Posts Tagged ‘Wonder Woman’
Merry Christmas!
A DC Holiday
DC’s 2015 holiday card, artist unknown (let us know).
‘Tis The Season…
Wonder Woman holds her own with DC’s 2006 holiday card. Artist unknown (let us know).
Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Halloween!
DC Universe Holiday Bash III (1998)
DC saved the best for last. The DC Universe Holiday Bash III is the final installment of Christmas specials before Y2K featuring seven stories running a gamut of characters.
Superman and Batman headline the book in “World’s Finest Christmas.” Writer Karl Kesel expounds on the toy collecting trend of the day. The Captain Action knock-off featured is Toyman’s revenge for a believed slight. Batman brings a bittersweet tale to conclusion with an act of kindness.
“The Joker’s Twelve Days of Christmas” mangles the holiday staple in a murderous take off.
Wonder Woman returns to her newfound fold for Christmas to be accused of foregoing her heritage and beliefs in “Heathen Ways.”
Chuck Dixon proves why he was the Bat Family scribe for so long with “Alone for the Holidays.” Robin finds himself part of an extended family so he’s never really alone – especially at Christmas time.
Prison is not the place to be for Christmas as Shrapnel discovers. His short-term vacation from the Slab brings Christmas “Home for the Holidays.”
Bat Lash has “An Eye for Detail” saving a frontier family from a dastardly land deal.
Finally, Impulse creator Mark Waid pens, with Devin Grayson, “No, Bart, There is No Santa Claus.” Bart Allen’s naivety and impulsive nature send him around the world as Santa’s helper.
The package is wrapped by a two-page spread as imagined by Sergio Aragones.
DC would take a break from Christmas specials for the next several years allowing the individual writers to pen any holiday tales in their respective titles.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
Happy Holidays from your Heroes
You know you were loved if you woke Christmas morning to find presents nestled in superhero wrapping paper back in the day.
Not sure when this roll hit store shelves, but it was before the dollar stores of today when consumers can fly their geek flags on the cheap.
If Mental Floss is to be believed, the colorful covering we take for granted today celebrated its centennial in 2017.
The Japanese and Koreans were ahead of the curve using colored cloth for wrapping purposes at least by the 1700s though some records date the tradition around the first century. A functional manila paper was in fashion by the Victorian era though the well-to-do used a more colorful tissue paper.
This was the norm until 1917 when brothers Joyce and Rollie Hall ran out and substituted with a more substantial, higher grade of paper in their stationary store. It cost a whopping $.10 a sheet and promptly sold out.
As did the next offering. And, the next. And, the next.
By 1919 the brothers believed their find was not a fad and began marketing on a larger scale basis creating a tradition we use today.
Most know their brand by the name Hallmark.
DC Holiday Special 2017
With 2017 history it’s time to be thankful DC remembered fans with a stocking stuffer holiday special.
The tales make up a worthy Tannenbaum tome as Jeff Limire bookends the seasonal sandwich of stories with Bibbo championing Superman and his deeds throughout the year to a doubting Clark Kent with John Constantine tossing in his two pence worth.
The meat of the book belongs to Sgt. Rock, the Atomic Knights, Flash (both Barry and Wally), Green Arrow and Black Canary, Deathstroke, Swamp Thing and Wonder Woman. Denny O’Neil returns for a haunting Batman yarn that warms no hearts.
“The Silent Night of the Batman” is the encore. Reprinted from Batman 218, “The Silent Night…” was the 1960s decade closer for Caped Crusader. Easily the best story of the book and has oft been reprinted capturing hearts again in the Batman by Neal Adams Omnibus, Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams (Vol. 2), Batman: The Joker’s Revenge trade paperback, Christmas With the Super Heroes (1988), Limited Collector’s Edition C-43 and Showcase Presents Batman trade paperback (Vol. 5).
Not the best for a good year, but a good way to start a new one.











Happy New Year!
Cheer up, Batman.
Artwork by The-Blackcat.