Jacksonville Public Library

Batman and the Signal, written by Scott Snyder, Tony Patrick ; art by Cully Hamner, Declan Shalvey, Francesco Francavilla, Minkyu Jung, Klaus Janson ; colors by Laura Martin, Jordie Bellaire, Pete Pantazis ; lettering by Deron Bennett, Steve Wands, Dezi Sienty ; cover art and original series covers by Cully Hamner

Label
Batman and the Signal, written by Scott Snyder, Tony Patrick ; art by Cully Hamner, Declan Shalvey, Francesco Francavilla, Minkyu Jung, Klaus Janson ; colors by Laura Martin, Jordie Bellaire, Pete Pantazis ; lettering by Deron Bennett, Steve Wands, Dezi Sienty ; cover art and original series covers by Cully Hamner
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
Batman and the Signal
Nature of contents
comics graphic novels
Oclc number
1001766695
Responsibility statement
written by Scott Snyder, Tony Patrick ; art by Cully Hamner, Declan Shalvey, Francesco Francavilla, Minkyu Jung, Klaus Janson ; colors by Laura Martin, Jordie Bellaire, Pete Pantazis ; lettering by Deron Bennett, Steve Wands, Dezi Sienty ; cover art and original series covers by Cully Hamner
Series statement
Batman DC ComicsAll star Batman DC, 2016-2017
Summary
"Duke Thomas always wanted to be a hero. During the "Robin War," he led an insurgency of teen Robins who insisted that their movement's namesake didn't really need a partner. In the aftermath, Batman himself has taken Duke under his wing to train him--not to be a sidekick, but to be his own man. Now, Duke is ready to emerge from his mentor's shadow and take his place as Gotham's protector by day: the Signal. But is he ready for what the light will reveal? Someone has been giving deadly metahuman powers to teenagers living in the Narrows, Gotham's poorest neighborhood--Duke's neighborhood. Even stranger, these newly powered teens seem to have some sort of connection to both Duke and his own barely understood abilities. With the help of the Bat-Family, the Signal and Batman must protect the city from the rampaging adolescents while also keeping them from harming themselves. But when Duke discovers the true nature of his connection to the crisis, will it signal a dark new chapter for Gotham's bright new hero?" -- page [4] of cover
Target audience
adult
Classification
Mapped to