batman #484-491, Detective Comics #654-658 September 2018 978-1401284220
Batman: Knightfall Vol. 1 Batman #492-497, Detective Comics #659-663 September 2018 978-1401284299
Batman: Knightfall Vol. 2 Batman #498-500, Detective Comics #664-666, Showcase '93 #7-8, Shadow of the Bat #16-18 September 2018 978-1401284398
Batman: Knightquest: The Crusade Vol. 1 Detective Comics #667-670, Robin #1-2, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #19-20, Batman #501-504, Catwoman #6-7 October 2018 978-1401284503
Batman: Knightquest: The Crusade Vol. 2 Detective Comics #671-675, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #24-28, Batman #505-508, Showcase '94 #7 October 2018 978-1401284589
Batman: KnightsEnd Batman #509-510, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #29-30, Detective Comics #676-677, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #62-63, Robin #8-9, Catwoman #12-13, Showcase '94 #10 December 2018 978-1401285180
Batman: Zero Hour Batman #0, #511; Batman: Shadow of the Bat #0, 31; Detective Comics #0, 678; Catwoman #0, 14;
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #0; Robin #0, 10.
June 2017 978-1401272586
Batman: Prodigal Batman #512-514, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #32-34, Detective Comics #679-681 and Robin #0 and #11-13 January 2019 978-1401285609
Batman: Troika Batman #515, Batman: Shadow of The Bat #35, Detective Comics #682, Robin #14, Nightwing: Alfred Returns and Batman: Vengeance of Bane II February 2019 978-1401285876
Robin Vol. 5: War of the Dragons Robin #14-22, Robin Annual #3 and Detective Comics #685-686 January 2018 978-1401275129
Batman: Contagion Collects Azrael #15–16, Batman #529, Batman Chronicles #4, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #48–49,
Catwoman #31–35, Detective Comics #695–696, Robin #27–30
March 2016 978-1401260682
Batman: Legacy Volume 1 Batman #533, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #53, Catwoman #33–35, Detective Comics #697–700 and Robin #31. April 2017 978-1401272029
Batman: Legacy Volume 2 Batman #534, Batman: Bane #1, Batman: Bane of the Demon #1–4, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #54,
Detective Comics #701–702, Robin #32–33
February 2018 978-1401277611
Batman: Cataclysm Batman #553–554, Detective Comics #719–721, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #73–74, Nightwing #19–20,
Catwoman #56–57, Robin #52–53, Azrael #40, Batman Chronicles #12, Batman: Blackgate #1,
Batman: Huntress/Spoiler: Blunt Trauma #1, and Batman: Arkham Asylum - Tales of Madness #1
June 2015 978-1401255152
Batman: Road to No Man's Land Volume 1 Detective Comics #722, 724–726, Batman #555–559, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #75–79, Robin #54, and Batman Chronicles #14 October 2015 978-1401258276
Batman: Road to No Man's Land Volume 2 Detective Comics #727–729, Batman #560–562, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #80–82,
Batman Chronicles #15, Azrael #47–50, and Batman: No Man's Land Secret Files & Origins #1
July 2016 978-1401260637
Batman: No Man's Land Volume 1 Batman: No Man's Land #1, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #83–86, Batman #563–566, Detective Comics #730–733,
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #51–55, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #117–118, Batman Chronicles #16
December 2011 978-1401232283
Batman: No Man's Land Volume 2 Batman #567–568, Detective Comics #734–735, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #119–121,
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #87–88, Batman Chronicles #17, Robin #67, Nightwing #35–37, Catwoman #72–74,
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #56–57, Young Justice: No Man's Land #1
April 2012 978-1401233808
Batman: No Man's Land Volume 3 Batman #569-71, Detective Comics #736–738, Azrael: Agent of the Bat #58, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #122–124,
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #89–92, Robin #68–72, and Batman: No Man's Land Secret Files and Origins #1
August 2012 978-1401234560
Batman: No Man's Land Volume 4 Batman Chronicles #18, Batman #572–574, Detective Comics #739–741, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #125–126,
Robin #73, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #93–94, Azrael: Agent of the Bat #59–61, Catwoman #75–77, Nightwing #38–39 and Batman: No Man's Land #0
December 2012 978-1401235642
Batman: Evolution Detective Comics #743–750 August 2001 978-1-56389-726-9
Batman: New Gotham Volume 1 Detective Comics #742–753 May 2017 978-1401263676
Batman: Officer Down Batman #587, Robin #86, Birds of Prey #27, Catwoman #90, Nightwing #53, Detective Comics #754, Batman: Gotham Knights #13 August 2001 978-1-56389-787-0
Batman: New Gotham Volume 2 Detective Comics #755–765 March 2018 978-1401277949
Batman: Bruce Wayne – Murderer? Batgirl #24, 27, Batman #599–602, Batman: Gotham Knights #25–28, Batman: The 10-Cent Adventure #1,
Birds Of Prey #39–41, 43, Detective Comics #766–767, Nightwing #65–66, 68–69 and Robin #98–99
March 2014 978-1401246839
Batman: Bruce Wayne – Fugitive Batman #603–607, Detective Comics #768–775, Batman: Gotham Knights #29–32 and Batgirl #29, 33 July 2014 978-1401246822
Batman: The Man Who Laughs Detective Comics #784–786 and Batman: The Man Who Laughs January 2008 (hardcover)
February 2009(softcover)
978-1-4012-1622-1
978-1-4012-1626-9
Batman: War Drums Detective Comics #790–796 and Robin (vol. 2) #126–128 October 2004 978-1-4012-0341-2
Batman: War Games Act One – Outbreak Batman: The 12-Cent Adventure, Detective Comics #797, Batman #631, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #182,
Nightwing #96, Batman: Gotham Knights #56, Robin #129, Batgirl #55, Catwoman #34
February 2006 978-1401204297
Batman: War Games Act Two – Tides Detective Comics #798, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #183, Nightwing #97,
Batman: Gotham Knights #57, Robin #130, Batgirl #56, Catwoman #35, Batman #632
June 2005 978-1401204303
Batman: War Games Act Three – Endgame Batgirl #57, Batman #633, Batman: Gotham Knights #58, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #184,
Catwoman #36, Detective Comics #799, Nightwing #98, Robin 131
October 2005 978-1401204310
Batman: City of Crime Detective Comics #800–808, 811–814 July 2006 978-1-4012-0897-4
Batman: War Crimes Batman #643–644, Detective Comics #809–810 February 2006 978-1-4012-0903-2
Batman Arkham: Victor Zsasz Batman: Shadow of the Bat #1-4, a story from Batman Chronicles #3, Batman: Batgirl (1998) #1, Detective Comics #815-816,
Batman: Streets of Gotham #10-11; a story from Detective Comics v2 #18
and the never-before-published story "Draining," originally intended for Gotham Knights #12.
February 2020 978-1401298975
Batman: Face the Face Detective Comics #817–820, Batman #651–654 September 2006 978-1-4012-0910-0
Batman: Detective Detective Comics #821–826 April 2007 978-1-4012-1239-1
Batman: Death and the City Detective Comics #827–834 November 2007 978-1-4012-1575-0
Batman: The Resurrection of Ra's Al Ghul Batman #670–671, Robin #168–169, Detective Comics #838–839, Nightwing #138–139, Batman Annual #26 and Robin Annual #7 May 2009 978-1401220327
Batman: Private Casebook Detective Comics #840–845 and DC Infinite Halloween Special December 2008 (hardcover)
November 2009 (softcover)
978-1-4012-2009-9
978-1-4012-2015-0
Batman: Heart of Hush Detective Comics #846–850 April 2009 (hardcover)
March 2010 (softcover)
978-1-4012-2123-2
978-1-4012-2124-9
Batwoman: Elegy Detective Comics #854–860 July 2010 (Hardcover)
June 2011 (softcover)
978-1-4012-2692-3
978-1-4012-3146-0
Batwoman by Greg Rucka and J.H. Williams III Detective Comics #854-863 June 2017 978-1401274139
Batman: Arkham Reborn Battle For the Cowl: Arkham Asylum #1, Arkham Reborn #1-3, Detective Comics 864-865 August 2010 978-1401227081
Batman: Impostors Detective Comics #867–870 August 2011 978-1-4012-3144-6
Batman: The Black Mirror Detective Comics #871–881 November 2011 978-1-4012-3206-1

The New 52

The New 52 saw every DC Comics series collected in its entirety in trade paperback form. Notably, collected volumes of Detective Comics vol. 2 were published in hardcover editions first, with paperback editions being delayed until the release of the next hardcover volume.

# Title Material Collected Publication date ISBN
1 Faces of Death Detective Comics vol. 2 #1–7 HC: June 2012
SC: April 2013
HC: 978-1401234669
SC: 978-1401234676
2 Scare Tactics Detective Comics vol. 2 #8–12, #0, Detective Comics Annual vol. 2 #1 HC: April 2013
SC: November 2013
HC: 978-1401238408
SC: 978-1401242657
3 Emperor Penguin Detective Comics vol. 2 #13–18 HC: November 2013
SC: July 2014
HC: 978-1401242664
SC: 978-1401246346
4 The Wrath Detective Comics vol. 2 #19–24, Detective Comics Annual vol. 2 #2 HC: July 2014
SC: November 2014
HC: 978-1401246334
SC: 978-1401249977
5 Gothtopia Detective Comics vol. 2 #25–29 HC: November 2014
SC: May 2015
HC: 978-1401249984
SC: 978-1401254667
6 Icarus Detective Comics vol. 2 #30–34, Detective Comics Annual vol. 2 #3 HC: May 2015
SC: January 2016
HC: 978-1401254421
SC: 978-1401258023
7 Anarky Detective Comics vol. 2 #35–40, Detective Comics: Endgame #1, Detective Comics: Futures End #1 HC: January 2016
SC: August 2016
HC: 978-1401257491
SC: 978-1401263546
8 Blood of Heroes Detective Comics vol. 2 #41–46 HC: August 2016
SC: December 2016
HC: 978-1401263553
SC: 978-1401269241
9 Gordon at War Detective Comics vol. 2 #47–52 HC: December 2016
SC: June 2017
HC: 978-1401269234
SC: 978-1401274115

Material from Detective Comics vol. 2 was also included in several collections of crossover events, each printed in both hardcover and softcover. In each case, the material consisted of tie-ins to the main event.

Title Material Collected Publication date ISBN
Batman: Night of the Owls All-Star Western vol. 3 #9; Batman vol. 2 #8–9; Batman Annual vol. 2 #1; Batman: The Dark Knight vol. 2 #9; Detective Comics vol. 2 #9; Batgirl vol. 4 #9; Batwing #9; Birds of Prey vol. 3 #9; Nightwing vol. 3 #8–9; Batman and Robin vol. 2 #9; Catwoman vol. 4 #9; Red Hood and the Outlaws #9 HC: February 2013
SC: November 2013
HC: 978-1401237738
SC: 978-1401242527
The Joker: Death of the Family Catwoman vol. 4 #13–14; Batgirl vol. 4 #13–16; Suicide Squad vol. 4 #14–15; Batman and Robin vol. 2 #15–16; Nightwing vol. 3 #15–16; Detective Comics vol. 2 #15–16; Red Hood and the Outlaws #15–16; Teen Titans vol. 4 #15–16 HC: October 2013
SC: April 2014
HC: 978-1401242343
SC: 978-1401246464
DC Comics: Zero Year Action Comics vol. 2 #25; Batgirl vol. 4 #25; Batman vol. 2 #24–25; Batwing #25; Batwoman #25; Birds of Prey vol. 3 #25; Catwoman vol. 4 #25; Detective Comics vol. 2 #25; Green Arrow vol. 6 #25; Green Lantern Corps vol. 3 #25; Nightwing vol. 3 #25; Red Hood and The Outlaws #25; The Flash vol. 4 #25 HC: November 2014
SC: April 2015
HC: 978-1401249373
SC: 978-1401253370
The Joker: Endgame Batman vol. 2 #35–40; Batman Annual vol. 2 #3; Gotham Academy: Endgame #1; Batgirl: Endgame #1; Detective Comics: Endgame #1; Arkham Manor: Endgame #1 HC: September 2015
SC: May 2016
HC: 978-1401258771
SC: 978-1401261658

DC Rebirth to present

Volumes 1-5 were published with DC Rebirth trade dress on the cover. This was dropped from volume 6 onwards, coinciding with the end of "DC Rebirth" branding on the series from issue #970 onwards.

Numbering on the collected editions was restarted from volume 1 with the start of Peter Tomasi's run as writer in issue #994. The first three volumes were published in hardcover editions first, before being reprinted in paperback.

