Tuesday, March 25, 2025

HONOR AMONG THIEVES: A brief history of super-villain team-ups, Part 3

Continuing a look back at the earliest examples of super-villain team-ups in comics. In Part 1, we established the belief that the meeting of Dr. Fate's adversaries Wotan and Karkull in More Fun Comics # 70 (August 1941) was probably the first such joint effort among bad guys. Part 2 discussed the Hand's five fingers versus the Seven Soldiers of Victory in Leading Comics # 1 (Winter 1941) as the likely second example. Now, Part 3 brings us the big one. 

The original Captain Marvel's battle with "The Monster Society of Evil" was an epic with no precedent in the then-short history of comic books: A 25-part serial with the hero facing an army of organized bad guys. Some of the bad guys were the true-life villains the Allies were fighting contemporaneously in World War II. But most were comic-book adversaries, many of whom had appeared in previous battles with our hero. And all of these ne'er-do-wells took malevolent orders from a sinister worm called Mister Mind.

As "The Monster Society Of Evil" began, no one--not even writer Otto Binder--knew Mister Mind was a literal creepy, crawly worm from outer space. In the serial's first chapter in Captain Marvel Adventures # 22 (March 1943), a voice from the stars introduces himself as Mister Mind, and sets his minion (and familiar Captain Marvel foe) Captain Nazi to carry out his evil plan. What plan? For EVIL, of course! The initial burst of evil involves the theft of a magic pearl, with powers Mister Mind wants out of the Allies' reach and in the hands of the Axis (the real-life Monster Society of Evil). The good guy Captain defeats the Aryan Captain, but Mr. Mind calls in reinforcements including Captain Marvel enemies Dr. Sivana, Ibac, Nippo, and Mr. Banjo, plus a still-fighting Captain Nazi. Captain Nazi is captured, but Ibac escapes with the magic pearl. Victory in the first round of this battle goes to Mister Mind and his Society.

The splash page for this first chapter indicates the source of inspiration for this comics serial. The success of the 1941 twelve-chapter movie serial The Adventures Of Captain Marvel nudged Fawcett Comics (Cap's publisher) toward the idea of an extended storyline to keep the kids coming back for more. During World War II, Captain Marvel was one of the best-selling superheroes in comics. With one magic word--SHAZAM!-- young Billy Batson was transformed into the mighty Captain Marvel, whose popularity rivaled and even surpassed that of DC Comics' standard bearer Superman. That didn't sit well with the folks at DC, who spent years trying to litigate Cap out of business, eventually prompting Fawcett to settle the suit and cancel its superhero line of comics. Decades later, DC wound up buying the Captain Marvel character outright, marketing him as Shazam in deference to other rival Marvel Comics swooping in to trademark the Captain Marvel name in the interim. The comics business is a business, kid.

The name of DC's early '40s swell bunch of guys the Justice Society Of America was likely an unconscious (or conscious) influence on Otto Binder when he concocted Mister Mind's swinish bunch of guys and called 'em the Monster Society of Evil. Reminiscences published in Steranko's History Of The Comics suggest that Binder had no preconceived notion of precisely what Mister Mind would be, and the idea of making the World's Mightiest Mortal's elusive and resourceful enemy an itty-bitty li'l worm occurred after the story was underway. But some chapters included occasional teaser glimpses of an unidentified worm--because, really, who goes around identifying worms?--before Mister Mind was revealed in Captain Marvel Adventures # 27 (September 1943). The serial concluded in Captain Marvel Adventures # 46 (May 1945), as Mister Mind was captured, tried, convicted, and executed for his crimes. Serves 'im right, the little worm.

Multi-part comic book serials are commonplace now, their eventual ubiquity jump-started in the '60s at Marvel. And there had certainly been to-be-continued comics stories before Mister Mind put his gang together. But it was a radical move for a comics publisher to attempt a 25-part comic book serial in the '40s, when funnybooks were absolutely considered ephemeral and disposable, a time when it certainly wasn't a given that the audience would remain invested, month after month, eager to trade their dimes again and again and again for the next exciting installment of an extended storyline.

That audience came back for Captain Marvel Adventures and "The Monster Society Of Evil." The power of SHAZAM!

After shining a spotlight on this epic multi-chapter super-villain team-up, HONOR AMONG THIEVES will return to more familiar single-issue shenanigans in Part 4. Meanwhile, back in Gotham City....

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

Monday, March 24, 2025

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1278

This week's show kicks off with the interplanetary radio debut of "When We Close Our Eyes" by Super 8 Featuring Lisa Mychols, covering a song written by Arty Lenin, guitarist for Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes. Previously recorded by the Flashcubes and by Arty as a solo artist, "When We Close Our Eyes" is Super 8 & Lisa Mychols' contribution to the forthcoming Flashcubes tribute album. 

