#23 (1993) John Ostrander Writer
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keycomicbooks · 6 months ago
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Magnus Robot Fighter #23 (1993) John Ostrander Writer, James Brock Artist
#MagnusRobotFighter #23 (1993) #JohnOstrander Writer,  #JamesBrock Artist The attack on Earth continues as Magnus races back to Earth and is unaware that a Malev is a hidden stowaway on board his ship and Leeja discovers that she has abilities which enable her to strike back against the Malev robots in “Holocaust 4002 Part Three – The Fall of the Milespires.” SAVE ON SHIPPING COST - NOW AVAILABLE FOR LOCAL PICK UP IN DELTONA, FLORIDA https://www.rarecomicbooks.fashionablewebs.com/Magnus%20Robot%20Fighter%201992.html#23  #ValiantComics #KeyComicBooks #RareComicBooks #VintageComicBooks
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katekaned · 5 years ago
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Barbara Gordon made her DC comics debut in 1967 in Detective Comics #359, “The Million Dollar Debut of Batgirl.” Initially introduced to the comics as a way to test fan reception to the idea of a new “Batgirl” appearing in the 1960s ABC Batman show, Barbara would outlast her television counterpart and go on to become a vital part of the DC universe and a fan favorite character. 
Under the cut is a summary of Barbara Gordon’s comic history pre-New 52 and an extensive list of comics in which she appears as the information jockey and wheelchair-using superhero, Oracle.
Basic Reading
Batman Chronicles #5 (1996)
Black Canary/Oracle: Birds of Prey (1996)
Birds of Prey (1999)
Batgirl (2000)
Batgirl (2009)
Birds of Prey (2010)
Pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths, Barbara was the daughter of Gotham Police Commissioner James Gordon and the head librarian at the Gotham City Public Library. Barbara takes on a second job as Batgirl after fighting Killer Moth while dressed up in a Batman-inspired costume for a masquerade ball. Although Batman is resistant to the idea of a girl helping him fight crime, he is unable to prevent Babs from assisting him and Robin in protecting Gotham. She also develops a close friendship and working relationship with Supergirl. During the 1970s, Barbara Gordon became a Congresswoman and continued to operate as Batgirl in Washington, D.C. After failing to be reelected, Babs returned to Gotham, where she worked as Batgirl up until the Crisis.
Post-Crisis on Infinite Earths, Barbara’s continuity underwent extensive reconstruction. No longer Jim Gordon’s daughter, she was his niece until her parents died while she was a teenager and her uncle brought her to Gotham and adopted her. A talented athlete and genius with a photographic memory, Babs longed to join the GCPD, but Jim did not like the idea of her having such a dangerous career. Eventually, Babs found her own way to help in joining Batman and Robin in fighting crime as Batgirl. In Batgirl Special (1988), Barbara retired from being Batgirl and resumed her civilian life. Later that year, the infamous graphic novel, The Killing Joke, was published. In Alan Moore’s story, Barbara Gordon was shot and assaulted by the Joker, in an attempt to drive her father insane. As a result of her gunshot wound, Babs was paralyzed from the waist-down and began using a wheelchair to get around. Although she served as little more than a plot device, the repercussions of what happened to her in The Killing Joke would reshape much of the DC Universe. 
Here’s where Oracle enters. Although DC editorial, by and large, had no further plans for Barbara Gordon’s character post-Killing Joke, writers Kim Yale and John Ostrander sought to create a place in comics for a superhero in a wheelchair who had no special powers of her own. Thus, Oracle was created as Barbara Gordon’s hacker and information specialist superhero persona. Oracle would first appear in Ostrander’s run on Suicide Squad before slowly reappearing as a Batman supporting character in the 1990s. In 1996, Chuck Dixon wrote the one-shot Black Canary/Oracle: Birds of Prey, which eventually spun off into its own popular and much beloved series in 1999. Oracle remained an integral part of DC canon, training two new Batgirls, working with Batman, the Birds of Prey and even the Justice League, until the New 52 reboot in 2011, when DC decided to return Babs to her status as Batgirl. The editorial decision to have Barbara undergo surgery to rid her of her paralysis has undergone major scrutiny and been heavily maligned by disability advocates, however, Babs is no closer to returning to her role as Oracle or her wheelchair.
Below is a (mostly) chronological list of Oracle’s most prominent appearances in DC comics! (My personal favorites will be bolded.)
[As a note - many of Oracle’s early appearances have her hiding behind a computer/in a cameo role, as her identity was not yet revealed to comic readers. I am including these early appearances in my list to show people how the mystery unfolded, but if you want to skip they will be marked with an asterisk!]
Oracle Appears
Batman Chronicles #5: Oracle -- Year One: Born of Hope (1996) [Not Oracle’s first appearance historically, but the story of how she came to be and essential to her character.]
