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Batman: Year One Deluxe Paperback – Illustrated, January 10, 2007

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 9,452 ratings

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In 1986, Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli produced this groundbreaking reinterpretation of the origin of Batman—who he is, and how he came to be. Sometimes careless and naive, this Dark Knight is far from the flawless vigilante he is today.

In his first year on the job, Batman feels his way around a Gotham City far darker than the one he left. His solemn vow to extinguish the town’s criminal element is only half the battle; along with Lieutenant James Gordon, the Dark Knight must also fight a police force more corrupt than the scum in the streets.

Batman: Year One stands next to Batman: The Dark Knight Returns on the mantle of greatest Batman graphic novels of all time. Timeless in its appeal, Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli’s masterpiece would stand apart from the crowded comics field even today.

This edition includes the complete graphic novel, a new introduction by writer Frank Miller and a new illustrated afterword by artist David Mazzucchelli. Completing this collection are over 40 pages of never-before-seen developmental material such as character and layout sketches, sample script pages, sketches, and more that pro-vide a glimpse into the making of this contemporary classic.

This volume collects
Batman #404-407.
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From the Publisher

Batman Dark Knight Gotham Gordon Alfred Bruce Wayne Imposter The Long Halloween Jeph Loeb Tim Sale Batman The Batman Robert Pattinson Movie Long Halloween Year One Ego Gotham Penguin Riddler Catwoman Batman Dark Knight Gotham Gordon Alfred Bruce Wayne Imposter Ego and Other Tails Darwyn Cooke
Batman: The Long Halloween The Batman Box Set Batman: Ego and Other Tails
Customer Reviews
4.9 out of 5 stars
5,078
4.8 out of 5 stars
504
4.7 out of 5 stars
763
Price $20.49 $37.19 $13.30
Writer Jeph Loeb Various Darwyn Cooke
Artist Tim Sale Various Darwyn Cooke
Synopsis A murderer is loose, striking only on holidays. In a mystery taking place during Batman's early days, Batman: The Long Halloween is one of the greatest Dark Knight stories ever told. This box set, collecting Batman: The Long Halloween, Batman: Ego and Other Tails, and Batman: Year One, is the perfect collection of BATMAN legends for any fan! A collection of pulse-pounding stories of the Dark Knight, Catwoman and more of Gotham’s finest. Featuring Darwyn Cooke's unique visions of Batman and Catwoman.

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 4 Up–In the late 1980s, DC Comics revamped many superheroes but realized that Batman should remain true to his 1939 history. According to the introduction, the editors also decided that the public needed to know more about Batman's early life as a vigilante, and Miller and Mazzucchelli came together to produce Batman: Year One. Originally released in 1988 in four parts, the stories have been combined into one book. Opening with the arrival of Lieutenant James Gordon in Gotham's police force, the story goes on to inform readers about the level of corruption permeating the force. They also witness Bruce Wayne's first encounter with the prostitute named Selina, who will become Catwoman. Wayne speaks to his dead father, asking for guidance, and is answered with a bat on the windowsill, and Batman is born. The remaining chapters highlight Gordon's continuing difficulties with the corrupt police force, Batman's early difficulties in protecting and using his arsenal of weapons, and the first villains he chooses to pursue. At the end of the book, readers are treated to some background on Mazzucchelli's art, the production of Year One, and details on Richmond Lewis's coloring techniques. Both beginning and devoted Batman fans will enjoy this edition.–Sarah Krygier, Solano County Library, Fairfield, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"This is a story no true Batman fan should be able to resist." —School Library Journal
 
“A gritty and atmospheric retelling of Batman’s earliest days as told by the author of the seminal
Dark Knight Returns (1987). Mazuzuccelli’s art brings a new level of emotional instensity and realistic, muscular action.” —Booklist
 
Year One worked as a fine piece of urban crime fiction…it was just a bonus that the arc also brought new depth to iconic characters that had been around for nearly 50 years.” —A.V. Club
 
“[One of] the most influential Batman stories ever told.” —Vulture
 
“You know that saying, "If you read just one book, this is the one to read"? Well, that applies to
Batman: Year One. It's not only one of the most important comics ever written, it's also among the best” —IGN
 
“The best thing that Miller has ever written about Batman is the
Batman: Year One.”  —Wired.com
 