Make Something Happen! A Tribute To A DIY Power Pop Band Called THE FLASHCUBES is due for September release from the mighty Big Stir Records label. We've been teasing glimpses of its track line-up, we've played Make Something Happen! gems by the Kennedys, the SpongeTones, Pop Co-Op, sparkle*jets u.k., and the Flashcubes themselves on previous shows (and reprised the sparkle*jets and 'Cubes songs this week), and admitted elsewhere that the album will also include "No Promise" by Chris von Sneidern and "Got No Mind" by Hamell On Trial

There will be more details offered shortly. As I write this, we have confirmed nearly all of the album's contributors, and we are beyond excited to see this through and finally get it into the bright lights it deserves.

Close your eyes. Reminisce. Make something happen. This is what rock 'n' roll radio sounded like on another Sunday night in Syracuse this week.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream, and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio

You can read all about this show's long and weird history here: Boppin' The Whole Friggin' Planet (The History Of THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO)

TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATIONS are always welcome.

Carl's new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get Carl's previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:

Volume 1: download
Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download
Volume 5: CD or download

TIRnRR # 1278: 3/23/2025
TIRnRR FRESH SPINS! Tracks we think we ain't played before are listed in bold.

THE JOHNNY POPSTAR LUV EXPLOSION: Oh Renee (Futureman, VA: This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 1)
THE NEEDMORES: Lookin' (single)
TOM PETTY AND THE HEARTBREAKERS: Forgotten Man (Reprise, Hypnotic Eye)
AMY RIGBY: Hell-Oh Sixty (Tapete, Hang In There With Me)
MIKE MITSCH'S LAGANSLOVE: I Don't Want To Waste Another Day (single)
THE RUBINOOS: Rock 'n' Roll Is Dead (Castle, Everything You Always Wanted To Know About The Rubinoos But Were Afraid To Ask!)
--
THE AMPLIFIER HEADS: We Just Don't Know (single)
BOB DYLAN: I Want You (Columbia, Blonde On Blonde)
ROB MOSS AND SKIN-TIGHT SKIN: GlamOrama (single)
BLONDIE: X Offender (Chrysalis, The Platinum Collection)
DONNA SUMMER: I Feel Love (Casablanca, Summer: The Original Hits)
THE YOUNGBLOODS: Get Together (Time-Life, VA: Classic Rock: 1969)
--
GIRL WITH A HAWK: No One Like You (Rum Bar, single)
THE OPEN MIND: Magic Potion (Rhino, VA: Nuggets II)
THE CLOVERS: Love Potion No. 9 [single version] (Capitol, The Best Of The Clovers)
THE NERVES: When You Find Out (Alive, One Way Ticket)
CHAD AND JEREMY: A Summer Song (Rhino, VA: The British Invasion: The History Of British Rock, Vol. 2)
NRBQ: Ridin' In My Car (Omnivore, All Hopped Up [deluxe])
--
ORBIS MAX: Lie To Me (single)
UTOPIA: Love In Action (Rhino, TODD RUNDGREN: The Very Best Of Todd Rundgren)
THE KINKS: People Take Pictures Of Each Other [European Stereo Mix] (Sanctuary, The Anthology 1964-1971)
TUFF DARTS: All For The Love Of Rock 'n' Roll (Rhino, VA: DIY: Blank Generation: The New York Scene 1975-78)
SOUL ASYLUM: Easy Street (A & M, And The Horse They Rode In On)
THE MC5: Shakin' Street (Rhino, The Big Bang! Best Of MC5)
--
JIM BASNIGHT: So F'd Up (single)
THE CLASH: London's Burning (Epic, Clash On Broadway)
TINA TURNER: The Acid Queen (Republic, VA: Tommy OST)
DAVID BOWIE: Queen Bitch (Parlophone, Hunky Dory)
--
The Greatest Record Ever Made!
THE MONKEES: For Pete's Sake (Rhino, Headquarters)
THE MONKEES: You Just May Be The One (Rhino, Headquarters)
JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS: You've Come A Long Way Baby [single version] (Rhino Handmade, Stop, Look And Listen: The Capitol Recordings)
BELINDA CARLISLE: Should I Let You In? (MCA, Heaven On Earth)
LITTLE RICHARD: Keep A Knockin' (Specialty, The Georgia Peach)
THE NEW YORK DOLLS: Chatterbox (Mercury, Rock 'N Roll)
--
ROME 56: The Last Man Standing (single)
NIKKI CORVETTE AND THE HELL ON HEELS: What A Way To Die (Vivid Sound, VA: He Put The Bomp In The Bomp: Greg Shaw)
SORROWS: You Don't Own Me (Big Stir, Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow)
TERRY MANNING: Rocks
THE CYNZ: Heartbreak Time (Jem, single)
THE BEATLES: Do You Want To Know A Secret (Apple, Please Please Me)
LIBRARIANS WITH HICKEYS: Mirror (Big Stir, How To Make Friends By Telephone)
THE MnM'S: I'm Tired (Burger, Melts In Your Ears 1980-1981)
--
THE BABLERS: One Of Those Dreams (Big Stir, Like The First Time)
CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL: My Baby Left Me (Fantasy, Cosmoi's Factory)
THE RAMONES: The KKK Took My Baby Away (Rhino, Subterranean Jungle)
DWIGHT TWILLEY: Let Her Dance (Big Oak, The Best Of Twilley: The Tulsa Years 1999-2016)
CHUBBY CHECKER: The Twist (Abkco, Dancin' Party--The Chubby Checker Collection: 1960-1966)
GENE VINCENT: Ruby Baby (Newsound 2000, Rock 'n' Roll Fugitive)
JOE GIDDINGS: Tonite Tonite (Kool Kat Musik, Stories With Guitars)
PAUL McCARTNEY: Dance Tonight (Hear Music, Memory Almost Full)
--