# Title Material collected Pages Cover Date Published ISBN
Original printings
1 Rise of the Batmen Detective Comics #934–940 176 TPB February 1, 2017 978-1401267995
Batman: Night of the Monster Men Batman vol. 3 #7–8; Detective Comics #941–942; Nightwing vol. 4 #5–6 144 February 22, 2017 978-1401270674
2 The Victim Syndicate Detective Comics #943–949 168 May 10, 2017 978-1401268916
3 League of Shadows Detective Comics #950–956 184 October 4, 2017 978-1401276096
4 Deus Ex Machina Detective Comics #957–962 144 December 13, 2017 978-1401274979
5 A Lonely Place of Living Detective Comics #963–968 April 4, 2018 978-1401278229
6 Fall of the Batmen Detective Comics #969–974 and Annual #1 184 June 20, 2018 978-1401281458
7 Batmen Eternal Detective Comics #975–981 176 September 5, 2018 978-1401284213
8 On The Outside Detective Comics #982-987 144 December 5, 2018 978-1401285289
9 Deface The Face Detective Comics #988-993 168 April 3, 2019 978-1401290641
1 Mythology Detective Comics #994-999 144 HC September 10, 2019 978-1779501622
TPB February 20, 2020 978-1779501721
2 Arkham Knight Detective Comics #1001-1005 144 HC December 17, 2019 978-1779501646
TPB September 8, 2020 978-1779502513
3 Greetings From Gotham Detective Comics #1006-1011 144 HC April 8, 2020 978-1401288617
TPB September 29, 2020 978-1779505545
4 Cold Vengeance Detective Comics #1012-1019 192 TPB December 29, 2020 978-1779504555
5 The Joker War Detective Comics #1020-1027 and Annual #3; Batman: Pennyworth R.I.P 256 HC March 23, 2021 978-1779509222
6 The Road to Ruin Detective Comics #1028-1033 144 HC October 5, 2021 978-1779512703
1 The Neighborhood Detective Comics #1034-1039 203 HC February 8, 2022 978-1779514226
Deluxe hardcovers
Book 1 Detective Comics #934-949 388 OHC November 7, 2017 978-1401276089
Book 2 Detective Comics #950-962 320 May 15, 2018 978-1401278571
Book 3 Detective Comics #963-973 and Annual #1 320 October 30, 2018 978-1401284817
Book 4 Detective Comics #974-982 296 April 23, 2019 978-1401289102
Issue #1000 Detective Comics #1000 160 June 18, 2019 978-1401294199

Millennium Editions

In 2000 and 2001, DC reprinted several of its most notable issues in the Millennium Edition series. Seven issues of Detective Comics were reprinted in this format.[100]

References

  1. ^ . DC Comics. July 25, 2009. Archived from the original on July 24, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2012. DC Comics President and Publisher Paul Levitz accepted an award on behalf of DC from the Guinness World Records, recognizing Detective Comics as the longest-running comic book periodical in the United States of America.
  2. ^ Wallace, Daniel; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1930s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. The launch of Detective Comics defined [Malcolm] Wheeler-Nicholson's young comics company and set it on an ascendant path within the industry...His smart business decision to partner with businessmen Harry Donenfeld and Jack Liebowitz on Detective Comics guaranteed that his company's third title would at least be solvent. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ Wallace "1930s" in Dolan, p. 21: "Alongside more typical fare...came the debut of the Crimson Avenger, the first masked crime fighter in comics."
  4. ^ Cronin, Brian (13 June 2016). "The 25 Most Important "Detective Comics" Issues Ever Published". CBR. Released over two years before Batman's debut, this issue (marred by its grotesquely racist cover) [...]
  5. ^ Funk, Matthew (2 March 2017). "Before Batman: looking back at Detective Comics #1 80 years later". SYFY WIRE. Hindsight is 20/20, [...] and being published in 1937, there's a fair bit of racism and xenophobia as is clearly shown by the cover.
  6. ^ Dong, Lan (2011). "Reimagining the Monkey King in Comics: Gene Luen Yang's American Born Chinese". The Oxford handbook of children's literature. Oxford University Press. pp. 241 & 248. ISBN 978-0-19-537978-5.
  7. ^ McCool, Ben (19 August 2015). "Exploring The Forgotten Back-Up Stories In Batman, Superman And Spider-Man's First Appearances". Tech Times. Prior to Batman's arrival, stars of the book included [...] Ching Lung (a "yellow peril" villain...and yes, it's every bit as racist/cringeworthy as it sounds)
  8. ^ Wallace "1930s" in Dolan, p. 24: "DC's second superstar debuted in the lead story of this issue, written by Bill Finger and drawn by Bob Kane, though the character was missing many of the elements that would make him a legend."
  9. ^ Cavna, Michael (February 27, 2010). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 12, 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  10. ^ Wallace "1930s" in Dolan, p. 25: "In November's Detective Comics #33, a two-page story titled 'The Batman and How He Came to Be' recounted the Dark Knight's tragic and driven origin."
  11. ^ Desris, Joe (1994). "Cops, Crooks, and Creeps". The Golden Age of Batman The Greatest Covers of Detective Comics From the '30s to the '50s. New York, New York: Artabras. p. 11. ISBN 0896600467. Gotham City's most famous detective ultimately usurped the coveted cover position with issue 35.
  12. ^ Wallace "1940s" in Dolan, p. 31: "Writer Bill Finger and artist Bob Kane justified any hyperbole in this issue, for with the introduction of Robin, Batman's world changed forever."
  13. ^ Wallace "1940s" in Dolan, p. 37: "One of Batman's most peculiar foes first appeared in this issue, and naturally he brought his trademark umbrella with him. The Penguin was a squat dandy with a beaked nose and a tuxedo."
  14. ^ Wallace "1940s" in Dolan, p. 41: "The nightmarish Two-Face debuted as Batman's antagonist in this story by writer Bill Finger and artist Bob Kane."
  15. ^ Wallace, Daniel "1940s" in Dolan, p. 59: "The Riddler debuted as a perplexing foe of Batman in a story by writer Bill Finger and artist Dick Sprang."
  16. ^ Irvine, Alex "1950s" in Dolan, p. 80: "In the story 'The Batwoman' by writer Edmond Hamilton and penciller Sheldon Moldoff (as Bob Kane), Bruce Wayne took notice of a young admirer who...was fighting crime while wearing a bat-costume."
  17. ^ Daniels, Les (2004). Batman: The Complete History. San Francisco, California: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-4232-0.
  18. ^ Irvine "1950s" in Dolan, p. 94: "The impish Bat-Mite made his first appearance in Detective Comics #267, care of writer Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff."
  19. ^ McAvennie, Michael "1960s" in Dolan, p. 103: "Scribe Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff reshaped the face of evil with the second – and perhaps most recognized – Clayface ever to challenge the Dark Knight."
  20. ^ a b "Julius Schwartz' run on Detective Comics". Grand Comics Database.
  21. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 110: "The Dark Knight received a much-needed facelift from new Batman editor Julius Schwartz, writer John Broome, and artist Carmine Infantino. With sales at an all-time low and threatening the cancelation of one of DC's flagship titles, their overhaul was a lifesaving success for DC and its beloved Batman."
  22. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 122 "Nine months before making her debut on Batman, a new Batgirl appeared in the pages of Detective Comics...Yet the idea for the debut of Barbara Gordon, according to editor Julius Schwartz, was attributed to the television series executives' desire to have a character that would appeal to a female audience and for this character to originate in the comics. Hence, writer Gardner Fox and artist Carmine Infantino collaborated on 'The Million Dollar Debut of Batgirl!'"
  23. ^ Forbeck, Matt; Dougall, Alastair (2014). "1960s". Batman: A Visual History. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 101. ISBN 978-1465424563. The main story, written by Mike Friedrich and drawn by Bob Brown, celebrated Batman's 30th anniversary by updating the first Batman story [from Detective Comics #27].
  24. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 143: "Artist Neal Adams and writer Denny O'Neil rescued Batman from the cozy, campy cul-de-sac he had been consigned to in the 1960s and returned the Dark Knight to his roots as a haunted crime fighter. The cover of their first collaboration, "The Secret of the Waiting Graves", was typical of Adams' edgy, spooky style."
  25. ^ Greenberger, Robert; Manning, Matthew K. (2009). The Batman Vault: A Museum-in-a-Book with Rare Collectibles from the Batcave. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Running Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-7624-3663-7. Editor Julius Schwartz had decided to darken the character's world to further distance him from the camp environment created by the 1966 ABC show. Bringing in the talented O'Neil as well as the innovative Frank Robbins and showcasing the art of rising star Neal Adams...Schwartz pointed Batman in a new and darker direction, a path the character still continues on to this day.
  26. ^ Goulart, Ron, Ron Goulart's Great History of Comic Books (Contemporary Books, Chicago, 1986) ISBN 978-0-8092-5045-5, p. 297
  27. ^ Daniels, Les (1995). "Revamping the Classics The Old Guard Gets a New Look". DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes. New York, New York: Bulfinch Press. p. 157. ISBN 0821220764.
  28. ^ Greenberger and Manning, p. 177 "Adams helped darken Gotham City in the 1970s [and] the scene was set for a new host of major villains. One of the first was Man-Bat, who debuted in the pages of 1970's Detective Comics #400."
  29. ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1970s" in Dougall, p. 109: "Batman had his first brush with the mysterious League of Assassins in this issue written by Dennis O'Neil and illustrated by Bob Brown."
  30. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 145 "Before Batman first encountered one of his greatest adversaries, Ra's al Ghul, he met his daughter, the lovely but lethal Talia [in a story by] writer Denny O'Neil and artist Bob Brown."
  31. ^ Eury, Michael (July 2015). "A Look at DC's Super Specs". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#81): 23–24.
  32. ^ Greenberger and Manning, p. 30: "It was Dick Giordano who, among many other similar feats, drew the March 1976 fan-favorite issue #457 of Detective Comics to illustrate the fabled Denny O'Neil yarn 'There is No Hope in Crime Alley'."
  33. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 174: "...first-time collaborators Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers firmly entrenched Batman in his dark, pulp roots."
  34. ^ . SciFi Wire, Syfy.com. March 28, 2007. Archived from the original on July 9, 2007. Even though their Batman run was only six issues, the three laid the foundation for later Batman comics. Their stories include the classic 'Laughing Fish' (in which the Joker's face appeared on fish); they were adapted for Batman: The Animated Series in the 1990s. Earlier drafts of the 1989 Batman movie with Michael Keaton as the Dark Knight were based heavily on their work.
  35. ^ Greenberger and Manning, p. 27: "Batman was now a true creature of the night, and every artist and writer team worth their creative salt wanted a piece of him. One of the greatest of such pairs consisted of writer Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers...when Rogers joined Englehart in Detective Comics issue #471 (August 1977), their styles meshed with such ease that the result gave the impression of years' worth of collaboration."
