Review – Batman: Detective Comics #1093 – The Hunting Grounds

Comic Books DC This Week
Batman: Detective Comics cover, via DC Comics.

Batman: Detective Comics – Tom Taylor, Writer; Mikel Janin, Artist

Ray – 9.5/10

Ray: Tom Taylor has always dealt with some darker themes in his work, but I don’t know if he’s ever done a run with a villain so unsettling as this one. It delves back to Bruce Wayne’s childhood and the legacy his family left in Gotham, with the reveal that his mother saved a woman and her child from her abusive husband – Joe Chill, who was also saved by Thomas Wayne’s surgical skills. A flashback shows the woman trying to contact Bruce years later – leading to Bruce’s first meeting with Scarlett, the girl who would grow into a biotech magnate and Bruce’s lover. But how does she tie into the murderous streak targeting juvenile detainees in Gotham – and are they having their blood harvested to create the serum that’s giving Bruce his youth back? It’s a deeply disturbing concept, and one the comic doesn’t shy away from in its depiction of the assassin tasked with hunting them down.

Memories. Via DC Comics.

Having identified the next target, the Bat-family tracks down the teenagers and collects them in a lair. Most go smoothly, but Batman has a particularly tense showdown with an abusive stepfather as he rescues the boy. There’s some great Bat-family banter in this issue, reminding us how good Taylor can be at humor, but there’s also some really interesting discussions about redemption and second chances. The Bat-family tries to keep tabs on the kids, but the mysterious Asana soon finds them, setting up a bloody battle in the streets of Gotham that leaves Batman vulnerable – and may give away his biggest secret. Scarlett is mostly out of focus this issue, but she’s looming in the background as either a pawn in a truly evil scheme – or one of the darkest villains Batman has ever faced. The scope of this run so far is smaller than Taylor’s Nightwing, but it’s zoomed in tight on a very compelling story.

To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week.

GeekDad received this comic for review purposes.

Liked it? Take a second to support GeekDad and GeekMom on Patreon!
Become a patron at Patreon!