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Tonight On THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO

Ahem. SUPER 8 FEATURING LISA MYCHOLS covering THE FLASHCUBES! We begin this week's celebration of pop with power by debuting Super 8 'n' Lisa Mychols' contribution to the forthcoming Flashcubes tribute album, and then we just keep right on a-poppin' with more new music from THE NEEDMORES, GIRL WITH A HAWK, ROME 56, ORBIS MAX, JIM BASNIGHT, and THE COCKTAIL SLIPPERS, the first US release of an essential album by THE BABLERS, both sides of a new split single with THE AMPLIFIER HEADS and ROB MOSS WITH SKIN-TIGHT SKIN serving up reciprocal covers of one of each other's songs, and a whole bunch of WOW!! courtesy of SORROWS, TOM PETTY AND THE HEARTBREAKERS, DONNA SUMMER, AMY RIGBY, MICK MITSCH'S LAGANSLOVE, THE RUBINOOS, BLONDIE, THE NERVES, CHAD AND JEREMY, NRBQ, THE KINKS, TUFF DARTS, CURVED AIR, TINA TURNER, THE MONKEES, BELINDA CARLISLE, THE CYNZ, LIBRARIANS WITH HICKEYS, THE RAMONES, DWIGHT TWILLEY, CHUBBY CHECKER, GENE VINCENT, JOE GIDDINGS, and more. We begin with new Cubic greatness by SUPER 8 FEATURING LISA MYCHOLS. Sunday night, 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FMhttps://sparksyracuse.org/, streaming on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. The weekend stops HERE!

Saturday, March 22, 2025

10 SONGS: 3/22/2025

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1277

THE RAMONES: What's Your Game

I love the Ramones. My first book was about the Ramones, I co-host a radio show that takes its title from a line in a Ramones song, and I regard "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker" as the record that changed my life. I'm a fan, and I'm proud to be a fan. My three favorite bands are always going to be the Beatles, the Ramones, and the Flashcubes. Ain't gonna change at this age.

For all that, there are still some Ramones tracks that have yet to be played on TIRnRR. But I was a little surprised to discover we'd never played "What's Your Game" before. It's from their second album, 1977's incredible Leave Home, and I just figured we must have played everything from the first four Ramones albums by now. Better late than never! It's all in the game.

SORROWS: Somethin' Else
THE ARTWOODS: Day Tripper

Given that Sorrows guitarist Arthur Alexander has expressed his affection for the  music of mid '60s rockin' Mods the Artwoods, our recent playlists have taken to playing the two acts in close proximity. We're breaking that trend on our next show--my fault!--but I betcha we'll get back to it in short order.

Meanwhile, both of these fine acts are represented this week by covers. The Artwoods' BBC radio performance of the Beatles' "Day Tripper" is influenced less by Her Majesty's Fab Ramones and more by Otis Redding's own soulful version. It jumps, it swaggers, and it doesn't take the easy way out as it tries to please us. Got a good reason!

Sorrows' righteously boppin' run-through of Eddie Cochran's "Somethin' Else" comes to us from their current record Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow, an archival release that rescues an irresistible previously-unreleased Sorrows album from more'n four decades ago, and serves now as Sorrows' farewell work. The Artwoods are taking next week off, but we will hear another track from Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow.

