Batman: Gotham Knights

Batman: Gotham Knights

Cover to Batman: Gotham Knights #43 (2003), featuring Batman and two of his allies: Batgirl and Robin. The cover mirrors Batgirl's first appearance. Art by Brian Bolland.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date March 2000 – April 2006
No. of issues 74
Main character(s) Batman
Creative team
Written by Devin Grayson, Scott Beatty, A.J. Lieberman]
Penciller(s) Dale Eaglesham, Paul Ryan, Roger Robinson, Al Barrionuevo, Dick Giordano, Javier Pina, Leonardo Manco
Inker(s) John Floyd, Bit
Letterer(s) Bill Oakley, Clem Robins
Colorist(s) Wildstorm FX, Pamela Rambo
Editor(s) Joseph Illidge, Dennis O'Neil
Collected editions
Batman Black and White Volume 2 ISBN 1-56389-828-4
Batman Black and White Volume 3 ISBN 978-1-4012-1531-6

Batman: Gotham Knights was a monthly American comic book series published by DC Comics. The original intent of this book was to feature the exploits of Batman and his extended family, such as Alfred Pennyworth, Batgirl, Nightwing, Robin, Oracle, and Catwoman, among others. The latter section of the run, however, came to focus much more upon his enemies.

The series also featured the popular "Batman: Black and White" back-up strip, which allowed various artists with widely varying styles to do their take on the Dark Knight in a black and white format. These back-up strips are also collected in trade paperback form. Contributors to this section include Jim Lee, John Byrne, John Buscema, Eduardo Risso, Jordi Bernet, José Luis García-López, Kyle Baker, Harlan Ellison, Dave Gibbons, Gene Ha, Gene Colan, Enrique Breccia, Claudio Castellini, Dick Giordano, Christian Alamy, Jason Pearson, Mike Wieringo, Alan Davis, Chris Bachalo, Denys Cowan, John Watkiss, Mike Kaluta, and Whilce Portacio.

Publication history

Batman: Gotham Knights began in March 2000 and ran for a total of 74 issues. The last issue was published in April 2006. This title was among several which were cancelled at the conclusion of the Infinite Crisis storyline, as part of the "One Year Later" event. The final story arc was left unresolved but was closed with Paul Dini's Detective Comics arc Heart of Hush.

Collected editions

Various stories have been collected into individual volumes:

See also

Notes

  1. Batman: Black and White Volume 3 Archived June 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine., DC Comics.com

References

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