Batman Vol. 2: I Am Suicide (Rebirth) by Tom King

Batman Vol. 2: I Am Suicide (Rebirth)

by Tom King

A part of DC Universe: Rebirth! Still reeling from the events of "I AM
GOTHAM," the epic first arc in Tom King's brand new BATMAN series, the Dark
Knight finds himself up against some of the biggest (literally) threats he's
ever faced within the city limits of Gotham. To save the city he loves, Batman
enlists the help of the toughest members of the Bat-family including Nightwing,
Batwoman and more! Also in this volume, Batman must take on some familiar foes
who have stolen something from Gotham--and the Caped Crusader's limits will be
tested as he fights to get it back. Breakout writer and former CIA analyst, Tom
King (GRAYSON, THE SHERIFF OF BABYLON) is paired with superstar artists Riley
Rossmo and Mikel Janin in this knock-down, drag-out superhero story! Collects
BATMAN #7-12, ANNUAL #1. Rebirth honors the richest history in comics, while
continuing to look towards the future. These are the most innovative and modern
stories featuring the world's greatest superheroes, told by some of the finest
storytellers in the business. Honoring the past, protecting our present, and
looking towards the future. This is the next chapter in the ongoing saga of the
DC Universe. The legacy continues.

Reviewed by Quirky Cat on

3 of 5 stars

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Just going to start with a spoiler warning: Don’t read this review if you don’t want spoilers!

Following the events that occur in I Am Batman, Bruce Wayne is determined to help Gotham Girl by capturing Psycho Pirate and forcing him to fix her. Apparently the best way to do this is to form his own Suicide Squad, complete with Catwoman, the Ventriloquist, Bronze Tiger, Jewelee, and Punchee (guess which one is the couple in that listing). Together they go after Bane, who is now the only obstacle between them and Psycho Pirate.
I’m going to be brutally blunt here, I didn’t love this volume. First, I didn’t exactly love the Suicide Squad rip off (is it still a rip off if it’s in the same franchise? Or is there another name for that?). Second, Batman’s motives…seemed kind of skewed and out of character. I’ve always felt that Batman was for justice…not revenge (which is one of the reasons why he doesn’t kill, or so I thought), but his focus on breaking Bane’s back is far too close to the revenge line for my liking.
Finally, while I give them an A for effort with the Catwoman plotline, it didn’t fit. I know, I know. It didn’t fit that Selena Kyle was the killer because she actually wasn’t, but that’s not what I mean. I knew right off the bat (no pun intended) that there was no way they’d change her character that much, at least I would hope not. So I didn’t really every get the feeling of suspense or dread. Is there a way they could have done this plotline and terrified me? Absolutely! Which is why I’m going to give them some credit for the attempt.
All in all I’d say this was a decent read: not the best I’ve seen of Batman, but certainly not the worst.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 19 April, 2017: Finished reading
  • 19 April, 2017: Reviewed