In our Ramones entry up above, I mentioned that Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes mingle all celestial-like with the Beatles and Ramones as the Trinity in my rock 'n' roll cosmology. I think my first exposure to Cochran's power pop prototype "Somethin' Else" was provided by the Flashcubes, who used to include the song in their live sets circa 1979; pretty sure I heard the 'Cubes play it before I heard the Sex Pistols' cover, and a couple of years before I heard Cochran's original. So, nice connection here between the Flashcubes and Sorrows.

(Connections between the Flashcubes and Sorrows.... Do we want to get into spoilers? Most of you already know about a forthcoming project we've been teasing for a bit. More details yet to come. A connection between the Flashcubes and Sorrows? On the radio, pop music is their religion....)

LIBRARIANS WITH HICKEYS: Ship To Shore

This little mutant radio show is wholeheartedly and enthusiastically in favor of Librarians With Hickeys. That's the band Librarians With Hickeys, though I guess we're not opposed to nibbling playfully on Marian the Librarian's neck if she were open to the notion. There were bells on a hill, but we never heard them ringing....

Where were we? Ah, right...pop music. Librarians With Hickeys' current album How To Make Friends By Telephone is a ripe 'n' ready resource for rockin' pop radio picks, and we move now to the latest single "Ship To Shore." Hailing frequencies open, and message received. 

(We've also just heard a great new, currently unreleased track from Librarians With Hickeys. Do we want to get into spoilers? Maybe not yet. In saying even that much, I hope we haven't gone too far.)

THE SPONGETONES: Words And Music


No spoiler here: We've been playing the SpongeTones' cover of the Flashcubes' "Nothing Really Matters When You're Young," loving it, and we'll for damned sure be playing it again (and again) in the future. As other tracks from this various-artists project shift from secret to spoiler to HERE IT IS!!, the SpongeTones' "Nothing Really Matters When You're Young" has already secured a guaranteed berth on the year-end Countdown show of our most-played tracks in 2025. And we're not even done with March yet!

This week, we wanted to reach back for a spin of one of the 'Tones' own tunes: "Words And Music," from their 1991 album Oh Yeah! Oh Yeah! was my first SpongeTones album; I was smitten, I caught up with its predecessors in the SpongeTones library PDQ, and I've been on board ever since. Words AND music. I'm sold!

P. HUX: Better Than Good

As referenced at the tippy-top of today's rant, my first book was 2023's Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones, coming soon to a remainder table near you. My second book was 2024's The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), dedicated to the notion that an infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns.

If/when I do a GREM! Volume 2 book, that volume will include a celebration of "Double Our Numbers," a sublime song from Parthenon Huxley's 1988 album Sunny Nights.  You can read that GREM! chapter here.

Speaking of books, Mr. Huxley has his own new tome. Parthenon's memoir Electric Light Odyssey is subtitled "My Zigzag Life And The Iconic Band That Changed Everything," and it chronicles his personal and professional history, including his dbas under his own name and fronting his combo P. Hux, and his tenure with the Orchestra, the current incarnation representing the legacy of the Electric Light Orchestra. A book by Parthenon Huixley covering all of that? To paraphrase Lenny Haise, the great philosopher who used to play guitar in Erie, PA's phenomenal pop combo the Wonders: I bought it, you're buyin' it, we're ALL buyin' it. Do so here.

Some years back, Parthenon allowed us the use of his P. Hux track "Better Than Good" on our compilation album This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4. Thanks again, Parthenon! It seemed high time for a repeat spin, and that is indeed the better-than-good option we chose this week. Better and better!

(Do we want to get into spoilers? That would be premature in this case anyway. I guess we will have to wait another night.)

BADFINGER: Day After Day

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

SUPER 8 FEATURING LISA MYCHOLS: Pop Radio

The assembled forces of Super 8 Featuring Lisa Mychols have crafted this lovely statement of intent "Pop Radio," a delicious ditty which serves as manifesto for TIRnRR in all our imaginary glory. We've been playing "Pop Radio" a lot, and we have an even newer track from Super 8 Featuring Lisa Mychols set to open our next show.

(As for the identity of this new new Super 8/Lisa Mychols track: Do we want to get into spoilers? We DO! And this will be revealed at the top of this coming Sunday night's show, when we close our eyes.)

THE FLASHCUBES: Reminisce

Do we want to get into spoilers? Even if we don't wanna do that, this isn't a spoiler at all. The Flashcubes' absolutely ace new number "Reminisce" will be one of three new Flashcubes tracks appearing alongside 21 other artists covering various Flashcubes originals on Make Something Happen! A Tribute To A DIY Power Pop Band Called THE FLASHCUBES. The album is due from our friends at Big Stir Records in September, and "Reminisce" will be the opening track. "Reminisce" will lead into sparkle*jets u.k.'s cover of "Make Something Happen," which will flow into...