  36. ^ Greenberger and Manning, p. 163: "In this fondly remembered tale that was later adapted into an episode of the 1990s cartoon Batman: The Animated Series, the Joker poisoned the harbors of Gotham so that the fish would all bear his signature grin, a look the Joker then tried to trademark in order to collect royalties."
  37. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 179: "Writer Len Wein and artist Marshall Rogers vividly depicted Batman's battle with a third Clayface."
  38. ^ Romero, Max (July 2012). "I'll Buy That For a Dollar! DC Comics' Dollar Comics". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#57): 39–41.
  39. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 183: "September's Detective Comics #485 featured...the League of Assassins' murder of Kathy (Batwoman) Kane [an event] that sent Batman out for revenge in a story by scripter Denny O'Neil and artist Don Newton."
  40. ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1980s" in Dolan, p. 193: "The comic responsible for DC's name reached its 500th issue with the help of a variety of talented comic book icons...In a dimension-spanning story by writer Alan Brennert and fan-favorite artist Dick Giordano, Batman traveled to an alternate Earth to save the parents of a young Bruce Wayne...Writer of pulp icon the Shadow, Walter Gibson, spun a prose story of the Dark Knight, illustrated by Tom Yeates."
  41. ^ Greenberger, Robert (December 2013). "Memories of Detective Comics #500". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#69): 54–57.
  42. ^ a b Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 200: "Killer Croc made his mysterious debut in the pages of Detective Comics #523, written by Gerry Conway, with art by Gene Colan...Croc would soon become a major player in Gotham's underworld."
  43. ^ Ellison, Harlan (w), Colan, Gene (p), Smith, Bob (i). "The Night of Thanks, But No Thanks!" Detective Comics #567 (October 1986)
  44. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 229: "In 'Year Two', a four-part sequel [to "Batman: Year One"] set in Batman's second year as a crime fighter, writer Mike W. Barr and artists Alan Davis and Todd McFarlane challenged the Caped Crusader with the threat of the Reaper."
  45. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 235: "In February [1988], the Batman crossed paths with Scarface and the Ventriloquist in Detective Comics #583 by writer John Wagner and Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle."
  46. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dougall, p. 171: "Writers John Wagner and Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle introduced the Ratcatcher in this two-part story."
  47. ^ Greenberger and Manning, p. 41: "In the pages of Detective Comics, Batman screenwriter Sam Hamm took advantage of that year's ongoing writers' strike to write a three-issue story entitled "Blind Justice", which culminated in that title's 600th issue."
  48. ^ Manning "1990s" in Dougall, p. 195: "Chuck Dixon became the new writer on Detective Comics, starting with this issue with the help of the pencils of Tom Lyle and the inks of Scott Hanna."
  49. ^ Manning "1990s" in Dougall, p. 195
  50. ^ Manning "1990s" in Dougall, p. 196
  51. ^ Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 274: "['Legacy'] kicked into full speed in the anniversary issue of Detective Comics (#700), which came with a unique envelope wrapping."
  52. ^ Manning "2000s" in Dougall, p. 246: "Greg Rucka was handed the reins of Detective Comics, alongside artist Shawn Martinbrough...To visually distinguish the title from other Batman books, Martinbrough employed a minimal color palette, using shades of only one or two colors per issue."
  53. ^ Manning "2000s" in Dougall, p. 252: "Greg Rucka and artist Shawn Martinbrough debuted a major new character and love interest into the life of Batman: Sasha Bordeaux."
  54. ^ Cowsill, Alan "2000s" in Dolan, p. 318: "Detective Comics ' 800th issue was extra large to celebrate the comic's anniversary and set up a new direction for the Dark Knight...Scripted by Andersen Gabrych and pencilled by Pet Woods, the issue took Batman back to basics."
  55. ^ Manning "2000s" in Dougall, p. 290: "Paul Dini came aboard Detective Comics as its new ongoing writer as of this issue."
  56. ^ Manning "2000s" in Dougall, p. 293: "Paul Dini and artist Don Kramer introduced a new Ventriloquist in this self-contained issue."
  57. ^ Phegley, Kiel (July 14, 2012). "Snyder Goes Exclusive With Detective Comics". Comic Book Resources. from the original on July 18, 2010. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  58. ^ Wallace "1940s" in Dolan, p. 41: "The inaugural issue of Boy Commandos represented Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's first original title since they started at DC though the characters had debuted earlier that year in Detective Comics #64."
  59. ^ Wallace "1940s" in Dolan, p. 61: "Television was a new medium in 1949, and this issue saw the debut of Roy Raymond, adventurer and star of the fictional TV program 'Impossible _ But True!'"
  60. ^ Irvine "1950s" in Dolan, p. 77: "The Martian called J'onn J'onzz debuted as a regular feature in Detective Comics #225. 'The Strange Experiment of Dr. Erdel', by writer Joe Samachson and artist Joe Certa, gave the origin for the lonely Martian Manhunter."
  61. ^ Wells, John (May 2013). "The Master Crime-File of Jason Bard". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#64): 39–43.
  62. ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 157: "Together with exciting new artist Walt Simonson, [Archie] Goodwin executed seven flawless tales that chronicled Paul Kirk's hunt for the world's deadliest game...Manhunter's award-winning revival earned undying acclaim for its talented storytellers."
  63. ^ Boney, Alex (May 2013). "Hunting the Hunters: Manhunter and the Most Dangerous Game". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#64): 44–50.
  64. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 199: "Green Arrow netted the coveted position as backup story to the Dark Knight's adventures in Detective Comics. Written by Joey Cavalieri, with art by Trevor Von Eeden, the new feature saw Star City's renowned archer renew his war on crime."
  65. ^ Kingman, Jim (May 2013). "The Ballad of Ollie and Dinah". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#64): 10–21.
  66. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 214: "Dinah Lance adopted a new costume tailor-made for the 1980s in the pages of this issue's 'Green Arrow' back-up feature."
  67. ^ Detective Comics #589 at the Grand Comics Database
  68. ^ Detective Comics #595 at the Grand Comics Database
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  70. ^ Manning "2010s" in Dougall, p. 319: "For the first time, Batman starred in a first issue of Detective Comics as the title was restarted to reflect the revised continuity of DC Comics' New 52 universe."
  71. ^ Khouri, Andy (June 6, 2011). . ComicsAlliance. Archived from the original on May 17, 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
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  75. ^ West, Scott (June 10, 2012). "Comic Book Review: Detective Comics #10". Sciencefiction.com. from the original on November 20, 2014.
  76. ^ Langshaw, Mark (May 19, 2012). "Detective Comics, Batman: Arkham City win Stan Lee Awards". Digital Spy. from the original on June 24, 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2012.
  77. ^ . The New York Times Best Seller list. July 1, 2012. Archived from the original on June 28, 2012. Retrieved July 2, 2012.
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  82. ^ Johnston, Rich (April 19, 2012). . BleedingCool.com. Archived from the original on April 21, 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2012. I understand that for one month all the original new 52 books will be numbered #0 instead of being #13. And that their #13s will run in October instead.
  83. ^ . Newsarama. June 11, 2012. Archived from the original on June 15, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  84. ^ Rogers, Vaneta (June 26, 2012). . Newsarama. Archived from the original on June 29, 2012. Retrieved July 2, 2012. Tony was so busy on so many different fronts that we thought it could be really fun for us to collaborate, with him handling the art and me handling the story on this one. And so we just jumped in.
  85. ^ "Several 'Zero Month' Creative Changes One-Time Confirms DC". Newsarama. June 12, 2012. from the original on September 13, 2014. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  86. ^ Nagorski, Alex (May 7, 2012). . DC Comics. Archived from the original on May 17, 2012. Retrieved May 12, 2012.
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  88. ^ Rogers, Vaneta (November 6, 2013). "New Detective Comics Creative Team Bring Unique Visual Style to Batman". Newsarama. from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  89. ^ Hunsaker, Andy (June 3, 2013). "Exclusive: DC's Detective Comics Group Solicits for Villains Month". CraveOnline. from the original on June 10, 2013. Retrieved July 7, 2013.
  90. ^ Rogers, Vaneta (January 6, 2014). "Brad Meltzer Honors, Modernizes Batman's First Appearance in Detective Comics #27". Newsarama.com. from the original on May 21, 2014. Perhaps the most daunting task was given to Brad Meltzer and Bryan Hitch, who have created what DC is calling a 'modern-day retelling' of the first Batman story – the one in the original Detective Comics #27.
  91. ^ White, Brett (February 18, 2016). "Action, Detective Comics Return To Original Numbering For Rebirth". CBR.com. from the original on March 3, 2017. Action Comics numbering will pick up with #957 and Detective will be at #934. Both series will be released on twice-monthly schedule, at a $2.99 price.
  92. ^ Marston, George (March 26, 2016). "DC Comics Rebirth Recap – Creative Teams, Schedule & a Few New Details". Newsarama. from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  93. ^ Detective Comics #944 DC Comics (Burbank, California).
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  95. ^ Lawson, Corrina (April 25, 2018). "DC Comics Milestone #1000 Issues Are Missing Representation". Geek Mom. from the original on April 11, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  96. ^ Pollack, Sarabeth (March 2019). "Detective Comics #1000 will be ultimate issue for Batman fans". FanSided. from the original on April 11, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  97. ^ Sava, Oliver (April 25, 2018). "Action Comics #1000 is a powerful tribute to Superman's enduring legacy". The A.V. Club. from the original on April 11, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  98. ^ Spry, Jeff (February 19, 2019). "EXCLUSIVE REVEAL: ALEX ROSS SALUTES BATMAN'S 80TH BIRTHDAY WITH TWO DETECTIVE COMICS #1000 COVERS". SyFy Wire. from the original on April 11, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  99. ^ "RAM V AND RAFAEL ALBUQUERQUE TAKE THE STAGE IN DETECTIVE COMICS". DC. 2022-04-13. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  100. ^ Millennium Edition: Detective Comics at the Grand Comics Database

