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Catwoman (2001) (New Editions) book cover 1
Catwoman (2001) (New Editions) book cover 2
Catwoman (2001) (New Editions) book cover 3
Catwoman (2001) (New Editions)
Series · 5 books · 2008-2017

Books in series

Catwoman, Volume 1 book cover
#1

Catwoman, Volume 1

Trail of the Catwoman

2008

For years, Selina Kyle has prowled the skyline of Gotham City as its most famous thief, Catwoman. But when word spreads of Catwoman's demise, Selina decides to leave the costumed world behind and continue her trade cloaked in the shadows. Unable to enjoy her newfound anonymity for too long though, Selina decides that she must return to her infamous persona. Donning a new costume and attitude, Catwoman returns to the streets and sets her sights on the serial killer that has been preying upon the streetwalkers she calls friends. This volume collects in chronological order an entire Catwoman epic from multiple award-winning creators Darwyn Cooke & Ed Brubaker. Collecting: Catwoman 1-9, Selina's Big Score & Detective Comics 759-762
Catwoman, Volume 2 book cover
#2

Catwoman, Volume 2

No Easy Way Down

2013

Ed Brubaker continues his noir look at Selina Kyle and the growing criminal element in Gotham City, along with new artist Cameron Stewart. The Black Mask, long-time foil of Batman, has his sights set on Gotham City's East End to house his drug trafficking empire. When Selina Kyle discovers the Black Mask's intentions, she begins to wage a vigilante war against his operation in Gotham. Selina continues to frustrate the Black Mask at every turn and when Selina uses funds stolen from Black Mask henchmen to fund a youth center, the Black Mask is enraged and vows to make Selina pay an awful price. There is a reason superheroes have a secret identity and when that identity is known, no one in their family as safe, a hard lesson Selina is forced to learn. Collects CATWOMAN #10-24 and CATWOMAN SECRET FILES #1.
Catwoman, Volume 4 book cover
#4

Catwoman, Volume 4

The One You Love

2015

Gotham’s worst gang war is over and Catwoman must pick up the pieces of the East End. When Hush comes knocking on Selina’s door, asking her to steal a mysterious canister from STAR Labs, she knows something bigger is up. In order to stop it, she’ll have to cross a morally ambiguous line and conspire with the very criminals she working to eliminate. Can Catwoman play both sides to get what she wants? Collecting CATWOMAN #38-49, CATWOMAN: THE ONE YOU LOVE collects CATWOMAN #38-49, featuring writers Will Pfeifer (TEEN TITANS) and Scott Morse (Soulwind), and artists Pete Woods (LEGION LOST) and Paul Gulacy (BATMAN: PREY).
Catwoman, Volume 5 book cover
#5

Catwoman, Volume 5

Backward Unmasking

2016

Will Pfeifer (TEEN TITANS) and artists Pete Woods (LEGION LOST) and David López (INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US: YEAR ONE) take Catwoman in a whole new direction as Selina rediscovers who she is and who she has to protect. Who is Catwoman? That’s the question Selina Kyle is asking herself after discovering that her mind was altered by Zatanna and the Justice League, and she was changed to become more hero than villain. How does this affect her mission to protect Gotham City’s East End? Or her relationship with her friends Holly Robinson and Sam Bradley? After learning the truth, Selina’s life becomes chaos, but Black Mask doesn’t care. He has his own idea of who Catwoman is, and he’s about to tell her in the most bloody way possible. Collects CATWOMAN #50-65!
Catwoman, Volume 6 book cover
#6

Catwoman, Volume 6

Final Jeopardy

2017

GOOD-BYE TO EVERYTHING Catwoman has learned a lot from Batman: how to use fear to cripple foes, how to embrace the heights of Gotham rooftops and the underbellies of its alleyways, how to thrive in shadows. Now, after carefully rebuilding her secret identity to protect herself and her new daughter, everything is crumbling around her, and her daughter and friends are in danger, too. Selina Kyle faces uncomfortable truths about her nature while dealing with the threat of the killers-for-hire Hammer and Sickle, only to then be thrown off-planet by the government…along with all of Earth’s super-villains! She must now claw her way back to Earth and reality for the sake of everything she holds dear… Will Pfeifer (TEEN TITANS), David López (INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US), Álvaro López (Spider-Woman) and others continue the classic adventures of the Feline Fatale in this final volume of the acclaimed series. CATWOMAN VOLUME 6: FINAL JEOPARDY collects CATWOMAN #66-82 and issue #83 from the BLACKEST NIGHT saga!