...Heh. No more spoilers for now. Stay tuned. Things are about to get brilliantly Cubic around here.

WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

Listen: They're ALL girl songs, man. Our boy Robbie Rist understands. Oh! One spoilery question for Robbie: Is one of the girls named Sybil? Something about a girl with more than one personality...?

And with that, 10 Songs takes five.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

Friday, March 21, 2025

Professional Liar RETURNS! BWA-HA-HA-HAAAAAAAA!

Hey, I sold another short story. The good folks at AHOY Comics have purchased my li'l white lie "Bullets From The Copperhead Detective," and it will appear as a pulp prose piece in a future issue from the AHOY Comics line of superstars.

This is the ninth story I've sold to AHOY. My first was "Guitars Vs. Rayguns" in 2019, though the first one to see print was my Western "The Last Ride Of The Copperhead Kid," also sold in 2019. The reaction to the Copperhead Kid led me to write (and sell) some stories about the Kid's descendants, which have included a masked vigilante in the 1930s ("The Copperhead Strikes!"), a secret agent in the '60s ("The Copperhead Affair"), a bass-playin', ass-kickin' punk chick in the '80s ("Chaos At The Copperhead Club"), a present-day costumed heroine who decides to leave adventure behind her ("Flight Of The Copperhead"), and now going back to the 1920s for "Bullets From The Copperhead Detective," the tale of a Harlem-based private gumshoe whose latest case takes him to a confrontation in Tibet. There will be bullets.

(Incidentally, I've had this "Bullets From..." title in my head for a very, very long time. When I was a square-peg teen in the early to mid 1970s, I envisioned a sequel to the 1944 Captain America movie serial, and I called my never-in-a-million-years serial sequel Bullets From Captain America. Yeah, a '70s kid imagining a new 1940s movie serial. As I've said before and will say again: No, YOU get a life.)

One cool thing about the new story is that it was written very fast. I'd composed its opening paragraphs months ago, but earlier this year I took out my spiral notebook and started scribbling, continuing the story from memory of where it left off. I finished it that morning while sitting on my couch.

I will eventually collect all of the Copperhead Kid family of short stories together as a de facto novel, and I've been working on another entry called "The Copperhead Kid's New York Adventure," set in the early years of the 20th century. That novel is waaaaay down on my current to-do list, but I'm going to continue working on new chapters, and continue giving AHOY first right of refusal.

Meanwhile, watch this space for an announcement of when and where "Bullets From The Copperhead Detective" will hit comic book shop nationwide. The professional liar is back with a bullet.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

5 ABOVE: Single-Issue BATMAN Comic Book Stories

5 Above picks five great things within a specific category. Look out below--these are five that rise above.

Commission drawing for Dan Greenfield at 13th Dimension

I've been a Batman fan since 1966. I was six years old, and the twice-weekly televised adventures of the Caped Crusader (played by Adam West, alongside Burt Ward as Robin the Boy Wonder) had me fully captivated faster'n you could say "To the Batmobile!" It was the start of my nearly six decades of fascination with comic books in general, superheroes in particular, and Batman always first and foremost. You can read a little more about my 1960s pop culture journey here, my love of comic books here and here, and the specifics of my Batman fandom here and here.

The fact that the Batman TV series was really a comedy--a comedy that gleefully poked fun at our heroes and their milieu--sailed over my li'l head like the Batsignal shining over Gotham City. As I aged into the presumed maturity (HA!) of adolescence and teendom, I moved away from the campy aspects of the Batman TV series, and embraced the more serious image of Batman as the Dark Knight: The Batman, as depicted in early '70s comics written by Dennis O'Neil, Frank Robbins, Archie Goodwin, even the much-maligned Bob Haney, illustrated by Neal Adams, Irv Novick, Jim Aparo, Dick Giordano, et al. At the age of 13, I decided I wanted to be a writer; Batman comics in the early '70s provided the specific impetus for that decision. (My teen efforts to write Batman were abysmal, but I became a better writer over time. Although it was fanfic, I'm stubbornly proud of my latter-day attempt to write Batman.)

I have read a lot of Batman comics over the decades, going back to the character's first appearances in the '30s and early '40s through all subsequent decades. I am still an active comics reader, and the current runs of Batman, Detective Comics, Batman And Robin: Year One, and Batman Superman World's Finest are among my must-reads. I buy titles from several different publishers, but I've always had a particular affinity for DC. I haven't read anywhere near 100% of Batman's 86-year history, but I've certainly experienced way more than a mere representative sample. Along the way, I've reconciled my childhood adoration of the 1966 TV show and my enthusiasm for the Darknight Detective. Batman is large. He contains multitudes. 