Further reading

External links

  • Detective Comics at DC Comics official site
  • Detective Comics at the Grand Comics Database
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)

detective, comics, predecessor, company, comics, called, national, comics, publications, technical, reasons, redirects, here, comic, book, american, comic, book, series, published, later, shortened, comics, first, volume, published, from, 1937, 2011, later, co. For the predecessor company of DC Comics called Detective Comics Inc see National Comics Publications For technical reasons Detective Comics 27 redirects here For the comic book see Detective Comics 27 Detective Comics is an American comic book series published by Detective Comics later shortened to DC Comics The first volume published from 1937 to 2011 and later continued in 2016 is best known for introducing the superhero Batman in Detective Comics 27 cover dated May 1939 Detective ComicsDetective Comics 27 May 1939 Art by Bob KanePublication informationPublisherDetective Comics Inc 1 119National Comics Publications 120 296National Periodical Publications 297 467DC Comics 468 currentScheduleList Monthly 1 434 446 466 489 811Eight times a year 469 474Bimonthly 435 445 467 468 475 488Twice monthly 934 currentWeekly 1047 1058FormatOngoing seriesPublication dateList vol 1 March 1937 October 2011 vol 2 November 2011 July 2016 vol 1 cont August 2016 presentNo of issuesList vol 1 883 1 881 plus issues numbered 0 and 1 000 000 and 12 Annuals vol 2 57 1 52 plus issues numbered 0 and 23 1 through 23 4 and 3 Annuals vol 1 cont 128 934 1062 and 4 Annuals as of September 2022 cover date Main character s List Batman since 27 Other characters Slam Bradleythe Elongated ManBatgirlRobinthe Manhunterthe Man Batthe Green Arrowthe Human TargetBatwomanCreative teamWritten byList vol 1 Bill FingerDennis O NeilFrank RobbinsGerry ConwayArchie GoodwinSteve EnglehartDavid V ReedChuck DixonGreg RuckaScott Snyder vol 2 Tony DanielDerek FridolfsGregg HurwitzMatt KindtJohn LaymanFrank TieriPeter J TomasiJames Tynion IVEd BrubakerPenciller s List vol 1 Bob KaneDick SprangSheldon MoldoffCarmine InfantinoGil KaneNeal AdamsIrv NovickJim AparoWalt SimonsonErnie ChanMarshall RogersGene ColanAlan DavisTom MandrakeDon NewtonJ H Williams III Pete Woods vol 2 Ed Benes Andy Clarke Tony DanielScot EatonJason FabokMikel JaninSyzmon KudranskiEduardo PansicaJavier PinaInker s List vol 1 Jerry RobinsonCharles ParisMurphy AndersonJoe GiellaSid GreeneDick GiordanoTerry AustinAlfredo AlcalaColorist s List Adrienne RoyA second series of the same title was launched in September 2011 but in 2016 reverted to the original volume numbering The series is the source of its publishing company s name and along with Action Comics the series that launched with the debut of Superman one of the medium s signature series The series published 881 issues between 1937 and 2011 and is the longest continuously published comic book in the United States 1 Note 1 Contents 1 Publication history 1 1 Batman Bruce Wayne 1 2 Back up features 1 3 Batwoman 1 4 The New 52 1 5 2016 present 2 Character debuts 3 Notes 4 Collected editions 4 1 Volume 1 1937 2011 4 1 1 Batman Archive editions 4 1 2 Batman Chronicles 4 1 3 Showcase Presents 4 1 4 Celebration hardcovers 4 1 5 Tales of The Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 4 1 6 Other editions 4 2 The New 52 4 3 DC Rebirth to present 4 4 Millennium Editions 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksPublication history Edit Detective Comics 1 March 1937 Art by Vin Sullivan Detective Comics was the final publication of the entrepreneur Major Malcolm Wheeler Nicholson whose comics company National Allied Publications would evolve into DC Comics one of the world s two largest comic book publishers though long after its founder had left it Wheeler Nicholson s first two titles were the landmark New Fun The Big Comic Magazine 1 cover dated Feb 1935 colloquially called New Fun Comics 1 and the first such early comic book to contain all original content rather than a mix of newspaper comic strips and comic strip style new material His second effort New Comics 1 would be retitled twice to become Adventure Comics another seminal series that ran for decades until issue 503 in 1983 and was later revived in 2009 The third and final title published under his aegis would be Detective Comics advertised with a cover illustration dated December 1936 but eventually premiering three months later with a March 1937 cover date Wheeler Nicholson was in debt to printing plant owner and magazine distributor Harry Donenfeld who was as well a pulp magazine publisher and a principal in the magazine distributorship Independent News Wheeler Nicholson took Donenfeld on as a partner in order to publish Detective Comics 1 through the newly formed Detective Comics Inc with Wheeler Nicholson and Jack S Liebowitz Donenfeld s accountant listed as owners 2 Wheeler Nicholson was forced out a year later Originally an anthology comic in the manner of the times Detective Comics 1 March 1937 featured stories in the hard boiled detective genre with such stars as Ching Lung a Fu Manchu style Yellow Peril villain Slam Bradley created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster before their character Superman saw print two years later and Speed Saunders among others Its first editor Vin Sullivan also drew the debut issue s cover The Crimson Avenger debuted in issue 20 October 1938 3 Early issues of the series have been criticized for their racism and xenophobia 4 5 6 7 Batman Bruce Wayne Edit Cover of Detective Comics 140 October 1948 the first appearance of the Riddler Art by Win Mortimer Detective Comics 27 March 1939 with a printed date of May 1939 first appearance of Batman 8 That superhero would eventually become the star of the title the cover logo of which is often written as Detective Comics featuring Batman Because of its significance issue 27 is widely considered one of the most valuable comic books in existence with one copy selling for 1 075 000 in a February 2010 auction 9 Batman s origin is first revealed in a two page story in issue 33 Nov 1939 10 Batman became the main cover feature of the title beginning with issue 35 Jan 1940 11 Issue 38 April 1940 introduced Batman s sidekick Robin billed as The Sensational Character Find of 1940 on the cover and the first of several characters that would make up the Batman Family 12 Robin s appearance and the subsequent increase in sales of the book soon led to the trend of superheroes and young sidekicks that characterize the era that fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books Several of Batman s best known villains debuted in the pages of Detective Comics during this era including the Penguin in issue 58 13 Two Face in issue 66 14 and the Riddler in issue 140 15 Batwoman first appeared in Detective Comics 233 July 1956 16 Since the family formula had proven very successful for the Superman franchise editor Jack Schiff suggested to Batman co creator Bob Kane that he create one for the Batman A female was chosen first to offset the charges made by Fredric Wertham that Batman and Robin were homosexual 17 Writer Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff introduced Bat Mite in issue 267 May 1959 18 and Clayface in 298 Dec 1961 19 In 1964 Julius Schwartz was made responsible for reviving the fading Batman titles 20 Writer John Broome and artist Carmine Infantino jettisoned the sillier aspects that had crept into the franchise such as Ace the Bathound and Bat Mite and gave the character a New Look that premiered in Detective Comics 327 May 1964 21 Schwartz Gardner Fox and Infantino introduced from the William Dozier produced TV series Barbara Gordon as a new version of Batgirl in a story titled The Million Dollar Debut of Batgirl in issue 359 Jan 1967 22 Mike Friedrich wrote the 30th anniversary Batman story in Detective Comics 387 May 1969 which was drawn by Bob Brown 23 Writer Dennis O Neil and artist Neal Adams had their first collaboration on Batman on the story The Secret of the Waiting Graves in issue 395 Jan 1970 24 The duo under the direction of Schwartz 25 would revitalize the character with a series of noteworthy stories reestablishing Batman s dark brooding nature and taking the books away from the campy look and feel of the 1966 68 ABC TV series 26 Comics historian Les Daniels observed that O Neil s interpretation of Batman as a vengeful obsessive compulsive which he modestly describes as a return to the roots was actually an act of creative imagination that has influenced every subsequent version of the Dark Knight 27 Adams introduced the Man Bat with writer Frank Robbins in Detective Comics 400 June 1970 28 O Neil and artist Bob Brown crafted Batman s first encounter with the League of Assassins in Detective Comics 405 Nov 1970 29 and created Talia al Ghul in issue 411 May 1971 30 After publishing on a monthly schedule throughout its run Detective Comics became a bi monthly book from issues 435 June July 1973 to 445 Feb March 1975 Issues 438 Dec 1973 Jan 1974 to 445 Feb March 1975 of the series were in the 100 Page Super Spectacular format 31 O Neil and artist Dick Giordano created the Batman supporting character Leslie Thompkins in the story There Is No Hope in Crime Alley appearing in issue 457 March 1976 32 Writer Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers produced an acclaimed run of Batman stories in Detective Comics 471 476 Aug 1977 April 1978 33 and provided one of the definitive interpretations that influenced the 1989 Batman film and would be adapted for the 1990s animated series 34 The Englehart and Rogers pairing was described in 2009 by comics writer and historian Robert Greenberger as one of the greatest creative teams to work on the Batman character 35 In their story The Laughing Fish the Joker is brazen enough to disfigure fish with a rictus grin then expects to be granted a federal trademark on them only to start killing the bureaucrats who try to explain to him that obtaining such a claim on a natural resource is legally impossible 36 Writer Len Wein and Rogers co created the third version of the supervillain Clayface in Detective Comics 478 July Aug 1978 37 From issue 481 Dec 1978 Jan 1979 through 495 Oct 1980 the magazine adopted the expanded Dollar Comics format used by the canceled Batman Family 38 adding solo features including Robin the Teen Wonder Batgirl the Human Target and the anthology Tales of Gotham City which featured stories of the city s ordinary people Julius Schwartz who had edited the title for most of its run since 1964 left the series as of issue 484 June July 1979 20 The original Katherine Kane also known as Batwoman was killed in the lead story in issue 485 Aug Sept 1979 by the League of Assassins 39 The title s 500th issue March 1981 featured stories by several well known creators including television writer Alan Brennert and Walter B Gibson best known for his work on the pulp fiction character The Shadow 40 41 Also used during the 1980s was the use of serialization of the main Batman story with stories from Detective Comics and Batman directly flowing from one book to another with cliffhangers at the end of each book s monthly story that would be resolved in the other title of that month A single writer handled both books during that time beginning with Gerry Conway and followed up by Doug Moench The supervillain Killer Croc made a shadowy cameo in issue 523 Feb 1983 42 Noted author Harlan Ellison wrote the Batman story in issue 567 43 Writer Mike W Barr and artists Alan Davis and Todd McFarlane crafted the Batman Year Two storyline in Detective Comics 575 578 which followed up on Frank Miller s Batman Year One 44 Writer Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle introduced the Ventriloquist in their first Batman story together 45 and the Ratcatcher in their third 585 46 Sam Hamm who wrote the screenplay for Tim Burton s Batman wrote the Blind Justice story in Detective Comics issues 598 600 47 Chuck Dixon became the writer of the series with issue 644 May 1992 48 He and Tom Lyle co created the Electrocutioner in Detective Comics 644 May 1992 49 and Stephanie Brown in Detective Comics 647 August 1992 50 The Batman Legacy storyline began in issue 700 August 1996 51 The No Man s Land storyline crossed over into Detective Comics in issues 730 741 Writer Greg Rucka and artist Shawn Martinbrough became the creative team as of issue 742 March 2000 52 and created the Sasha Bordeaux character in issue 751 Dec 2000 53 Issue 800 Jan 2005 was written by Andersen Gabrych and drawn by Pete Woods 54 Paul Dini became the writer of the series as of issue 821 Sept 2006 55 and created a new version of the Ventriloquist in 827 March 2007 56 Scott Snyder became the writer of Detective Comics with issue 871 Jan 2011 57 Back up features Edit In addition to the Batman stories the title has had numerous back up strips The Boy Commandos by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby debuted in Detective Comics 64 June 1942 and were then soon spun off into their own title 58 The character Roy Raymond first appeared in issue 153 Nov 1949 59 The Martian Manhunter was created by writer Joseph Samachson and artist Joe Certa in the back up story The Strange Experiment of Dr Erdel in Detective Comics 225 Nov 1955 60 After issue 326 April 1964 the Martian Manhunter was moved to House of Mystery and in issue 327 the Elongated Man and his wife now remodeled after Dashiell Hammett s Nick and Nora Charles took over The characters crossed over with Batman three times The Elongated Man run lasted until issue 383 Jan 1969 and his feature returned sporadically 15 times until issue 572 which celebrated the 50th anniversary of the title by teaming him up with Batman Robin Slam Bradley and Sherlock Holmes against Edgar Moriarty the great grandnephew of Professor Moriarty After the Elongated Man back up feature ended Batgirl held the role until issue 424 After moving her to Batman Family she returned from issues 481 519 Jason Bard appeared as the backup feature in the odd numbered issues of Detective from 