Batman Chronicles volume 7


By Bob Kane, Bill Finger, Jerry Robinson & various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84856-176-2

This seventh volume of chronological Batman yarns covers Batman #12-13, Detective Comics #66-70 and World’s Finest Comics #7, and features adventures that were produced during the darkest days of World War II. I’m sure it’s no coincidence that many of these Golden Age treasures are also some of the best and most reprinted tales in the Batman canon. With chief writer Bill Finger at a peak of creativity and production, everybody on the Home Front was keen to do their bit – even it that was simply making kids of all ages forget their troubles for a brief while…

‘The Crime of Two-Face’, (Detective Comics #66, August 1942) by Finger, Bob Kane and Jerry Robinson, is a classical tragedy in crime-caper form as Gotham DA Harvey Kent (the name was later changed to Dent) was disfigured in court and went mad – becoming the conflicted villain who remains one of the Caped Crusader’s greatest foes.

Batman #12 (Aug/Sept 1942) follows with another four classics. ‘Brothers in Crime’ by Don Cameron and Jerry Robinson, reveals the tragic fates of a criminal family whilst the Joker returns in ‘The Wizard of Words’ by Finger, Kane Robinson and George Roussos. Jack Burnley illustrated the spectacular daredevil drama ‘They Thrill to Conquer’ and ‘Around the Clock with Batman’ recounts a typical “day in the life” of the Dynamic Duo complete with blazing guns, giant statues and skyscraper near-death experiences.

From World’s Finest Comics #7 (Fall 1942) comes an imaginative thriller ‘The North Pole Crimes!’ whilst Detective Comics #67 features the Penguin as ‘Crime’s Early Bird!’ before Two-Face’s personal horror-story continues in ‘The Man Who Led a Double Life’ from #68.

Batman #13 (Oct/Nov 1942) tugged heartstrings as ‘The Batman Plays a Lone Hand’ but was on more traditional ground when the Joker organized a ‘Comedy of Tears’ (by Jack Schiff, Kane, Robinson & Roussos), and although ‘The Story of the Seventeen Stones!’ (drawn by Burnley) is a deliciously experimental murder-mystery, the heroes slipped into comfortable Agatha Christie – or perhaps Hitchcock territory – as they tackled a portmanteau of crimes on a train in Cameron, Kane, Robinson and Roussos’ ‘Destination: Unknown!’

Joseph Greene scripted the Joker’s next escapade in the marvelous case of ‘The Harlequin’s Hoax!’ from Detective Comics #68 and this brilliant book concludes with the decidedly different threat of ‘The Man Who Could Read Minds!’ another off-beat thriller from Don Cameron that premiered in Detective Comics #70.

This wonderful series of Golden Age greats is one of my absolute favourite collected formats: paper that feels comfortingly like newsprint, vivid colours applied with a gracious acknowledgement of the power and limitations of the original four-colour printing process and the riotous exuberance of an industry in the first flush of success The tales here show the creators and the characters at their absolute peak and they’re even more readable now that I don’t have to worry if I’m wrecking an historical treasure simply by turning a page. I can only pray that other companies like Marvel, Archie and the rest follow suit.

Soon.

© 1942, 2009 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.