“This may be the best
Batman comic ever.” —io9
 
 

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1401207529
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Dc Comics; Deluxe ed. edition (January 10, 2007)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 144 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0290204895
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0290204890
  • Grade level ‏ : ‎ 7 - 9
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.9 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.7 x 0.3 x 10.2 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 9,452 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
9,452 global ratings
Must read for Any BATMAN Fan!
5 Stars
Must read for Any BATMAN Fan!
Batman Year One was written by Frank Miller and Illustrated by David Mazzucchelli. This graphic novel book collects DC Comics issues of Batman #404-#407 in to one entire collection.The story is about Batman's 1st year fighting crime, but it also tells the story of Gotham police James Gordon. The book goes back and forth through both their mindsets. Later in the story Selina Kyle gets introduced and the reader gets her point of view as well, as the reader later learns that she becomes the Catwoman.If you are familiar with Batman movies in Hollywood, you will notice that a lot of stuff put in movies were inspired by bits and parts of this story.I definitely say this is a must for any Batman Fan to read. If you have thoughts about watching Batman Year One animated film, read this before you watch it because the graphic novel allows the reader to get the inside thoughts of characters that are not shown in the animated feature.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 13, 2011
During the 1980s there was a real attempt in the comic book industry to cater to the interests, maturity, and cynicism of adults rather than to the naivete, innocence, and adventurous spirit of children. Many classic comic book superheroes were resurrected into the world of the '80s and given very grim contemporary story lines to make them more realistic and compelling. Perhaps one of the most compelling of these story lines is that written by Frank Miller. In the late '70s and into the early '80s, Miller had made a real name for himself while working at both Marvel and DC, and his revitalization of the Daredevil and Punisher characters for Marvel Comics had proven to be a major success with fans and critics. But perhaps Miller's greatest achievement in comics came when he created two very different and very dark depictions of Batman for DC Comics.

In the now legendary 
"Batman: The Dark Knight Returns" , Miller turned Batman into a Dirty Harry-like vigilante, whose brutal methods were only matched by the brutality of the crumbling futuristic Gotham that he lived in. The book was somewhat controversial as it changed or rather embellished certain characteristics of the Batman and pushed the envelope as to the amount of violence and killing that could occur within mainstream superhero comics. Personally, I have not read this particular Batman tale since I don't care for some of Miller's overly authoritarian depictions of heroism, but I will admit that the man is a great talent, as both a writer and an artist, and that his macho-noir vision was groundbreaking in the comic book medium.

For me, Frank Miller's shining moment of creative genius came when he revisited Batman's past and how it was that he came to be the Dark Knight of Gotham City that we all know and love. As mentioned earlier, DC Comics wanted to update their characters by retelling their origin stories with a new level of depth and complexity in order to attract more intelligent and sophisticated readers. To do this, they often challenged the idealized version of the superhero which had been so prevalent in the past by placing them in corrupt societies where their methods of enforcing order became increasingly harsh and their morality began to wane. When writer/editor Denny O'Neil (who had, along with editor Julius Schwartz and artists Dick Giordano and Neal Adams, reinvented many of DC Comics' great characters during the late '60s and '70s) asked some of the writers and artists at DC who would be interested in tackling Batman in a realistic and psychologically grounded story that would explore the character's past, it became clear that the job would have to go to a collaborative team that knew how to deal with the character.
Enter Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli.

In "Batman: Year One", which was originally published as a four-issue miniseries in 1987 before being collected into a bestselling graphic novel, Frank Miller told readers a tale of how Bruce Wayne became Batman in a way that was ultimately definitive. In terms of character origins, the story emphasized the psychology of the protagonists, Bruce Wayne and Jim Gordon, and showed them as truly heroic albeit sometimes flawed figures. Miller took what had come before in comics and elaborated on it and in doing so established a new version of the Batman mythos which has been an inspiration and influence to almost every writer who has set out to tell a Batman story since.

David Mazzucchelli had been a talented artist with a very unique visual sense. Hand-picked by Miller, Mazzucchelli created a stunning depiction of Gotham replete with gothic settings, film noir atmosphere, and stark contrasts between light and shadows, monochrome and color. Mazzucchelli modeled his version of Bruce Wayne on young Gregory Peck and Jim Gordon is reminiscent of many of the iconic hard-boiled police and detective characters found in illustrated pulp magazines of the '30s and '40s. The cityscape of Gotham is a strangely believable combination of modern New York with a distinctly retro-noir look to it.