425 435 61 The Manhunter was resurrected in a story by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson in issue 437 Oct Nov 1973 62 63 With the last episode of the series Manhunter moved to the front of the book in a full length team up with Batman The Green Arrow became the back up feature starting with issue 521 Dec 1982 64 and running until 567 Oct 1986 65 The Black Canary received a new costume in the back up story in issue 554 Sept 1985 66 DC Comics Bonus Books were included in issues 589 August 1988 67 and 595 Jan 1989 68 After a lengthy absence the back up features returned for issues 746 810 These were more closed ended stories featuring new and established characters in the Batman mythos The first was The Jacobian in issues 746 757 followed by a one issue Batman story in 758 The following issues 759 762 featured Slam Bradley and were a lead in to the 2002 Catwoman series Issues 763 772 featured Josephine Josie Mac MacDonald a Gotham police detective Issues 773 775 were titled Tales of Gotham and feature Detectives Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya Batman starred in Spore from issues 776 780 781 featured a special Elseworlds tale while 782 featured a Batman solo tale Issue 783 featured a prelude to the Death and the Maidens miniseries and issue 784 featured a Josie Mac tale The Tales of Gotham stories resumed in issues 785 788 with The Dogcatcher and 789 794 featured The Tailor Polished Stone featuring the Green Arrow and Onyx ran in issues 795 796 Low featuring the Riddler and Poison Ivy ran from issues 797 799 Detective Comics 800 featured a short Batman back up story under the Tales of Gotham banner A four issue 801 805 story featuring the Barker entitled When You re Strange was next and Mud in issue 805 A two issue story 806 807 featuring Alfred was followed by the last back up a three issue 808 810 Killer Croc story The Manhunter series that ran as a backup in Detective Comics from 1973 to 1974 won the Shazam Award for Best Individual Short Story Dramatic in 1974 for the story Cathedral Perilous in issue 441 written by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson Batwoman Edit Main article Batwoman Elegy In 2009 as part of a planned reorganization of the Batman universe due to the events shown in Batman R I P and Final Crisis Detective Comics went on hiatus for three months while DC Comics published the Battle for the Cowl miniseries Upon its return the series featured the newly reintroduced in 52 Batwoman as the new star of the book as well as a 10 page back up feature starring Renee Montoya as the new Question 69 The series returned Batman to a starring role in early 2010 The New 52 Edit DC Comics relaunched Detective Comics with issue 1 in September 2011 as part of an initiative called The New 52 70 The series was written and drawn by Tony Daniel until the 12th issue with the team of John Layman and Jason Fabok beginning with issue 13 71 72 The first issue of the relaunched Detective Comics has received six printings second only to the relaunched Justice League which had seven printings 73 The series 7th issue was also DC Comic s 6th highest selling digital comic ranking above many other series in the Batman category 74 Scott West of Sciencefiction com gave the series third arc a positive review stating that After last month s disappointing Night of the Owls tie in issue it s nice to see Detective Comics getting back to where it should be good detective stories 75 The relaunched Detective Comics received the award for Best Series at the 2012 Stan Lee Awards 76 The series first collected edition would reach the number 1 spot on The New York Times Best Seller list in the category of Hardcover Graphic Books 77 Daniel wrote and penciled the series until the Night of the Owls crossover at which point Ed Benes Julio Ferreira and Eduardo Pansica began drawing the series for a three issue arc 78 79 The price of Detective Comics was increased due to the addition of a backup feature starring Batman villain Two Face which was written by Daniel and illustrated by Syzmon Kudranski this followed a similar backup featuring Professor Hugo Strange 80 Daniel left the series with issue 12 being his last as writer and the 0 issue his last as penciller 81 DC celebrated the first anniversary of The New 52 in September 2012 by publishing a number 0 of each original New 52 title which act as prequels to the series and reveal previously unexplained plot elements 82 Gregg Hurwitz wrote the 0 issue 83 Hurwitz was approached by Daniel to write the 0 issue due to Daniel s busy schedule 84 85 To follow up on the Night of the Owls elements in Detective Comics Daniel wrote Detective Comics Annual 1 which was pencilled by Romano Molenaar and inked by Sandu Florea 86 Following Daniel s tenure on the series John Layman became the new writer and Jason Fabok the new artist 87 with James Tynion IV writing the backup features and Syzmon Kudranski remaining as artist for Tynion s first feature With issue 19 of Detective Comics vol 2 released on April 3 2013 the series reached 900 issues as combined with the first volume of the series and was a special oversized celebratory issue Under Layman the series featured its first crossover Gothtopia after which Layman and Fabok moved to the Batman Eternal series and Detective Comics was taken over by Brain Buccalleto and Francis Manapul 88 In commemoration of the second anniversary of The New 52 DC Comics announced Villains Month with Detective Comics getting four issues The issues starred Poison Ivy Harley Quinn the Scarecrow and the Man Bat and respectively being numbered 23 1 23 2 23 3 and 23 4 by an ensemble of writers and artists 89 For the 75th anniversary of Batman issue 27 was a larger sized issue featuring new stories by Brad Meltzer and Bryan Hitch 90 Scott Snyder and Sean Murphy Peter Tomasi and Ian Bertram John Layman and Jason Fabok Gregg Hurwitz and Neal Adams Mike W Barr and Guillem March and one written and drawn by Francesco Francavilla In addition variant covers to the issue were by Greg Capullo Frank Miller Chris Burnham Jim Lee Jason Fabok and Tony Daniel Single page artwork included work by Kelley Jones Mike Allred Patrick Gleason and Jock 2016 present Edit Writer Peter Tomasi at a 2019 signing for the series 1 000th issue at Midtown Comics in Manhattan In February 2016 DC Comics announced that as part of the company s continuity relaunch called DC Rebirth Detective Comics would resume its original numbering system with June 2016 s issue 934 The 52 issues of Detective Comics volume 2 2011 2016 were added to the original count of 881 issues from Detective Comics volume 1 1937 2011 making Detective Comics 934 the premier issue following the end of the DC Rebirth initiative The series was published twice monthly 91 The creative team beginning with issue 934 included writer James Tynion IV and artists Eddy Barrows and Alvaro Martinez 92 The series featured a team led by Batman and Batwoman Kate Kane operating out of a secondary base in the heart of Gotham known as the Belfry Team members initially included Red Robin Tim Drake Spoiler Stephanie Brown Orphan Cassandra Cain and Clayface Basil Karlo with Batwing Luke Fox and Azrael Jean Paul Valley later recruited as new members 93 Zatanna also briefly joins the team as a guest star in several issues This status quo ended with the conclusion of Tynion s run on the series in issue 981 published May 2018 During the interim period without a permanent writer Bryan Edward Hill wrote the story arc On the Outside starring Batman Orphan Signal Katana and Black Lightning over issues 983 987 as a prelude to his ongoing series Batman and the Outsiders The next regular writer Peter Tomasi began on the series with issue 994 published December 2018 Tomasi s run as writer continued for two years until issue 1033 published December 2020 On March 27 2019 DC Comics released the series 1 000th issue 94 marking the second American comic book in history to reach that milestone after Action Comics in 2018 95 96 97 The issue which coincided with Batman s 80th anniversary 98 is an anthology featuring several stories from a variety of different creative teams 94 Writer Mariko Tamaki began on the series with issue 1034 as part of the Infinite Frontier line wide relaunch citation needed In April 2022 it was announced that Ram V and Rafael Albuquerque would serve as the new creative team starting with issue 1062 99 Character debuts EditCharacter Issue PublicationSlam Bradley and Speed Saunders 1 March 1937The Crimson Avenger and Wing How 20 October 1938Batman Bruce Wayne and Commissioner Gordon 27 May 1939Doctor Death 29 July 1939The Monk Julie Madison 31 Sept 1939Dala 32 Oct 1939Joe Chill Thomas Wayne Martha Wayne 33 Nov 1939Professor Hugo Strange 36 Feb 1940Robin 38 April 1940Clayface Basil Karlo 40 June 1940The Penguin 58 December 1941Air Wave 60 February 1942Mister Baffle 63 May 1942The Boy Commandos 64 June 1942Two Face 66 Aug 1942Tweedledum and Tweedledee 74 April 1943The Cavalier 81 Nov 1943The Riddler 140 October 1948Pow Wow Smith 151 Sept 1949Roy Raymond 153 Nov 1949The Red Hood 168 Feb 1951The Firefly 184 June 1952Mysto 203 January 1954Mirror Man 213 Nov 1954The Batmen of All Nations 215 Jan 1955The Martian Manhunter 225 Nov 1955The Impostor Mad Hatter 230 April 1956Batwoman Kathy Kane 233 July 1956Diane Meade 246 Aug 1957The Terrible Trio 253 March 1958The Calendar Man 259 Sept 1958Doctor Double X 261 Nov 1958Bat Mite 267 May 1959Clayface Matt Hagen 298 Dec 1961The Catman Zook 311 Jan 1963The Idol Head of Diabolu 326 April 1964The Outsider 334 Dec 1964The Blockbuster 345 Nov 1965The Cluemaster 351 May 1966Batgirl Barbara Gordon 359 Jan 1967Jason Bard 392 Oct 1969The Man Bat 400 June 1970Talia al Ghul 411 May 1971Harvey Bullock 441 July 1974Leslie Thompkins 457 March 1976The Calculator 463 Sept 1976Doctor Phosphorus Boss Rupert Thorne 469 May 1977Silver St Cloud 470 June 1977Clayface Preston Payne 478 July 1978Maxie Zeus 483 May 1979The Odd Man 487 December 1979The Swashbuckler 493 March 1980Killer Croc 523 Note 2 Feb 1983Onyx 546 Jan 1985The Ventriloquist Arnold Wesker 583 Feb 1988The Ratcatcher 585 April 1988Anarky Lonnie Machin 608 Nov 1989Renee Montoya 642 March 1992Stephanie Brown 647 Jun 1992Cypher 657 March 1993Crispus Allen 742 March 2000Sasha Bordeaux 751 Dec 2000Nyssa Raatko 783 Aug 2003The Ventriloquist Peyton Riley 827 March 2007The Dollmaker vol 2 1 Sept 2011Dollhouse Mister Toxic vol 2 2 Oct 2011Eli Strange vol 2 5 March 2012Emperor Blackgate vol 2 13 Nov 2012The Merrymaker vol 2 17 Feb 2013Anarky Sam Young vol 2 37 Feb 2015The Arkham Knight 1000 May 2019The Silver Ghost 1027 November 2020Notes Edit Action Comics amassed more individual issues 904 in total despite launching a year after Detective due to 42 issues 601 642 in 1988 89 that were published weekly and because of Detective Comics bimonthly run from 1973 to 1975 The American record holder for most issues published is Dell Comics Four Color series which amassed more than 1 300 issues over a 23 year run There was a shadowy cameo in Detective Comics 523 Feb 1983 42 and his first full appearance is credited to Batman 357 March 1983 Collected editions EditSee also Batman collected editions Volume 1 1937 2011 Edit The Detective Comics series has been collected into a number of trade paperbacks and hardback collections Batman Archive editions Edit All DC Archive Editions are hardback only and printed on high quality archival paper Title Material collected Publication date ISBNBatman Archives Vol 1 Stories from Detective Comics 27 50 November 1997 HC 978 0930289607Batman Archives Vol 2 Stories from Detective Comics 51 70 November 1997 HC 978 1563890000Batman Archives Vol 3 Stories from Detective Comics 71 86 November 1997 HC 978 1563890994Batman Archives Vol 4 Stories from Detective Comics 87 102 December 1998 HC 978 1563894145Batman Archives Vol 5 Stories from Detective Comics 103 119 April 2001 HC 978 1563897252Batman Archives Vol 6 Stories from Detective Comics 120 135 August 2005 HC 978 1401204099Batman Archives Vol 7 Stories from Detective Comics 136 154 November 2007 HC 978 1401214937Batman Archives Vol 8 Stories from Detective Comics 155 170 July 2012 HC 978 1401233761Batman The Dynamic Duo Archives Vol 1 Batman 164 166 Detective Comics 327 333 March 2003 HC 978 1563899324Batman The Dynamic Duo Archives Vol 2 Batman 168 171 Detective Comics 334 339 June 2006 HC 978 1401207724Batman Chronicles Edit The Batman Chronicles series plans to reprint every Batman adventure in color in chronological order in affordable trade paperbacks It is not to be confused with the now finished series of the same name Title Material collected Publication date ISBNBatman Chronicles Vol 1 Detective Comics 27 38 Batman 1 April 2005 SC 978 1401204457Batman Chronicles Vol 2 Detective Comics 39 45 Batman 2 3 New York World s Fair Comics 2 September 2006 SC 978 1401207908Batman Chronicles Vol 3 Detective Comics 46 50 Batman 4 5 World s Best Comics 1 May 2007 SC 978 1401213473Batman Chronicles Vol 4 Detective Comics 51 56 World s Finest Comics 2 3 Batman 6 7 October 2007 SC 978 1401214623Batman Chronicles Vol 5 Detective Comics 57 61 World s Finest Comics 4 Batman 8 9 April 2008 SC 978 1401216825Batman Chronicles Vol 6 Detective Comics 62 66 World s Finest Comics 5 6 Batman 10 11 October 2008 SC 978 1401219611Batman Chronicles Vol 7 Detective Comics 67 70 World s Finest Comics 7 Batman 12 13 March 2009 SC 978 1401221348Batman Chronicles Vol 8 Detective Comics 71 74 World s Finest Comics 8 9 Batman 14 15 October 2009 SC 978 1401224844Batman Chronicles Vol 9 Detective Comics 75 77 World s Finest Comics 10 Batman 16 17 March 2010 SC 978 1401226459Batman Chronicles Vol 10 Detective Comics 78 81 World s Finest Comics 11 Batman 18 19 December 2010 SC 978 1401228958Batman Chronicles Vol 11 Detective Comics 82 85 World s Finest Comics 12 Batman 20 21 January 2013 SC 978 1401237394Showcase Presents Edit All Showcase Presents collections are large over 500 pages softcover black and white only reprints Title Material collected Publication date ISBNShowcase Presents Batman Vol 1 Detective Comics 