Written by Karl Kerschl, Torunn Gronbekk, Delilah S. Dawson, Dan Watters Art by Karl Kerschl, Fernando Pasarin and Ricardo Lopez Ortiz Gotham Academy is back in session in the first part of Karl Kerschl's thrilling three-part Batman adventure, guest-starring Maps Mizoguchi and Tristan Grey! Kirk Langstrom, formerly Man-Bat, now clean of his serum for years, is teaching at Gotham Academy. But Man-Bat is menacing the city. Has Dr. Langstrom fallen off the wagon, or is there a deeper, far more sinister, plan afoot? Plus, get ready for a conspiracy only Lois Lane could solve, a tale of rip-roaring adventure starring Artemis, and a Batman Black & more
This was a great collection of storieswith a potential masterpiece right at the start. Read Full Review
A new suite of stories, some newer characters to enjoy, and some old classics to revisit! Batman: The Brave & The Bold #10 really has it all. Read Full Review
There are a few must-read tales in Batman: The Brave and the Bold #10, making it another easy add to your buy pile. The opening and closing tales are fabulous, and there's plenty to love from the various artists. Comics like this remind us that taking big and original swings always reaps benefits with superhero books. Read Full Review
Batman: The Brave And The Bold #10 kicks off five new stories to add some Bat-variety into your life. Three of the five chapters are winners, so you'll mostly get your money's worth. Read Full Review
Batman: The Brave and the Bold #10 offers a new start for all of its stories, and they mostly deliver well enough. Nothing here particularly stands out above the rest, but there should at least be something for everyone. Returning to Gotham Academy is fun, and Watters' humorous take on Batman's obsession with perfection makes for a good way to close out the collection. Read Full Review
The issue is a good collection of different stories that all have a different impact. My favourite would have to be The Cheeseburger, those black and white illustrations definitely make an impact. Read Full Review
Although this reset misses more than it hits, both "The Cheeseburger" and "Mother's Day" are set to provide readers with sufficient satisfaction. Read Full Review
The Gotham Academy story took a while to get going, but I liked it more as it went along.
Artemis was really good.
Nameless wasn't bad but I feel like it could've been executed a bit better.
Lois Lane didn't really interest me, but it's Torunn Gronbekk so I'm sure it'll become engaging soon.
The Cheeseburger story was the first time that I felt like the black and white stories in this issues didn't feel like padding for the page count. Of course, it's written by Dan Watters, someone who doesn't get near enough credit despite how good of a writer they are.