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Like the best dramatic television, the main narrative of Batman: Gotham Knights would intersect with the setup of other storylines that would eventually pay off issues later. Beatty continued the focus on Batman family dynamics with several interwoven storylines. While the whole “Batman getting investigated by Gotham’s social services” arc came to a head in Batman: Gotham Knights #45, it was really the culmination of a year of storytelling from writer Scott Beatty and artist Roger Robinson (with a few guest artists), who took over the title after the exit of its originator, Devin Grayson. Welcome to Gotham Knights Image: Scott Beatty, David Ross/DC Comics Think of it as part society pages of superhero lives, part reading recommendations, part “look at this cool art.” There may be some spoilers. It was a classic problem of superhero secret identity in very serious trappings.īatman solved the problem in an unusual way: by telling the truth.Įach Monday, while the comics industry takes a bit of a break, we’re looking back at some of the stand out moments in comic history - or at least in weird comics history. Civil servant Felix Desidero decided that maybe it was worth looking into a highly influential billionaire whose last ward had died in a “warehouse fire” in Ethiopia. How did Bruce Wayne, a famously idiotic billionaire bachelor with a habit of adopting oddly similar-looking orphan teens, never raise the eyebrow of a city social worker? We all know that Batman has had a lot of Robins, but we talk less about how that succession of kids appeared to the people of Gotham City.