327 342 Batman 164 174 August 2006 SC 978 1401210861Showcase Presents Batman Vol 2 Detective Comics 343 358 Batman 175 177 181 183 184 188 June 2007 SC 978 1401213626Showcase Presents Batman Vol 3 Detective Comics 359 375 Batman 189 192 194 197 199 201 July 2008 SC 978 1401217198Showcase Presents Batman Vol 4 Detective Comics 376 390 Batman 202 215 July 2009 SC 978 1401223144Showcase Presents Batman Vol 5 Detective Comics 391 404 Batman 216 228 December 2011 SC 978 1401232368Showcase Presents Batman Vol 6 Detective Comics 408 426 Batman 229 244 January 2016 SC 978 1401251536Showcase Presents Martian Manhunter Vol 1 Detective Comics 225 304 July 2007 SC 978 1401213688Showcase Presents Martian Manhunter Vol 2 Detective Comics 305 326 May 2009 SC 978 1401222567Showcase Presents Robin the Boy Wonder Vol 1 Robin stories from Detective Comics 386 390 394 395 398 403 445 447 450 451 January 2008 SC 978 1401216764Showcase Presents Batgirl Vol 1 Batgirl stories from Detective Comics 359 363 369 371 384 385 388 389 392 393 396 397 400 401 404 424 July 2007 SC 978 1401213671Showcase Presents Enemy Ace Vol 1 includes Enemy Ace story from Detective Comics 404 February 2008 SC 978 1401217211Celebration hardcovers Edit Starting in 2014 DC began releasing character retrospective anthologies several of which feature issues of Detective Comics Title Material collected Publication date ISBNBatman A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics 27 83 211 216 327 359 395 442 474 574 633 711 757 821 Batman 1 49 181 497 Batman vol 2 2 World s Finest Comics 94 DC Special Series 21 Batman Special 1 July 2014 978 1401247584Robin the Boy Wonder A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics 38 342 Batman 20 107 156 408 428 442 657 Star Spangled Comics 82 86 103 Batman Family 1 Nightwing 25 101 Superman Batman 7 77 Robin vol 4 46 126 Batman amp Robin Annual 1 Justice League of America 55 DC One Million 80 Page Giant 1 000 000 May 2015 978 1401255367The Joker A Celebration of 75 Years Batman 1 5 25 32 85 163 251 427 Batman vol 2 15 Detective Comics 64 168 180 475 476 726 741 826 Detective Comics vol 2 1 World s Finest Comics 61 Superman vol 2 9 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 66 July 2014 978 1401247591Two Face A Celebration of 75 Years Detective Comics 66 68 80 739 Batman 50 81 234 410 411 572 Annual 14 The Brave and the Bold 106 The Joker 1 Secret Origins 1 Batman Black and White 1 Gotham Central 10 Joker s Asylum Two Face 1 Batman and Robin 23 November 2017 978 1 4012 7438 2Green Arrow A Celebration of 75 Years More Fun Comics 73 89 Leading Comics 1 Adventure Comics 256 Justice League of America 4 The Brave and the Bold 85 Green Lantern Green Arrow 85 86 90 Detective Comics 549 550 559 Green Arrow vol 2 24 100 101 Green Arrow vol 3 4 18 Green Arrow Year One 2 Green Arrow and Black Canary Wedding Special 1 Justice League 8 Green Arrow vol 4 24 July 2016 978 1401263867Tales of The Batman Legends of the Dark Knight Edit These hardcover books reprint issues by particular creators and contain many issues of Detective Comics as well as other Batman titles Title Material collected Publication date ISBNTales of the Batman Carmine Infantino Detective Comics 327 347 349 351 371 500 Batman 166 175 181 183 184 188 192 194 199 The Brave and the Bold 172 183 190 194 DC Comics Presents Batman 1 June 2014 9781401247553Tales of the Batman Len Wein Detective Comics 408 444 448 466 478 479 500 514 Batman 307 310 312 319 321 324 326 327 World s Finest Comics 207 DC Retroactive Batman The 70s Untold Legends of the Batman 1 3 Batman Black and White 5 December 2014 978 1401251543Tales of the Batman Archie Goodwin Batman stories from Detective Comics 437 438 and 440 442 the Manhunter stories from 437 442 and the Batman Manhunter team up from 443 Detective Comics Annual 3 Showcase 95 11 Batman Black and White 1 and 4 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 132 136 the Batman Night Cries graphic novel July 2013 978 1401238292Legends of the Dark Knight Jim Aparo Volume 3 Detective Comics 444 446 Batman Family 17 The Brave and the Bold 152 154 155 157 162 168 170 173 178 180 182 The Untold Legend of the Batman 1 3 September 2017 978 1401271619Legends of the Dark Knight Michael Golden Batman Family 15 20 Batman 295 303 DC Special Series 15 Detective Comics 482 Batman Special 1 Batman Gotham Knights 22 Covers from Detective Comics 625 626 628 631 633 644 646 Batman 484 485 Showcase 93 Nightwing 66 77 amp 129 130 and the Man Bat entry from Who s Who in the DC Universe 12 June 2019 978 1401289614Legends of the Dark Knight Marshall Rogers Detective Comics 468 471 476 478 479 481 DC Special Series 15 Secret Origins 6 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 132 136 Batman Dark Detective 1 6 November 2011 978 1401232276Tales of the Batman Don Newton Detective Comics 480 483 497 Batman 305 306 328 The Brave and the Bold 153 156 and 165 December 2011 978 1401232948Tales of the Batman Alan Brennert The Brave and the Bold 178 181 182 and 197 Detective Comics 500 Batman Holy Terror July 2016 978 1401263492Tales of the Batman Gerry Conway Volume 1 Detective Comics 463 464 497 499 501 504 The Brave And The Bold 158 161 171 174 Batman 295 305 306 Batman Family 17 Man Bat 1 World s Finest Comics 250 269 July 2017 978 1401272555Tales of the Batman Gerry Conway Volume 2 Detective Comics 505 513 Batman 337 346 348 World s Finest Comics 270 August 2018 978 1401281632Tales of the Batman Gerry Conway Volume 3 Detective Comics 515 526 Batman 349 359 September 2019 978 1401292737Tales of the Batman Gene Colan Volume One Detective Comics 517 520 523 528 529 and Batman 340 343 345 348 351 August 2011 978 1401231019Tales of the Batman Gene Colan Volume Two Batman 373 Detective Comics 530 538 and 540 544 World s Finest Comics 297 and 299 March 2018 978 1401277697Legends of the Dark Knight Alan Davis Detective Comics 569 575 Batman Full Circle Batman Gotham Knights 25 February 2013 978 1401236816Legends of the Dark Knight Norm Breyfogle Volume One Detective Comics 579 582 594 601 607 stories from Batman Annual 11 12 July 2015 978 1401258986Legends of the Dark Knight Norm Breyfogle Volume Two Detective Comics 608 621 and Batman 455 459 November 2018 978 1401285128Tales of the Batman J H Williams Batman 526 550 667 669 Batman Annual 21 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 86 88 192 196 Chase 7 8 Detective Comics 821 July 2014 978 1401247621Legends of the Dark Knight Matt Wagner Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 28 30 Batman Riddler the Riddle Factory Batman Black and White 3 Batman the Monster Men 1 6 Batman The Mad Monk 1 6 Batman 54 Robin II 1 Robin III 5 Detective Comics 647 649 Batman 626 641 June 2020 978 1779502599Other editions Edit Many of these other editions are anthologies containing comics from titles other than Detective Comics Titles here are presented as close to chronologically as possible Title Material collected Publication date ISBNBatgirl The Bronze Age Omnibus Volume 1 Detective Comics 359 363 369 371 384 386 388 389 392 393 396 397 400 401 404 424 481 499 501 502 505 506 508 510 512 519 Batman 197 and Batman Family 1 3 7 and 9 20 December 2017 978 1401276409Manhunter The Special Edition Manhunter backup stories from 437 442 and the Batman Manhunter crossover in 443 Manhunter 1 and Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 100 June 1999 978 1 56389 374 2Batman Strange Apparitions Detective Comics 469 476 478 479 December 1999 978 1 56389 500 5DC Universe The Stories of Alan Moore Includes Night Olympics featuring Green Arrow and Black Canary from Detective Comics 549 550 January 2006 978 1 4012 0927 8Batman Year Two Detective Comics 575 578 later printing includes Batman Full Circle January 1990December 2002 978 0 930289 49 2978 1563899676Batman Year Two 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Detective Comics 575 578 Batman Full Circle November 2017 978 1401274566Batman The Dark Knight Detective Volume 1 Detective Comics 568 574 579 582 April 2018 978 1401271084Batman The Dark Knight Detective Volume 2 Detective Comics 583 591 Annual 1 October 2018 978 1401284688Batman The Dark Knight Detective Volume 3 Detective Comics 592 600 February 2020 978 1779501011Batman Blind Justice Detective Comics 598 600 May 2005 978 1 56389 047 5Batman Anarky Detective Comics 608 609 Batman Chronicles 1 Batman Shadow of the Bat 40 41 and Anarky 1 4 February 1999 978 1 56389 437 4Batman Knightfall Volume 1 Batman Vengeance of Bane 1 Batman 491 500 Detective Comics 659 666 Showcase 93 7 8 Batman Shadow of the Bat 16 18 May 2012 978 1401233792Batman Knightfall Volume 2 Knightquest Detective Comics 667 675 Shadow of the Bat 19 20 24 28 Batman 501 508 Catwoman 6 7 Robin 7 May 2012 978 1401235369Batman Knightfall Volume 3 KnightsEnd Batman 509 510 512 514 Batman Shadow of the Bat 29 30 32 34 Detective Comics 676 677 679 681 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 62 63 Robin 8 9 11 13 Catwoman 12 13 September 2012 978 1401237219Batman Prelude to Knightfall Batman Vengeance of Bane 1 Batman 484 491 Detective Comics 654 658 September 2018 978 1401284220Batman Knightfall Vol 1 Batman 492 497 Detective Comics 659 663 September 2018 978 1401284299Batman Knightfall Vol 2 Batman 498 500 Detective Comics 664 666 Showcase 93 7 8 Shadow of the Bat 16 18 September 2018 978 1401284398Batman Knightquest The Crusade Vol 1 Detective Comics 667 670 Robin 1 2 Batman Shadow of the Bat 19 20 Batman 501 504 Catwoman 6 7 October 2018 978 1401284503Batman Knightquest The Crusade Vol 2 Detective Comics 671 675 Batman Shadow of the Bat 24 28 Batman 505 508 Showcase 94 7 October 2018 978 1401284589Batman KnightsEnd Batman 509 510 Batman Shadow of the Bat 29 30 Detective Comics 676 677 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 62 63 Robin 8 9 Catwoman 12 13 Showcase 94 10 December 2018 978 1401285180Batman Zero Hour Batman 0 511 Batman Shadow of the Bat 0 31 Detective Comics 0 678 Catwoman 0 14 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 0 Robin 0 10 June 2017 978 1401272586Batman Prodigal Batman 512 514 Batman Shadow of the Bat 32 34 Detective Comics 679 681 and Robin 0 and 11 13 January 2019 978 1401285609Batman Troika Batman 515 Batman Shadow of The Bat 35 Detective Comics 682 Robin 14 Nightwing Alfred Returns and Batman Vengeance of Bane II February 2019 978 1401285876Robin Vol 5 War of the Dragons Robin 14 22 Robin Annual 3 and Detective Comics 685 686 January 2018 978 1401275129Batman Contagion Collects Azrael 15 16 Batman 529 Batman Chronicles 4 Batman Shadow of the Bat 48 49 Catwoman 31 35 Detective Comics 695 696 Robin 27 30 March 2016 978 1401260682Batman Legacy Volume 1 Batman 533 Batman Shadow of the Bat 53 Catwoman 33 35 Detective Comics 697 700 and Robin 31 April 2017 978 1401272029Batman Legacy Volume 2 Batman 534 Batman Bane 1 Batman Bane of the Demon 1 4 Batman Shadow of the Bat 54 Detective Comics 701 702 Robin 32 33 February 2018 978 1401277611Batman Cataclysm Batman 553 554 Detective Comics 719 721 Batman Shadow of the Bat 73 74 Nightwing 19 20 Catwoman 56 57 Robin 52 53 Azrael 40 Batman Chronicles 12 Batman Blackgate 1 Batman Huntress Spoiler Blunt Trauma 1 and Batman Arkham Asylum Tales of Madness 1 June 2015 978 1401255152Batman Road to No Man s Land Volume 1 Detective Comics 722 724 726 Batman 555 559 Batman Shadow of the Bat 75 79 Robin 54 and Batman Chronicles 14 October 2015 978 1401258276Batman Road to No Man s Land Volume 2 Detective Comics 727 729 Batman 560 562 Batman Shadow of the Bat 80 82 Batman Chronicles 15 Azrael 47 50 and Batman No Man s Land Secret Files amp Origins 1 July 2016 978 1401260637Batman No Man s Land Volume 1 Batman No Man s Land 1 Batman Shadow of the Bat 83 86 Batman 563 566 Detective Comics 730 733 Azrael Agent of the Bat 51 55 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 117 118 Batman Chronicles 16 December 2011 978 1401232283Batman No Man s Land Volume 2 Batman 567 568 Detective Comics 734 735 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 119 121 Batman Shadow of the Bat 87 88 Batman Chronicles 17 Robin 67 Nightwing 35 37 Catwoman 72 74 Azrael Agent of the Bat 56 57 Young Justice No Man s Land 1 April 2012 978 1401233808Batman No Man s Land Volume 3 Batman 569 71 Detective Comics 736 738 Azrael Agent of the Bat 58 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 122 124 Batman Shadow of the Bat 89 92 Robin 68 72 and Batman No Man s Land Secret Files and Origins 1 August 2012 978 1401234560Batman No Man s Land Volume 4 Batman Chronicles 18 Batman 572 574 Detective Comics 739 741 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 125 126 Robin 73 Batman Shadow of the Bat 93 94 Azrael Agent of the Bat 59 61 Catwoman 75 77 Nightwing 38 39 and Batman No Man s Land 0 December 2012 978 1401235642Batman Evolution Detective Comics 743 750 August 2001 978 1 56389 726 9Batman New Gotham Volume 1 Detective Comics 742 753 May 2017 978 1401263676Batman Officer Down Batman 587 Robin 86 Birds of Prey 27 Catwoman 90 Nightwing 53 Detective Comics 754 Batman Gotham Knights 13 August 2001 978 1 56389 787 0Batman New Gotham Volume 2 Detective Comics 755 765 March 2018 978 1401277949Batman Bruce Wayne Murderer Batgirl 24 27 Batman 599 602 Batman Gotham Knights 25 28 Batman The 10 Cent Adventure 1 Birds Of Prey 39 41 43 Detective Comics 766 767 Nightwing 65 66 68 69 and Robin 98 99 March 2014 978 1401246839Batman Bruce Wayne Fugitive Batman 603 607 Detective Comics 768 775 Batman Gotham Knights 29 32 and Batgirl 29 33 July 2014 978 1401246822Batman The Man Who Laughs Detective Comics 784 786 and Batman The Man Who Laughs January 2008 hardcover February 2009 softcover 978 1 4012 1622 1 978 1 4012 1626 9Batman War Drums Detective Comics 790 796 and Robin vol 2 126 128 October 2004 978 1 4012 0341 2Batman War Games Act One Outbreak Batman The 12 Cent Adventure Detective Comics 797 Batman 631 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 182 Nightwing 96 Batman Gotham Knights 56 Robin 129 Batgirl 55 Catwoman 34 February 2006 978 1401204297Batman War Games Act Two Tides Detective Comics 798 