Sources and More Information

Books

There are a variety of useful reference books about the Golden Age Batman.

Comic Book Reprint Collections

There are, of course, many of these. The most noteworthy are:

  • There are presently nine volumes of DC’s hardbound Archives series containing Golden Age Batman stories. All are in print, although their cover price is formidable. Fortunately, they can be obtained through various on-line vendors at substantial discounts, up to 40% (search Bookfinder to find the best deal, new or used). Don’t pay full list price.

  • Newspaper Comic Strip

    Batman and Robin appeared in both daily and Sunday newspaper comic strips, each with separate continuities, from the McClure Syndicate (which also released the Superman newspaper strip) from 1943 to 1946. Although most of the strip was not part of the same continuity as the comic books (a number of the newspaper stories were rewritten from existing comic book tales), the newspaper comic was written by the same writers as the comic book (Bill Finger, Al Schwartz, and Don Cameron) and drawn by the same artists (Jack Burnley on most of the Sunday strip and Bob Kane on the daily, the last major body of work that Kane actually drew himself), so it’s very much in the same vein. DC and Kitchen Sink Press reprinted the entire series in several volumes in 1990–1991. All are beautifully packaged, with lovely covers by artist Pete Poplaski in the style of Dick Sprang, excellent reproduction, and thorough historical notes by uber-Batfan Joe Desris.

    Batman on Radio

    Although efforts to get Batman his own radio series during the forties failed, Batman and Robin were regular guest stars on Superman’s radio series beginning in 1945, usually played by Matt Crowley and Ronald Liss. A number of Superman’s radio adventures, some with Batman and Robin, are available on cassette and CD from the Smithsonian Institute and Radio Spirits/Mediabay.

    Batman Serials

    Batman and Robin appeared in two 15-part chapter-plays from Columbia Pictures. The first, starring Lewis Wilson as Batman, Douglas Croft as Robin, Shirley Patterson as Linda Page, and J. Carrol Naish as Dr. Daka, was released in 1943. The second, with Robert Lowery as Batman, John Duncan as Robin, and Jane Dams as Vicki Vale, appeared in 1949. Both are available on videocassette. Be warned that both serials were cheap and shoddy even by the dubious standards of forties chapter-plays. The first has a livelier villain in the form of Naish, but its racist, anti-Japanese wartime sentiments (although comparatively mild for the time period) sit uneasily today. The second, with a masked villain called the Wizard, is less offensive, but rather dull. If you value your sanity, don’t try to watch more than an installment or two of either serial at a time.

    Related Web Sites

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