Infinite Crisis by Greg Cox is a novelization of the seven issue comic book series.
Because the Dallas Library System remains closed due to the pandemic, I have
read most of the library books I had checked out when the system shut down.
This 2006 published book comes from my personal TBR pile and was a gift from my
Mom back in 2008.
Because this book came out more than
ten years ago, it uses the canon of the time and not how things are being
reimagined today. Set during the “post crisis” it is a low point for Batman,
Superman, and Wonder Woman personally as well as in their relationships with
each other. After the revelations and decisions that led to this novel, Batman
recently found out that multiple heroes were mind wiping villains once they
learned the secret identities of various Justice League members. Batman also
learned that he had been mindwiped as well after he objected to the actions of
his fellow heroes. This betrayal led him to start the OMAC project and build
brother Eye.
At a later point, when Superman was
mind controlled by Maxwell Lord, he brutally beat Batman until he was barely
alive. He then went after Wonder Woman and tried to kill her. The only way to
stop him was the death of Maxwell Lord which Wonder Woman made happen by
snapping his neck. Batman believes that
Wonder Woman crossed a moral line as no hero kills. The mind wiping that was
done on him remains a major issue in their relationship.
The preceding sets up the multiple
storylines in this book. Infinite Crisis is one of the more
complicated “event comics” I have read. There are numerous deaths, huge
battles, and lots of violent action. Heroes and villains die. Many minor heroes
and several major heroes find even the most powerful among them will not
survive the events in this novel. The comic series that was adapted into this
book changed the DC Universe with repercussions that continue today through
numerous series.
The story is told from multiple
perspectives of heroes and villains. Many readers will be familiar with the
major players. Many will not be familiar with many of the minor ones such as Omega
Men, the Freedom Fighters, the Justice Society, Power Girl, Max Mercury, and
more. This book features minor and major heroes as well as minor and major villains.
Just about anyone and everyone is here in this read.
This is all hands-on deck situation
with tragedy after tragedy and a massive body count among heroes and civilians.
While Infinite Crisis by Greg Cox is a really good book, it is
probably over complicated for casual readers. But, I think it is worth a read
for any DC Comics fan especially one who enjoyed the comic.
Scott A. Tipple © 2020
2 comments:
Greg Cox is a good writer. I've read his three Star Trek novels about Khan and the Eugenics Wars, and even though they're not canon, they read as though they could be canonical.
(Paramount and Viacom have always been clearer about the canon status of novels or other tie-in media than "pre-Disney" Lucasfilm was about Star Wars books not directly linked to the films. The rule vis a vis Star Trek is simple: Only the TV shows and movies count. Novels do not.)
Greg is pretty gifted when it comes to characterizing and adapting material that he did not create and somehow makes it his own.
Good review, Scott!
Thank you very much for the comment and the compliment, Alex.
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