What sets "Year One" apart from other Batman stories is the way that it so efficiently juxtaposes Bruce Wayne's journey into becoming Batman with Jim Gordon's rise in the Gotham City Police Department as one of the few honest cops amidst all the corruption. I really love the fact that as much time is spent with Bruce Wayne/Batman as is spent learning about Gordon, who had up until this point never really been given the focus that he deserved as a character. The story itself is also unique since it doesn't rely on Batman's colorful enemies to flesh it out or engage readers. Selina Kyle, also known as the femme fatale Catwoman, is given an introduction as prostitute who turns to cat burglary and the last page of the comic introduces the Joker as a new threat to the citizens of Gotham, but all in all, there are no supervillains. This more down to earth approach allows for Miller to display Wayne's evolution as Batman and to show him learning how to apply his keen intelligence, martial arts training, and detective skills to costumed crime-fighting. Without the presence of theatrical megalomaniac villains, the focus returns to corrupt politicians and police officers, to street-level crime and poverty, which really shows the social crusader aspects of the Batman and Gordon characters brilliantly. My only complaint as far as the writing goes is that the Alfred character is so under-utilized and is left merely to make dry humorous comments and that Selina Kyle's appearances are so few. However, these are very minor qualms with what is truly a masterpiece of superhero fiction!

All in all, "Batman: Year One" is perhaps the best Batman graphic novel ever written in that it so carefully adheres to the moody detective roots of the character created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger, while injecting the world of Gotham City with a vitality that was both refreshingly modern and yet timeless. Of all Frank Miller's work, this manages to stand out in my memory as his most intelligently scripted, most dynamically drawn, and most memorably heroic.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2015
So you want to start reading Batman comics? I bet you've searched all over the internet, on sites such as comic vine, youtube, yahoo answers, and they all tell you the same thing: Start with Batman: Year One. Why start with this book? Well, this review will explain everything: The cover, the artwork, the extra features, the story, and what I recommend you read next. Without further ado, let us begin.

Once upon a time, there was a man named Frank Miller. In 1986, Frank wrote a little story called The Dark Knight Returns. This critically acclaimed alternate-universe novel featured Miller's revolutionary interpretation of Batman. Shortly after, he was asked to write something else. Anything. He took a very general route: a Batman origin story. Little did he know, this 4-issue story would become a classic, essential Batman collection.

Batman Year One collects Batman issues 404-407 into one remastered collection, complete with bonus features of extra artwork, preludes, afterwords, etc. Here is a breakdown of the book's contents:

- A one page long newspaper clipping titled The Crime Blotter written by Slam Bradley, the original star of Detective Comics #1, perhaps as a homage to him.
- A 2 page introduction by Dennis O'Neil from March 1988 explaining how the idea for Batman Year one was introduced.
- The 97 page long story itself. More on that later.
- A 37 page afterword(s) complete with original sketches, the process of remastering the color, original scripts, black and white artwork, etc.
- An advertisement at the end for other graphic novels, The Long Halloween, Dark Victory, Haunted Knight, and Catwoman: When in Rome, all by the Dynamic Duo of comics whose names aren't Batman and Robin, Jeff Loeb and Tim Sale. Perhaps DC is trying to tell us something...

The story itself is phenomenal. I'm not going to spoil anything, but here's a little opening to draw you in:
Lieutenant James Gordon has been called in to work in Gotham City. During the train ride there, we learn of his opinions towards his new workplace. He complains about the long ride, the scummy people, the lousy effort of the police force in a mob-ruled city, how he knows it will be difficult to raise his family. Think Detroit. While there, he learns of the corrupt Gotham police force, and the return of Bruce Wayne, a millionaire playboy who inherited his dead parents' wealth by default. Bruce himself is struggling mentally. He wants to become a vigilante, a self-appointed crime fighter, but he lacks one minor thing: others simply won't fear him. It finally dawns to him that he should become what he feared, a bat.