And I have some favorite Batman stories.

Without going back to do any actual research, these are the five single-issue Batman comic book stories that my gut insists were my all-time favorites. It's basically a ranked list, from # 5 to # 1, though there ain't much daylight between the individual rankings. 

The list does not include stories that were chapters in a longer serial. That means it excludes writer Steve Englehart's amazing run on Detective Comics, penciled for its first two issues by Walt Simonson and then through its conclusion by Marshall Rogers, with Terry Austin inking throughout. That is far and away my favorite Batman run, and probably my all-time favorite run of any comics character. 

To the Bat-list!

5. THE ORIGIN OF THE BATMAN! (Batman # 47, June-July 1948)

Written by Bill Finger, art by Bob Kane (?) and Charles Paris

I am well aware of the fact that pundits overuse the word "iconic." Nonetheless, the original two-page spread of the Batman's origin story--who he is and how he came to be--is one of the most iconic sequences in the history of superhero comic books. Written by Batman's co-creator Bill Finger, the story first appeared in Detective Comics # 33  in 1939, attached to a story written by Gardner Fox. It was reprinted with a new splash image in Batman # 1, and the latter version has been reprinted again and again. I first saw it in the 1966 Batman Signet paperback, and many times thereafter. 

You know the story by heart: A young Bruce Wayne is eyewitness to the murder of his parents at the hands of a street thug, and the boy vows to dedicate his life to warring on crime, training himself to physical and mental excellence, and ultimately donning the image of a bat to strike fear into the hearts of the superstitious and cowardly lot known as criminals. The events of the origin story have been revisited countless times in comics and film, and three of my top five single-issue Batman stories draw directly from that source.

I believe 1948's "The Origin Of The Batman!" was the first attempt to re-tell that story and expand upon it. Also written by Finger, "The Origin Of The Batman!" finds the Dark Knight nearly a decade into his mission, the grim nature of his original crusade brightened by the 1940 adoption of his de facto son Dick Grayson, aka Robin. Throughout that time, the unidentified gunman who killed Bruce Wayne's parents remained anonymous, and presumably still at large.

In "The Origin Of The Batman!," Commissioner Gordon shows the Dynamic Duo a photo of the suspected head of a unique smuggling ring: Joe Chill. Batman immediately recognizes Chill's face as that of the man who murdered Bruce Wayne's parents. 

In the pages that follow, readers again experience the tragedy that formed the Batman, and watch as the adult hero seeks to fulfill the vow of justice he made as a child. The story is tense and exciting, and made even larger as the Batman reveals his secret identity to the rat that murdered his parents. Chill flees in terror, and blurts out to his underlings that he was responsible for inspiring Batman's war on crime.

The superstitious and cowardly criminals, maddened by their rage at this frightened thug whose actions had created the masked nemesis that had dogged their own criminal careers, murder Chill on the spot. A fitting end for his kind. No honor among thieves! The swine who put Chill on ice then realize that he could have told them who the Batman really was. Too late, bad guys! The Batman brings them all to justice.

One of the many great things about this story is a part that's left unsaid, just understood. As Batman finally marks the Wayne murder case closed, there isn't even an inkling that securing justice against his parents' killer means the end of the Batman. There are other innocents to protect, other people to save, and other villains to face and overcome. The Batman's mission was always, and should always remain, about more than vengeance, and more than just one boy's tragedy. The Batman knew, without needing to say it, that he had to be more than a mere avenger.

He needed to be a hero. That mission doesn't end.

4. THE JOKER'S FIVE-WAY REVENGE! (Batman # 251, August-September 1973)

Written by Dennis O'Neil, art by Neal Adams and Dick Giordano

The success of the 1966-68 Batman TV series led to an enormous boost in the character's comic book sales. Sales fell precipitously when the Batfad ended, and by the end of the '60s/beginning of the '70s there was a conscious effort to move Batman away from camp elements. Specifically, the intention was to return the Caped Crusader to his pulpish roots as the Dark Knight. Good ol' Batman had to once again become a creature of the night: THE Batman.

Yeah, you better run, you superstitious and cowardly criminals!

The transition began in 1968 issues of the Batman team-up book The Brave And The Bold. This was strictly a visual update, as artist Neal Adams took it upon himself to render the Batman as he envisioned the Batman: In shadows, long cape flowing, the ears of his mask more pronounced and demonic, his posture suggesting a deadly nightstalker. In 1969, main Bat-editor Julius Schwartz began following this blueprint, initially in a story by writer Frank Robbins and artists Irv Novick and Dick Giordano that found Dick Grayson heading off to college, Bruce Wayne shuttering stately Wayne Manor and its subterranean Batcave, and moving to a penthouse in the heart of Gotham City. Schwartz paired Adams with writer Denny O'Neil to join Robbins, Novick, Giordano, and others in chronicling the new old look Batman.