Authors

Will Pfeifer
Will Pfeifer
Author · 14 books

Will Pfeifer was born in 1967 in the town of Niles, Ohio. He attended Kent State University and graduated in 1989. He has resided in Rockford, Illinois since 1990, with his wife, Amy. Pfeifer, along with his comic writing duties, is the assistant features editor at the Rockford Register Star. He also writes a weekly DVD column for the Sunday paper.

Ed Brubaker
Ed Brubaker
Author · 146 books

Ed Brubaker (born November 17, 1966) is an Eisner Award-winning American cartoonist and writer. He was born at the National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland. Brubaker is best known for his work as a comic book writer on such titles as Batman, Daredevil, Captain America, Iron Fist, Catwoman, Gotham Central and Uncanny X-Men. In more recent years, he has focused solely on creator-owned titles for Image Comics, such as Fatale, Criminal, Velvet and Kill or Be Killed. In 2016, Brubaker ventured into television, joining the writing staff of the HBO series Westworld.

Darwyn Cooke
Darwyn Cooke
Author · 22 books

Darwyn Cooke was an Eisner Award winning comic book writer, artist, cartoonist and animator, best known for his work on the comic books Catwoman, DC: The New Frontier and Will Eisner's The Spirit. In 1985, Cooke published his first comic book work as a professional artist in a short story in New Talent Showcase #19, but economic pressure made him leave the career and he worked in Canada as a magazine art director, graphic and product designer for the next 15 years. In the early 1990s Cooke decided to return to comics, but found little interest for his work at the major publishers. Eventually he was hired by Warner Bros. Animation after replying to an ad placed by animator Bruce Timm. He went on to work as a storyboard artist for Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series, and in 1999 he animated the main title design for Batman Beyond. He then worked as a director for Sony Animation's Men in Black: The Series for a year. DC Comics then approached Cooke about a project which he had submitted to the publisher years earlier which eventually became Batman: Ego, a graphic novel published in 2000. The critical success of that project led to Cooke taking on more freelance work, such as X-Force, Wolverine/Doop and Spider-Man's Tangled Web for Marvel Comics and Just Imagine... Stan Lee for DC. In 2001, Cooke and writer Ed Brubaker teamed up to revamp the Catwoman character. They started with a 4 issue serial "Trail of the Catwoman" in Detective Comics #759-762 in which private detective Slam Bradley attempts to investigate the death of Selina Kyle (AKA Catwoman). The story led into a new Catwoman title in late 2001 by Brubaker and Cooke, in which the character's costume, supporting cast and modus operandi were all redesigned and redeveloped. Cooke would stay on the series, which was met with critical and fan acclaim, up until issue #4. In 2002 he would write and draw a prequel, the Selina's Big Score graphic novel which detailed what had happened to the character directly before her new series. Cover to DC: The New Frontier #6. Cover to DC: The New Frontier #6. Cooke's next project was the ambitious DC: The New Frontier (2004), a six issue miniseries which sought to tell an epic storyline bridging the gap between the end of the golden and the start of the silver age of comic books in the DC Universe. The story, which was set in the 1950s, featured dozens of super-hero characters and drew inspiration from the comic books and movies of the period as well as from Tom Wolfe's non-fiction account of the start of the US Space Program The Right Stuff. The major DC characters are introduced in "The New Frontier" in the same order that DC originally published them, even down to the correct month and year in the story's timeline. In 2005, Cooke won an Eisner Award for "Best Limited Series", and a Joe Shuster Award for "Outstanding Canadian Comic Book Cartoonist" for his work on the series. Most recently, Cooke contributed to DC's artist-centric anthology project Solo. His issue (#5, June, 2005) featured several different stories in different styles with a framing sequence featuring the Slam Bradley character. In 2006, Solo #5 won an Eisner Award for "Best Single Issue." In July 2005, it was announced that in 2006 Cooke and writer Jeph Loeb would produce a Batman/Spirit crossover, to be followed shortly afterwards by an ongoing Spirit series written and drawn by Cooke. Batman/The Spirit was ultimately published in November 2006, followed in December by the first issue of Cooke's The Spirit. In June 2007, Cooke and J. Bone won a Joe Shuster Award for "Outstanding Canadian Comic Book Artists" for their work on "Batman/The Spirit", and Cooke won "Outstanding Canadian Comic Book Cartoonist" for his work on "The Spirit". In July 2006, it was announced that Warner Bros. Animation and DC Comics would release a series of direct-to-DVD animated movies based on important DC com

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Catwoman (2001) (New Editions)