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 183 Nightwing 97 Batman Gotham Knights 57 Robin 130 Batgirl 56 Catwoman 35 Batman 632 June 2005 978 1401204303Batman War Games Act Three Endgame Batgirl 57 Batman 633 Batman Gotham Knights 58 Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 184 Catwoman 36 Detective Comics 799 Nightwing 98 Robin 131 October 2005 978 1401204310Batman City of Crime Detective Comics 800 808 811 814 July 2006 978 1 4012 0897 4Batman War Crimes Batman 643 644 Detective Comics 809 810 February 2006 978 1 4012 0903 2Batman Arkham Victor Zsasz Batman Shadow of the Bat 1 4 a story from Batman Chronicles 3 Batman Batgirl 1998 1 Detective Comics 815 816 Batman Streets of Gotham 10 11 a story from Detective Comics v2 18 and the never before published story Draining originally intended for Gotham Knights 12 February 2020 978 1401298975Batman Face the Face Detective Comics 817 820 Batman 651 654 September 2006 978 1 4012 0910 0Batman Detective Detective Comics 821 826 April 2007 978 1 4012 1239 1Batman Death and the City Detective Comics 827 834 November 2007 978 1 4012 1575 0Batman The Resurrection of Ra s Al Ghul Batman 670 671 Robin 168 169 Detective Comics 838 839 Nightwing 138 139 Batman Annual 26 and Robin Annual 7 May 2009 978 1401220327Batman Private Casebook Detective Comics 840 845 and DC Infinite Halloween Special December 2008 hardcover November 2009 softcover 978 1 4012 2009 9978 1 4012 2015 0Batman Heart of Hush Detective Comics 846 850 April 2009 hardcover March 2010 softcover 978 1 4012 2123 2978 1 4012 2124 9Batwoman Elegy Detective Comics 854 860 July 2010 Hardcover June 2011 softcover 978 1 4012 2692 3978 1 4012 3146 0Batwoman by Greg Rucka and J H Williams III Detective Comics 854 863 June 2017 978 1401274139Batman Arkham Reborn Battle For the Cowl Arkham Asylum 1 Arkham Reborn 1 3 Detective Comics 864 865 August 2010 978 1401227081Batman Impostors Detective Comics 867 870 August 2011 978 1 4012 3144 6Batman The Black Mirror Detective Comics 871 881 November 2011 978 1 4012 3206 1The New 52 Edit The New 52 saw every DC Comics series collected in its entirety in trade paperback form Notably collected volumes of Detective Comics vol 2 were published in hardcover editions first with paperback editions being delayed until the release of the next hardcover volume Title Material Collected Publication date ISBN1 Faces of Death Detective Comics vol 2 1 7 HC June 2012SC April 2013 HC 978 1401234669SC 978 14012346762 Scare Tactics Detective Comics vol 2 8 12 0 Detective Comics Annual vol 2 1 HC April 2013SC November 2013 HC 978 1401238408SC 978 14012426573 Emperor Penguin Detective Comics vol 2 13 18 HC November 2013SC July 2014 HC 978 1401242664SC 978 14012463464 The Wrath Detective Comics vol 2 19 24 Detective Comics Annual vol 2 2 HC July 2014SC November 2014 HC 978 1401246334SC 978 14012499775 Gothtopia Detective Comics vol 2 25 29 HC November 2014SC May 2015 HC 978 1401249984SC 978 14012546676 Icarus Detective Comics vol 2 30 34 Detective Comics Annual vol 2 3 HC May 2015SC January 2016 HC 978 1401254421SC 978 14012580237 Anarky Detective Comics vol 2 35 40 Detective Comics Endgame 1 Detective Comics Futures End 1 HC January 2016SC August 2016 HC 978 1401257491SC 978 14012635468 Blood of Heroes Detective Comics vol 2 41 46 HC August 2016SC December 2016 HC 978 1401263553SC 978 14012692419 Gordon at War Detective Comics vol 2 47 52 HC December 2016SC June 2017 HC 978 1401269234SC 978 1401274115Material from Detective Comics vol 2 was also included in several collections of crossover events each printed in both hardcover and softcover In each case the material consisted of tie ins to the main event Title Material Collected Publication date ISBNBatman Night of the Owls All Star Western vol 3 9 Batman vol 2 8 9 Batman Annual vol 2 1 Batman The Dark Knight vol 2 9 Detective Comics vol 2 9 Batgirl vol 4 9 Batwing 9 Birds of Prey vol 3 9 Nightwing vol 3 8 9 Batman and Robin vol 2 9 Catwoman vol 4 9 Red Hood and the Outlaws 9 HC February 2013SC November 2013 HC 978 1401237738SC 978 1401242527The Joker Death of the Family Catwoman vol 4 13 14 Batgirl vol 4 13 16 Suicide Squad vol 4 14 15 Batman and Robin vol 2 15 16 Nightwing vol 3 15 16 Detective Comics vol 2 15 16 Red Hood and the Outlaws 15 16 Teen Titans vol 4 15 16 HC October 2013SC April 2014 HC 978 1401242343SC 978 1401246464DC Comics Zero Year Action Comics vol 2 25 Batgirl vol 4 25 Batman vol 2 24 25 Batwing 25 Batwoman 25 Birds of Prey vol 3 25 Catwoman vol 4 25 Detective Comics vol 2 25 Green Arrow vol 6 25 Green Lantern Corps vol 3 25 Nightwing vol 3 25 Red Hood and The Outlaws 25 The Flash vol 4 25 HC November 2014SC April 2015 HC 978 1401249373SC 978 1401253370The Joker Endgame Batman vol 2 35 40 Batman Annual vol 2 3 Gotham Academy Endgame 1 Batgirl Endgame 1 Detective Comics Endgame 1 Arkham Manor Endgame 1 HC September 2015SC May 2016 HC 978 1401258771SC 978 1401261658DC Rebirth to present Edit Volumes 1 5 were published with DC Rebirth trade dress on the cover This was dropped from volume 6 onwards coinciding with the end of DC Rebirth branding on the series from issue 970 onwards Numbering on the collected editions was restarted from volume 1 with the start of Peter Tomasi s run as writer in issue 994 The first three volumes were published in hardcover editions first before being reprinted in paperback Title Material collected Pages Cover Date Published ISBNOriginal printings1 Rise of the Batmen Detective Comics 934 940 176 TPB February 1 2017 978 1401267995Batman Night of the Monster Men Batman vol 3 7 8 Detective Comics 941 942 Nightwing vol 4 5 6 144 February 22 2017 978 14012706742 The Victim Syndicate Detective Comics 943 949 168 May 10 2017 978 14012689163 League of Shadows Detective Comics 950 956 184 October 4 2017 978 14012760964 Deus Ex Machina Detective Comics 957 962 144 December 13 2017 978 14012749795 A Lonely Place of Living Detective Comics 963 968 April 4 2018 978 14012782296 Fall of the Batmen Detective Comics 969 974 and Annual 1 184 June 20 2018 978 14012814587 Batmen Eternal Detective Comics 975 981 176 September 5 2018 978 14012842138 On The Outside Detective Comics 982 987 144 December 5 2018 978 14012852899 Deface The Face Detective Comics 988 993 168 April 3 2019 978 14012906411 Mythology Detective Comics 994 999 144 HC September 10 2019 978 1779501622TPB February 20 2020 978 17795017212 Arkham Knight Detective Comics 1001 1005 144 HC December 17 2019 978 1779501646TPB September 8 2020 978 17795025133 Greetings From Gotham Detective Comics 1006 1011 144 HC April 8 2020 978 1401288617TPB September 29 2020 978 17795055454 Cold Vengeance Detective Comics 1012 1019 192 TPB December 29 2020 978 17795045555 The Joker War Detective Comics 1020 1027 and Annual 3 Batman Pennyworth R I P 256 HC March 23 2021 978 17795092226 The Road to Ruin Detective Comics 1028 1033 144 HC October 5 2021 978 17795127031 The Neighborhood Detective Comics 1034 1039 203 HC February 8 2022 978 1779514226Deluxe hardcoversBook 1 Detective Comics 934 949 388 OHC November 7 2017 978 1401276089Book 2 Detective Comics 950 962 320 May 15 2018 978 1401278571Book 3 Detective Comics 963 973 and Annual 1 320 October 30 2018 978 1401284817Book 4 Detective Comics 974 982 296 April 23 2019 978 1401289102Issue 1000 Detective Comics 1000 160 June 18 2019 978 1401294199Millennium Editions Edit In 2000 and 2001 DC reprinted several of its most notable issues in the Millennium Edition series Seven issues of Detective Comics were reprinted in this format 100 References Edit Detective Comics recognized by Guinness World Records as longest running comic book periodical DC Comics July 25 2009 Archived from the original on July 24 2012 Retrieved April 22 2012 DC Comics President and Publisher Paul Levitz accepted an award on behalf of DC from the Guinness World Records recognizing Detective Comics as the longest running comic book periodical in the United States of America Wallace Daniel Dolan Hannah ed 2010 1930s DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle London United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley p 17 ISBN 978 0 7566 6742 9 The launch of Detective Comics defined Malcolm Wheeler Nicholson s young comics company and set it on an ascendant path within the industry His smart business decision to partner with businessmen Harry Donenfeld and Jack Liebowitz on Detective Comics guaranteed that his company s third title would at least be solvent a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Wallace 1930s in Dolan p 21 Alongside more typical fare came the debut of the Crimson Avenger the first masked crime fighter in comics Cronin Brian 13 June 2016 The 25 Most Important Detective Comics Issues Ever Published CBR Released over two years before Batman s debut this issue marred by its grotesquely racist cover Funk Matthew 2 March 2017 Before Batman looking back at Detective Comics 1 80 years later SYFY WIRE Hindsight is 20 20 and being published in 1937 there s a fair bit of racism and xenophobia as is clearly shown by the cover Dong Lan 2011 Reimagining the Monkey King in Comics Gene Luen Yang s American Born Chinese The Oxford handbook of children s literature Oxford University Press pp 241 amp 248 ISBN 978 0 19 537978 5 McCool Ben 19 August 2015 Exploring The Forgotten Back Up Stories In Batman Superman And Spider Man s First Appearances Tech Times Prior to Batman s arrival stars of the book included Ching Lung a yellow peril villain and yes it s every bit as racist cringeworthy as it sounds Wallace 1930s in Dolan p 24 DC s second superstar debuted in the lead story of this issue written by Bill Finger and drawn by Bob Kane though the character was missing many of the elements that would make him a legend Cavna Michael February 27 2010 Batman Superman comic books set records for sale price The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 12 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2016 Wallace 1930s in Dolan p 25 In November s Detective Comics 33 a two page story titled The Batman and How He Came to Be recounted the Dark Knight s tragic and driven origin Desris Joe 1994 Cops Crooks and Creeps The Golden Age of Batman The Greatest Covers of Detective Comics From the 30s to the 50s New York New York Artabras p 11 ISBN 0896600467 Gotham City s most famous detective ultimately usurped the coveted cover position with issue 35 Wallace 1940s in Dolan p 31 Writer Bill Finger and artist Bob Kane justified any hyperbole in this issue for with the introduction of Robin Batman s world changed forever Wallace 1940s in Dolan p 37 One of Batman s most peculiar foes first appeared in this issue and naturally he brought his trademark umbrella with him The Penguin was a squat dandy with a beaked nose and a tuxedo Wallace 1940s in Dolan p 41 The nightmarish Two Face debuted as Batman s antagonist in this story by writer Bill Finger and artist Bob Kane Wallace Daniel 1940s in Dolan p 59 The Riddler debuted as a perplexing foe of Batman in a story by writer Bill Finger and artist Dick Sprang Irvine Alex 1950s in Dolan p 80 In the story The Batwoman by writer Edmond Hamilton and penciller Sheldon Moldoff as Bob Kane Bruce Wayne took notice of a young admirer who was fighting crime while wearing a bat costume Daniels Les 2004 Batman The Complete History San Francisco California Chronicle Books ISBN 0 8118 4232 0 Irvine 1950s in Dolan p 94 The impish Bat Mite made his first appearance in Detective Comics 267 care of writer Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff McAvennie Michael 1960s in Dolan p 103 Scribe Bill Finger and artist Sheldon Moldoff reshaped the face of evil with the second and perhaps most recognized Clayface ever to challenge the Dark Knight a b Julius Schwartz run on Detective Comics Grand Comics Database McAvennie 1960s in Dolan p 110 The Dark Knight received a much needed facelift from new Batman editor Julius Schwartz writer John Broome and artist Carmine Infantino With sales at an all time low and threatening the cancelation of one of DC s flagship titles their overhaul was a lifesaving success for DC and its beloved Batman McAvennie 1960s in Dolan p 122 Nine months before making her debut on Batman a new Batgirl appeared in the pages of Detective Comics Yet the idea for the debut of Barbara Gordon according to editor Julius Schwartz was attributed to the television series executives desire to have a character that would appeal to a female audience and for this character to originate in the comics Hence writer Gardner Fox and artist Carmine Infantino collaborated on The Million Dollar Debut of Batgirl Forbeck Matt Dougall Alastair 2014 1960s Batman A Visual History London United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley p 101 ISBN 978 1465424563 The main story written by Mike Friedrich and drawn by Bob Brown celebrated Batman s 30th anniversary by updating the first Batman story from Detective Comics 27 McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 143 Artist Neal Adams and writer Denny O Neil rescued Batman from the cozy campy cul de sac he had been consigned to in the 1960s and returned the Dark Knight to his roots as a haunted crime fighter The cover of their first collaboration The Secret of the Waiting Graves was typical of Adams edgy spooky style Greenberger Robert Manning Matthew K 2009 The Batman Vault A Museum in a Book with Rare Collectibles from the Batcave Philadelphia Pennsylvania Running Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 7624 3663 7 Editor Julius Schwartz had decided to darken the character s world to further distance him from the camp environment created by the 1966 ABC show Bringing in the talented O Neil as well as the innovative Frank Robbins and showcasing the art of rising star Neal Adams Schwartz pointed Batman in a new and darker direction a path the character still continues on to this day Goulart Ron Ron Goulart s Great History of Comic Books Contemporary Books Chicago 1986 ISBN 978 0 8092 5045 5 p 297 Daniels Les 1995 Revamping the Classics The Old Guard Gets a New Look DC Comics Sixty Years of the World s Favorite Comic Book Heroes New York