NEW DETAILS REVEALED FOR DC FESTIVAL OF HEROES: THE ASIAN SUPERHERO CELEBRATION
The Debut of Monkey Prince by Gene Luen Yang and Bernard Chang
A Special Monkey Prince 1 in 25 Variant Cover by Bernard Chang
Fantastic Stories Celebrating DC’s Legacy of Asian Super Heroes
A New Cassandra Cain Variant Cover from Stanley ‘Artgerm’ Lau
On Sale May 11, 2021
DC Festival of Heroes: The Asian Superhero Celebration, is an incredible anthology spotlighting DC’s past, present and even future Asian super heroes, featuring some of the most dynamic Asian storytellers in and out of comics. Featuring an incredible cover by the team of DC Publisher and Chief Creative Officer Jim Lee, and colorist Alex Sinclair, this anthology includes a foreword by activist and CNN and WSJ Online contributor Jeff Yang, a selection of tribute pinups of DC’s Asian super heroes, plus an awesome variant cover featuring Cassandra Cain by artist Stanley “Artgerm” Lau.
DC Festival of Heroes special will debut a brand-new Asian superhero and more
syfy.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from syfy.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Batman - Tome 5 - Batman : Detective - Doug Mahnke, Peter Tomasi - cartonné - Achat Livre
fnac.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fnac.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
10 Bizarre Discoveries From The World Of Batman
Between comics, cartoons, and movies, Batman is one of the most well-known American icons, one that has survived for 75 years. While many people think they know all about the character, a deeper look at his stories reveals facts and conclusions that are downright shocking.
10A Hacker Killed Robin
Photo credit: DC Comics
Most Batman fans know about the death of the second Robin. Jason Todd, who replaced original Robin Dick Grayson, was viciously beaten by a crowbar-wielding Joker and was left to die in an explosion. His fate went into the hands of readers, who could phone in and vote whether the Boy Wonder lived or died. More people voted for “dead” than “alive,” and DC Comics killed Robin in the name of democracy. But here’s the catch: The vote was rigged.