Ratings10
Average rating3.6
A devastating earthquake has left Gotham City in ruins, and the government is getting close to completely cutting it off from the rest of civilization. But there's one man who's vowed to save Gotham from whatever foe it comes up against, and now Bruce Wayne must put aside his life as Batman and put on his suit and tie as he takes his fight for the fate of Gotham to Washington, D.C. Lurking in the shadows is the mysterious Nicholas Scratch who will do everything in his power to ensure Gotham becomes a No Man’s Land! In this, the final act before the beginning of the classic event, “No Man's Land,” Bruce Wayne, Robin, Nightwing and many others try to save their city from destruction once again—this time at the hands of the U.S. government. BATMAN: ROAD TO NO MAN’S LAND VOL. 2 collects for the first time the complete “Road to No Man’s Land” storyline that rocked the Bat family and leads into the hit crossover event No Man’s Land, Reprinting DETECTIVE COMICS #727-729, BATMAN #560-562, BATMAN: SHADOW OF THE BAT #80-82, THE BATMAN CHRONICLES #15, AZRAEL #47-50, and BATMAN: NO MAN’S LAND SECRET FILES AND ORIGINS #1.
Series
5 primary books8 released booksBatman (1940-2011) is a 8-book series with 47 primary works first released in 1593 with contributions by Doug Moench, Alan Grant, and Chuck Dixon.
Series
33 primary booksModern Batman Collections is a 33-book series with 53 primary works first released in 1971 with contributions by Dennis O'Neil, Mike W. Barr, and Jim Starlin.
Series
0 released booksBatman: Shadow of the Bat (1992) is a 0-book series first released in 2011 with contributions by Alan Grant.
Series
2 primary booksBatman: No Man's Land is a 2-book series with 3 primary works first released in 1999 with contributions by Dennis O'Neil, Greg Rucka, and Chuck Dixon.
Reviews with the most likes.
Parts of this were great some of Batman's allies doubting Bruce's innocence, Tim rescuing his boarding school roommate, Alfred assisting in intelligence gathering, the interaction with Superman, and of course the whole ‘there is no more Bruce'
I was a little irritated at the lack of style consistency with some characters, sometimes Alfred had blue eyes, other times brown and various amounts of hair, sometimes it took me a few panels to recognize him. Love Barbra Gordon, who I know as a redhead, and I understand that ‘redhead' can vary, but in some sections she looked almost blonde. However, I thought the various Batman styles were excellent.
Took me a little bit to place the Leslie character, I like what she adds to the story.
Also could have done without the zombie villain
I had thought that in 600 or so pages this was going to be solved, silly me, but thankfully the next part is available. Thanks Hoopla.