Cover art for the book is basic. That's all it has to be. A red book with a sketch of Batman that stretches from front to back cover (I purchased the paperback version)

The story hits everyone differently. If your memory of Batman is the Adam West, joke-cracking pun-filled crime fighter, this story will come as a shock to you. You may have to read the story a second time before you can really appreciate it. It is very dark, filled with blood, cheating, alcohol, prostitutes, and drugs. What I'm trying to get at here is that this isn't a story to read to your kids at bed time. Nevertheless, it is still a masterpiece.

Speaking of masterpieces, David Mazzucchelli absolutely nails it on the artwork. It focuses a lot on lighting and shadows, perfect for the noir mood of the story. It also focuses on little, tiny details, the lining of the bricks of the apartment building being staked out by a psychopath, the raindrops on Gordon's car window, the debris of the collapsed house Batman uses to hide from the police (yes, I just said that, Batman hiding from the police)

The story occasionally switches narration between Batman, Jim Gordon, and Catwoman. The amount of use of this tool can be what makes or breaks a story. Miller balanced it perfectly. There are no "supercriminals" so to speak, no Joker, Poison Ivy, Mr. Freeze; just the mob, police force, and some no-named petty thieves. After all, it's just Batman's first year. It broadcasts the successes, failures, and luck of Batman.

All-in-all, it was a fantastic read. It's really something you can read again and again. This book will start you comic/TPB collection, and hopefully it will be a long one. You will see some connections to the Nolan films in this book, as it played a vital role as inspiration for Batman Begins. Upon putting this book down, it immediately poses another question: Where to next? Perhaps you didn't like this new spin on the Batman. Maybe you want a more vibrant kid friendly version. I would suggest picking up Batman: Chronicles Volume 1 or Batman: Archives. They are a collection of older Batman comics from the Gold, Silver, and Bronze age. Perhaps you did like this Batman and what to further oversee his development into the Dark Knight. Batman Year One in my opinion is the starting point for the modern age Batman. If this interests you, I'd pick up at least one of the following graphic novels:

- Batman the Long Halloween - a murder-mystery spanning over a year
- Batman: Dark Victory - an intended sequel for The Long Halloween, introduction of Dick Grayson AKA Robin
- Batman Haunted Knight - a collection of 3 Batman short stories
- Catwoman: When in Rome - further reading on Catwoman
- Batman: The Man who Laughs - introduction to the Joker
- Batman and the Monster Men - my recommendation if you want to read Batman in a chronological order. However, it is very expensive at this time on amazon.
- Legends of the Dark Knight - a comic series consisting of several batman short stories, no order is required, though some are sequels to others.
- Anything you firggin' want - no explanation needed.
I payed $8 for the book via Amazon, and it was a steal. If you see the book for under 10 bucks, don't hesitate to pick it up. I hoped I helped all you new readers, or veterans who never read this your time around. 5/5 stars, 100/5 stars, actually. It doesn't matter. Read it if you haven't. You won't regret it.
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Omar
5.0 out of 5 stars Great product
Reviewed in Canada on October 16, 2023
Came in great condition. Thank you!
André L.
5.0 out of 5 stars Produto excelente, porém Amazon deixou a desejar
Reviewed in Brazil on August 15, 2022
A HQ é excelente, nada a reclamar disso, porém, a entrega decepcionou. Veio solto em uma caixa muito mal embalada, sem nada para proteger meu produto, nem mesmo um plástico em volta, e veio também com uma marca de amassado no meio. Espero que a Amazon melhore nas próximas entregas.
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Connan
5.0 out of 5 stars Un clásico fundamental en la mitología de Batman
Reviewed in Mexico on January 9, 2022
Si entiendes el inglés y no quieres gastar mucho en una edición más “premium”, está es una perfecta opción.
Buena, bonita y barata son las mejores palabras para describir esta edición.
La obra en sí es fascinante, claro que todos pueden decir lo fabulosa que es pero es algo que debes de descubrir por tu cuenta al leer la historia.
William
5.0 out of 5 stars An origin story
Reviewed in Germany on April 27, 2024
An amazing introduction of Batman for those who want to get into comic books, I highly recommend it.
Gennaro C.
5.0 out of 5 stars un must have
Reviewed in Italy on April 18, 2024
disegni stupendi