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Batman: The Long Halloween Posters
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This was my first graphic novel and I have to say that it was awesome! The story is great and Tim Sale's art is just as great. Every chapter gets more and more interesting as the book progresses. It's just really good.
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Frank Miller might have all the kudos, but Jeff Loeb's story and the artwork by Sale in this graphic novel deserve a place in the Comic Book Hall of Fame. The story takes place shortly after Batman: Year One ends, and Gotham and Batman are still getting used to each other. Selena Kyle is featured prominently in this novel, and though Batman is the main character the driving force behind this story is Harvey Dent's war on crime.
I will be rereading this for years to come (not repeatedly, but once every six months or so). Strongly recommended.
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Batman Long Halloween is by far the best batman graphic novel from Loeb and Sale. Kept me on the edge the entire time and its one of those books you can pick up over and over. If you love batman, you'll for sure love this.
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A fantastic read, I wasn't sure which batman book I would read first but I eventually came to the conclusion that The Long Halloween was the choice for me. A great murder mystery with the villains of Batman you've come to known well.
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This book's elevated stature among all of the Battales is perplexing. The story has many flaws. It is a very sparse script. There is nothing to it. Many pages have so few words on them that your focus and time is spent on turning pages moreso than actually reading them. The rogue cameos are pointless and add very little to the plot, especially Catwoman, who is seen hanging around throughout the entire story for no apparent reason, for which we don't find out the reason until the end of Dark Victory. Plus Batman doesn't even play a big role in the discovery of the killer, whose identity at the end of the story is still in doubt. This is easily Jeph Loeb's weakest Batman tale, Dark Victory and especially Catwoman When in Rome are far superior, and Hush has the huge unfair advantage of Jim Lee's great artwork. A novel, like many other works of art, needs to have a rhythm and flow to it, and that is entirely missing when a story reads as fast as this one. It's lack of substance leaves the reader with an empty feeling of squandered opportunity and wasted time. Loeb is certainly a talented writer, but he needs to show that by adding some depth and material essence to the story and not just by producing a book that reads like a series of flash cards.
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