New York Bulfinch Press p 157 ISBN 0821220764 Greenberger and Manning p 177 Adams helped darken Gotham City in the 1970s and the scene was set for a new host of major villains One of the first was Man Bat who debuted in the pages of 1970 s Detective Comics 400 Manning Matthew K 1970s in Dougall p 109 Batman had his first brush with the mysterious League of Assassins in this issue written by Dennis O Neil and illustrated by Bob Brown McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 145 Before Batman first encountered one of his greatest adversaries Ra s al Ghul he met his daughter the lovely but lethal Talia in a story by writer Denny O Neil and artist Bob Brown Eury Michael July 2015 A Look at DC s Super Specs Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 81 23 24 Greenberger and Manning p 30 It was Dick Giordano who among many other similar feats drew the March 1976 fan favorite issue 457 of Detective Comics to illustrate the fabled Denny O Neil yarn There is No Hope in Crime Alley McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 174 first time collaborators Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers firmly entrenched Batman in his dark pulp roots Batman Artist Rogers is Dead SciFi Wire Syfy com March 28 2007 Archived from the original on July 9 2007 Even though their Batman run was only six issues the three laid the foundation for later Batman comics Their stories include the classic Laughing Fish in which the Joker s face appeared on fish they were adapted for Batman The Animated Series in the 1990s Earlier drafts of the 1989 Batman movie with Michael Keaton as the Dark Knight were based heavily on their work Greenberger and Manning p 27 Batman was now a true creature of the night and every artist and writer team worth their creative salt wanted a piece of him One of the greatest of such pairs consisted of writer Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers when Rogers joined Englehart in Detective Comics issue 471 August 1977 their styles meshed with such ease that the result gave the impression of years worth of collaboration Greenberger and Manning p 163 In this fondly remembered tale that was later adapted into an episode of the 1990s cartoon Batman The Animated Series the Joker poisoned the harbors of Gotham so that the fish would all bear his signature grin a look the Joker then tried to trademark in order to collect royalties McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 179 Writer Len Wein and artist Marshall Rogers vividly depicted Batman s battle with a third Clayface Romero Max July 2012 I ll Buy That For a Dollar DC Comics Dollar Comics Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 57 39 41 McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 183 September s Detective Comics 485 featured the League of Assassins murder of Kathy Batwoman Kane an event that sent Batman out for revenge in a story by scripter Denny O Neil and artist Don Newton Manning Matthew K 1980s in Dolan p 193 The comic responsible for DC s name reached its 500th issue with the help of a variety of talented comic book icons In a dimension spanning story by writer Alan Brennert and fan favorite artist Dick Giordano Batman traveled to an alternate Earth to save the parents of a young Bruce Wayne Writer of pulp icon the Shadow Walter Gibson spun a prose story of the Dark Knight illustrated by Tom Yeates Greenberger Robert December 2013 Memories of Detective Comics 500 Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 69 54 57 a b Manning 1980s in Dolan p 200 Killer Croc made his mysterious debut in the pages of Detective Comics 523 written by Gerry Conway with art by Gene Colan Croc would soon become a major player in Gotham s underworld Ellison Harlan w Colan Gene p Smith Bob i The Night of Thanks But No Thanks Detective Comics 567 October 1986 Manning 1980s in Dolan p 229 In Year Two a four part sequel to Batman Year One set in Batman s second year as a crime fighter writer Mike W Barr and artists Alan Davis and Todd McFarlane challenged the Caped Crusader with the threat of the Reaper Manning 1980s in Dolan p 235 In February 1988 the Batman crossed paths with Scarface and the Ventriloquist in Detective Comics 583 by writer John Wagner and Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle Manning 1980s in Dougall p 171 Writers John Wagner and Alan Grant and artist Norm Breyfogle introduced the Ratcatcher in this two part story Greenberger and Manning p 41 In the pages of Detective Comics Batman screenwriter Sam Hamm took advantage of that year s ongoing writers strike to write a three issue story entitled Blind Justice which culminated in that title s 600th issue Manning 1990s in Dougall p 195 Chuck Dixon became the new writer on Detective Comics starting with this issue with the help of the pencils of Tom Lyle and the inks of Scott Hanna Manning 1990s in Dougall p 195 Manning 1990s in Dougall p 196 Manning 1990s in Dolan p 274 Legacy kicked into full speed in the anniversary issue of Detective Comics 700 which came with a unique envelope wrapping Manning 2000s in Dougall p 246 Greg Rucka was handed the reins of Detective Comics alongside artist Shawn Martinbrough To visually distinguish the title from other Batman books Martinbrough employed a minimal color palette using shades of only one or two colors per issue Manning 2000s in Dougall p 252 Greg Rucka and artist Shawn Martinbrough debuted a major new character and love interest into the life of Batman Sasha Bordeaux Cowsill Alan 2000s in Dolan p 318 Detective Comics 800th issue was extra large to celebrate the comic s anniversary and set up a new direction for the Dark Knight Scripted by Andersen Gabrych and pencilled by Pet Woods the issue took Batman back to basics Manning 2000s in Dougall p 290 Paul Dini came aboard Detective Comics as its new ongoing writer as of this issue Manning 2000s in Dougall p 293 Paul Dini and artist Don Kramer introduced a new Ventriloquist in this self contained issue Phegley Kiel July 14 2012 Snyder Goes Exclusive With Detective Comics Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on July 18 2010 Retrieved April 1 2012 Wallace 1940s in Dolan p 41 The inaugural issue of Boy Commandos represented Joe Simon and Jack Kirby s first original title since they started at DC though the characters had debuted earlier that year in Detective Comics 64 Wallace 1940s in Dolan p 61 Television was a new medium in 1949 and this issue saw the debut of Roy Raymond adventurer and star of the fictional TV program Impossible But True Irvine 1950s in Dolan p 77 The Martian called J onn J onzz debuted as a regular feature in Detective Comics 225 The Strange Experiment of Dr Erdel by writer Joe Samachson and artist Joe Certa gave the origin for the lonely Martian Manhunter Wells John May 2013 The Master Crime File of Jason Bard Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 64 39 43 McAvennie 1970s in Dolan p 157 Together with exciting new artist Walt Simonson Archie Goodwin executed seven flawless tales that chronicled Paul Kirk s hunt for the world s deadliest game Manhunter s award winning revival earned undying acclaim for its talented storytellers Boney Alex May 2013 Hunting the Hunters Manhunter and the Most Dangerous Game Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 64 44 50 Manning 1980s in Dolan p 199 Green Arrow netted the coveted position as backup story to the Dark Knight s adventures in Detective Comics Written by Joey Cavalieri with art by Trevor Von Eeden the new feature saw Star City s renowned archer renew his war on crime Kingman Jim May 2013 The Ballad of Ollie and Dinah Back Issue Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing 64 10 21 Manning 1980s in Dolan p 214 Dinah Lance adopted a new costume tailor made for the 1980s in the pages of this issue s Green Arrow back up feature Detective Comics 589 at the Grand Comics Database Detective Comics 595 at the Grand Comics Database Batwoman takes over Detective ICv2 February 9 2009 Archived from the original on September 27 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 Manning 2010s in Dougall p 319 For the first time Batman starred in a first issue of Detective Comics as the title was restarted to reflect the revised continuity of DC Comics New 52 universe Khouri Andy June 6 2011 Batman Relaunch New 1s for Batgirl Batman Detective Catwoman Birds of Prey ComicsAlliance Archived from the original on May 17 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 Truitt Brian September 5 2011 Tony Daniel makes history with Detective Comics No 1 USA Today Archived from the original on June 29 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 West Scott February 28 2012 Holy Sales Batman Action Comics Batman Batman The Dark Knight and Detective Comics 1s Getting Reprints ScienceFiction com Archived from the original on April 15 2012 Retrieved April 15 2012 Phegley Kiel April 6 2012 Exclusive DC Execs On Sales In Digital Print amp New 52 Wave Two Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on April 10 2012 Retrieved April 15 2012 West Scott June 10 2012 Comic Book Review Detective Comics 10 Sciencefiction com Archived from the original on November 20 2014 Langshaw Mark May 19 2012 Detective Comics Batman Arkham City win Stan Lee Awards Digital Spy Archived from the original on June 24 2012 Retrieved June 10 2012 Best Sellers Hardcover Graphic Books The New York Times Best Seller list July 1 2012 Archived from the original on June 28 2012 Retrieved July 2 2012 Kushins Josh March 8 2012 Guest Artists Join Batwoman and Detective Comics DC Comics Archived from the original on May 12 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 Exclusive DC Sneak Peek Detective Comics 11 Newsarama June 29 2012 Archived from the original on July 4 2012 Retrieved July 2 2012 DC Announces Detective Comics Two Face Back Up Feature Newsarama January 10 2012 Archived from the original on May 17 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 Zechs June 29 2012 Tony Daniel Off Detective Comics Theouthousers com Archived from the original on July 2 2012 Retrieved July 2 2012 Johnston Rich April 19 2012 DC Comics To Launch Zero Issues For The New 52 In September BleedingCool com Archived from the original on April 21 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 I understand that for one month all the original new 52 books will be numbered 0 instead of being 13 And that their 13s will run in October instead DC s September 2012 Solicits Preview Batman Newsarama June 11 2012 Archived from the original on June 15 2012 Retrieved June 12 2012 Rogers Vaneta June 26 2012 Origin Early Years Expanded In Detective Dark Knight 0 s Newsarama Archived from the original on June 29 2012 Retrieved July 2 2012 Tony was so busy on so many different fronts that we thought it could be really fun for us to collaborate with him handling the art and me handling the story on this one And so we just jumped in Several Zero Month Creative Changes One Time Confirms DC Newsarama June 12 2012 Archived from the original on September 13 2014 Retrieved June 12 2012 Nagorski Alex May 7 2012 Announcing Detective Comics Annual 1 DC Comics Archived from the original on May 17 2012 Retrieved May 12 2012 Nagorski Alex July 5 2012 Announcing a New Writer and Artist for Detective Comics DC Comics Archived from the original on August 15 2012 Retrieved August 19 2012 Rogers Vaneta November 6 2013 New Detective Comics Creative Team Bring Unique Visual Style to Batman Newsarama Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved December 8 2013 Hunsaker Andy June 3 2013 Exclusive DC s Detective Comics Group Solicits for Villains Month CraveOnline Archived from the original on June 10 2013 Retrieved July 7 2013 Rogers Vaneta January 6 2014 Brad Meltzer Honors Modernizes Batman s First Appearance in Detective Comics 27 Newsarama com Archived from the original on May 21 2014 Perhaps the most daunting task was given to Brad Meltzer and Bryan Hitch who have created what DC is calling a modern day retelling of the first Batman story the one in the original Detective Comics 27 White Brett February 18 2016 Action Detective Comics Return To Original Numbering For Rebirth CBR com Archived from the original on March 3 2017 Action Comics numbering will pick up with 957 and Detective will be at 934 Both series will be released on twice monthly schedule at a 2 99 price Marston George March 26 2016 DC Comics Rebirth Recap Creative Teams Schedule amp a Few New Details Newsarama Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved March 28 2016 Detective Comics 944 DC Comics Burbank California a b Jackson Matthew February 15 2019 COMICS DETECTIVE COMICS 1000 FULL LINEUP REVEALED BATMAN AND TMNT TEAM UP AGAIN MARVEL LAUNCHES AVENGERS NO ROAD HOME SyFy Wire Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 Lawson Corrina April 25 2018 DC Comics Milestone 1000 Issues Are Missing Representation Geek Mom Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 Pollack Sarabeth March 2019 Detective Comics 1000 will be ultimate issue for Batman fans FanSided Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 Sava Oliver April 25 2018 Action Comics 1000 is a powerful tribute to Superman s enduring legacy The A V Club Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 Spry Jeff February 19 2019 EXCLUSIVE REVEAL ALEX ROSS SALUTES BATMAN S 80TH BIRTHDAY WITH TWO DETECTIVE COMICS 1000 COVERS SyFy Wire Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 RAM V AND RAFAEL ALBUQUERQUE TAKE THE STAGE IN DETECTIVE COMICS DC 2022 04 13 Retrieved 2022 05 16 Millennium Edition Detective Comics at the Grand Comics DatabaseFurther reading EditJones Gerard 2004 Men of Tomorrow Geeks Gangsters and the Birth of the Comic Book New York New York Basic Books ISBN 0 465 03657 0 External links EditDetective Comics at DC Comics official site Detective Comics at the Grand Comics Database Detective Comics at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Detective Comics amp oldid 1134020673, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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