Part of the plan was to eschew the familiar adversaries seen on the TV show. No Catwoman, for damned sure no Penguin or Riddler, and even the Joker was off-limits. Two-Face (a classic villain whom O'Neil described as untainted by the TV show) was brought back for his first real appearance since the '50s. New opponents were created, most notably Ra's al Ghul, less notably Colonel Sulphur.

The Joker finally returned in 1973's "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge!," crafted by O'Neil, Adams, and Giordano. This was the first shift away from the Clown Prince of Crime seen in comics for decades (and portrayed on TV by Caesar Romero) back to the murderous monster introduced in 1940's Batman # 1.

This was seismic. "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge!" redefined the Joker, establishing a model for how the character would be depicted in comics and film. It draws on what Bill Finger, Jerry Robinson, and (I guess) Bob Kane created before decisions were made to deemphasize the Joker's role as a killer, reestablishes the menace, and leads to Steve Englehart perfecting that approach a few years later.

I bought this comic book brand new off the spinner rack, one of the best twenty-cent purchases I ever made. The Joker's return had been teased in the letters column of a previous issue, and I could not wait for it to be in my hands. It did not disappoint, and thirteen-year-old me read it over and over and over. 

3. TO KILL A LEGEND (Detective Comics # 500, March 1981)

Written by Alan Brennert, art by Dick Giordano

We jump ahead a few years for my # 3 and # 2 favorites, both of which were written by Alan Brennert. Brennert is best known for his work in television (as writer and producer) and as a novelist; to say he's dabbled in writing for comics does a disservice to the impact of what he accomplished with a relatively small volume of stories. He did a little bit of work for Marvel, and a little more for DC. The 2016 hardcover Tales Of The Batman: Alan Brennert collects eleven Brennert stories, including two that don't feature Batman, and including the graphic novel Batman: Holy Terror. Other than two stories Brennert plotted (but did not script) for Wonder Woman in the late '70s, this book contains the entirety of his DC work.

And it's glorious. Brennert infuses his writing with an emotional element that feels real, a sense of verisimilitude that adds essential punch to his superhero storytelling. That is especially true of the two Brennert Batman stories on my list.

"To Kill A Legend" appeared in Detective Comics # 500, and it lives up to the honor. The mystic traveler known only as the Phantom Stranger offers Batman an opportunity to visit a parallel world, where a young Bruce Wayne is about to undergo the same trauma that forged the Batman. Throughout his life, Batman has felt survivor's guilt over his inability to save his parents. The Phantom Stranger's offer gives Batman a chance to save the Thomas and Martha Wayne of this alternate universe. Batman accepts this shot at redemption, and so the Phantom Stranger transports Batman and Robin to this other Earth, charged with the mission of preventing the Waynes' murder.

But is it that simple? The young Bruce on this parallel Earth is a spoiled brat, headed for an adult life as the useless playboy Batman only pretends to be. Robin wonders if saving the Waynes is worth the cost of depriving this other world of its Batman. But the Batman replies:

"I can appreciate your concerns, Robin...but I can't share them. Lives are at stake here...

"...Including a little boy's life...

"...A boy who'll see his family die before his eyes.

"He'll never forget that...never lose the anger or the anguish.

"No one should be angry all his life, Dick. No one."

Navigating a parallel world that is similar but not identical to the familiar world provides twists and turns that further complicate the Batman's efforts to save the Waynes. But he arrives just in time, in what may be my favorite visual sequence in the history of superhero comics.

I don't care that I'm supposed to be an adult, and a theoretically mature adult at that. This sequence brings me chills to this day.

But it is the story's epilogue that elevates even further. As the Batman and Robin we know return to their own reality, they don't realize the extent of the difference they made in this alternate world. That young, spoiled Bruce Wayne has seen how quickly a life could be taken away, without apology, without any sense of fairness. No innocent child should ever have to face that horror, a horror that almost befell Bruce. He begins to train himself, to study criminology and detection, to pursue a goal of seeking justice and protecting others. As Brennert writes, the path this young Bruce Wayne chooses "will not be a decision born of grief, or guilt, or vengeance...but of awe...and mystery...and gratitude."

A Batman born of determination and joy? Yes. Yes. Yes.

2. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF BRUCE WAYNE! (The Brave And The Bold # 197, April 1983)

Written by Alan Brennert, art by Joe Staton and George Freeman

"To Kill A Legend!" was far, far from Batman's first foray into the idea of parallel Earths. In the early 1960s, DC Comics canon established that there were multiple Earths, with DC's then-current main continuity of the Justice League of America occurring on Earth-One. Earth-Two was the home of the Justice Society of America, the JLA's counterparts (and forebears) from the 1940s. Earth-Two had its own Batman, about twenty years older than the Earth-One Batman. The Earth-Two Batman had retired long ago, and he'd married the love of his life, his former adversary the Catwoman. Both characters had perished in the comics before 1983.

But Alan Brennert wanted to go back and reveal the untold story of how Batman and Catwoman got together all those years ago.

The result was "The Autobiography Of Bruce Wayne!," a flashback related in the first person by the retired Caped Crusader himself. It's an amazing story of action informed by emotion, a story of love and dedication, sacrifices, fear, bravery, commitment, mortality, and love's potential power to transcend for whatever time this finite world allows us.

It is difficult for me to write this, even now. In 2008, my niece was killed in a stupid accident that angers and saddens me still, as I'm sure it always will. Some wounds don't heal. Maybe some wounds shouldn't heal.

She was living in New York at the time. Yes, Gotham City. The funeral would be in Syracuse. Her parents, my sister and brother-in-law, live in England, and it made sense for me to make as many of the local arrangements as I could. My pain was, frankly, nothing compared to the pain they were going through.

Part of the arrangements was writing my niece's obituary. God, it still pains me to say those words. It had to be done. And it had to be worthy of what a great person she was. 

My pop culture inspirations are never far from my mind. I remembered the closing passage from "The Autobiography Of Bruce Wayne!," as the Batman looked back on the death of his beloved Selina, and I offered that in my niece's memory as well:

"Her death was pointless, tragic...but I have long since given up trying to find meaning in death. The meaning is in life, not death. And [her] life was as full of meaning as it was of love, and spirit, and courage. And when my time comes to join her...I would only hope the same could be said for me."

1. NIGHT OF THE STALKER! (Detective Comics # 439, February-March 1974)

Written by Steve EnglehartVin Amendola, and Sal Amendola, art by Sal AmenolaVin Amendola, and Dick Giordano

The definitive single-issue Batman story. And I can say that even though it doesn't include Robin, Alfred, Commissioner Gordon, nor a single one of the Batman's familiar gallery of rogues, nor any other character from among his supporting cast. And the Batman has no dialogue, not a word of it.

And it's perfect.

Like "The Origin Of The Batman!" and "To Kill A Legend," "Night Of The Stalker!" flashes back to the night Bruce Wayne witnessed the murder of his parents. But here, the adult who grew from that grieving, traumatized child sees the same thing happen to someone else, as another young boy loses his mother and father to the gun. This time, it's not a lone gunman like Joe Chill, but a quartet of bank robbers fleeing from their crime. The Batman sees it all, but is too far away to prevent the tragedy. 

He can only seek vengeance.

One of the gunmen is captured at the scene, pounded into submission by the fists of this furious Dark Knight. The other three criminals drive away, not yet realizing they are now hunted, mere prey, damned to be stalked with cold efficiency by a bat out of Hell.

The Batman traces them. The Batman tracks them. In a tense and exciting narrative, the silent Batman faces the killers, spooks them, provokes them, taunts them, haunts them, and goads them into overconfident actions. He takes each one of them down. Two succumb to the Batman's physical force. The fourth and final killer, a young man, crumples under the weight of his own remorse, weeping with regret and guilt. The Batman leaves them all for the police to apprehend, and he returns to his home as night becomes light.

Dawn is stealing into Gotham City as the Batman slips into the penthouse atop the Wayne Foundation Building...

...Where, with the frosty birth of day, this hunter of darkness "dies," leaving only a weary Bruce Wayne...

As he lifts the cowl from his drawn face, his eyes automatically rise...

...And suddenly, sorrow explodes within him. 

Time heals all wounds, they say...

...And, in truth, Bruce Wayne long ago learned to live with the agonizing fact of his parents' demise.

But when he thinks of the boy crime left sobbing on the street at dusk--and the other boy crime left sobbing before the Batman's vengeance hours later...

...He remembers a third boy crime left sobbing so many years ago. And in this gray-lit, lonely tower, for this single moment in infinity...

...He is that boy again.

HONORABLE MENTIONS (listed in order of publication): 

"The Crazy Crime Clown!" (Batman # 74, November-December 1952)

"Web Of Doom!" (Batman # 90, March 1955)

"Death Knocks Three Times!" (Batman # 180, April-May 1966)

"Night Of The Reaper!" (Batman # 237, December 1971)

"There Is No Hope In Crime Alley!" (Detective Comics # 457, March 1976)

"Be Better" (Batman [Volume 3] # 150, September 2024)

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