cover image Batman: The Story of the Dark Knight

Batman: The Story of the Dark Knight

Ralph Cosentino, . . Viking, $15.99 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-670-06255-3

While this introduction to Batman pays plenty of homage to the original comic’s noirish aesthetics, Cosentino (The Marvelous Misadventures of Fun-Boy ) makes two astute concessions to the sensibilities of his target audience. First, Batman’s face and body is less chiseled and angst-ridden than the characterizations aimed at older readers; he’s still the Dark Knight, but he’s also less remote. Second, Cosentino unfolds the story largely through a series of double-page and single-page drawings composed from a straight-on perspective; by not breaking up the action, by eschewing a more cinematic presentation, the artwork enthralls but does not overwhelm. The text, written in Batman’s voice and set in traditional comic book fonts, is both hard-boiled and reassuring: “In the dark of the night, criminals think they can get away. They are wrong.” Some elements are scary (the murder of Bruce Wayne’s parents, the disfigured villain Two-Face), and some readers may bemoan the omission of Robin. But for kids already acquainted with the animated Batman or his action-figure counterpart, this is a gripping, sensitive celebration of superherodom—and an outstanding introduction to the joys and narrative power of classic comics. Ages 3–5. (June)