Suicide Squad #23 [1st appearance!] - #24, #26 (1989)*
Manhunter #13 (1989)*
Suicide Squad #32, #38 (1989-1990)*
Firestorm: The Nuclear Man #98 (1990)*
Batman #451 (1990)
Suicide Squad #48-#49 (1990-1991)
Suicide Squad #51 (1991)
Hawk and Dove #22-24 (1991)
Suicide Squad #54-#57, #59, #61, #63-#65 (1991-1992)
Hacker Files #5-#6 (1992-1993)
Oracle Joins the Bat-Family / Meets Black Canary
Showcase '94 #12: "A Little Knowledge" (1994)
Batman #520 (1995)
Nightwing #2 (1995) [A cameo appearance but the beginning of Dick and Babs’ complicated and lengthy post-crisis history]
Underworld Unleashed: Patterns of Fear #1 (1995)
Black Canary/Oracle: Birds of Prey #1 (1996)
Showcase '96 #3: "Birds of a Feather" (1996)
Detective Comics #695 - #696 (1996)
Robin #30, #33 (1996)
Birds of Prey: Manhunt #1- #4 (1996)
Green Arrow #115 - #117 (1996 - 1997)
Birds of Prey: Revolution #1 (1997)
Nightwing #7 (1996)
Nightwing Annual #1 (1997)
Birds of Prey: Wolves #1 (1997)
Detective Comics #706 - #707 (1997)
Nightwing #½ (1997)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #32, #35 - #37 (1997)
Batman #547 (1997)
DC Universe Holiday Bash #2: "The Old Lane" (1997)
Nightwing/Huntress #3 (1998)
Nightwing #16, #18
Birds of Prey: Batgirl #1 (1998)
Cataclysm
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #73 (1998)
Batman #553 (1998)
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #74 (1998)
Nightwing #20 (1998)
Detective Comics #721 (1998)
Robin #53 (1998)
Nightwing #24 (1998)
Oracle Joins the Justice League 
JLA #17 - #19 (1998)
JLA: Secret Files & Origins #2 (1998)
DC One Million #1 - #2 (1998)
JLA #1,000,000 (1998)
DC One Million #3 - #4 (1998)
JLA/Titans #1 - #3 (1998)
JLA #36 - #41 (1999 - 2000)
JLA: Secret Files & Origins #3 (2000)
Road to No Man’s Land
Robin #55 (1998)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #47 (1998)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #49 (1999)
Detective Comics #727 (1998)
Batman #562 (1999)
Robin #58 (1998)
Batman Chronicles #15: "Between Stars Above and Below" (1999)
Birds of Prey #1- #14 (1999 - 2000)
No Man’s Land
Batman: No Man's Land #1 (1999)
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #83 (1999)
Batman #563 (1999)
Detective Comics #730 (1999)
Batman #565 (1999)
Detective Comics #732 (1999)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #54 - #55 (1999)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #119 (1999)
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #87 (1999)
Batman #567 (1999) [Introduces Cassandra Cain, the second Batgirl and Oracle’s first protege.]
Detective Comics #734 (1999)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #120 (1999)
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #88 (1999)
Detective Comics #735 (1999)
Batman #569 (1999)
Batman: Day of Judgment (1999)
Nightwing #35, #37 - #39 (1999)
Robin #71 (1999)
Batman #573 (2000)
Detective Comics #740 (2000)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #60 - #61 (2000)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #126 (2000)
Detective Comics #741 (2000)
Birds of Prey #15 - #19 (2000)
Batgirl #1 - #5 (2000)
Batman: Gotham City Secret Files & Origins (2000)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #64 - #65 (2000)
Batman: Gotham Knights #6 (2000)
Nightwing #44 (2000)
The Hunt for Oracle
Nightwing #45 (2000)
Birds of Prey #20 (2000)
Nightwing #46 (2000)
Birds of Prey #21 (2000)
Nightwing 80-Page Giant #1 (2000)
Birds of Prey #22 - #26 (2000 - 2001)
Batgirl #7, #9 - #10 (2000 - 2001)
Batman: Gotham Knights #12 (2001)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #72 - #74 (2001)
Officer Down
Robin #86 (2001)
Birds of Prey #27 (2001)
Catwoman #90 (2001)
Nightwing #53 (2001)
Detective Comics #754 (2001)
Birds of Prey #28 - #35 (2001)
Batgirl #14 (2001)
Batman #590 (2001)
Harley Quinn #6 - #7 (2001)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #80 - #82 (2001)
Batgirl #17 (2001)
Nightwing #55 - #58 (2001)
Harley Quinn #11 (2001)
Nightwing: Our Worlds at War #1 (2001)
Joker: Last Laugh
Joker: Last Laugh Secret Files #1 (2001)
Birds of Prey #36 (2001)
Batgirl #21 (2001)
Joker: Last Laugh #3 (2001)
Joker: Last Laugh #5 (2001)
Robin #95 (2001)
Joker: Last Laugh #6 (2002)
Nightwing #63 (2002)
Birds of Prey #37 - #38 (2002)
Robin #96 - #97 (2002)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #84 (2002)
Batgirl #22 - #23 (2002)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #88 - #90 (2002)
Batgirl: Secret Files & Origins (2002)
Bruce Wayne: Murderer? / Fugitive
Batgirl #24 (2002)
Nightwing #65 (2002)
Batman: Gotham Knights #25 (2002)
Birds of Prey #39 (2002)
Nightwing #66 (2002)
Batman: Gotham Knights #26 (2002)
Robin #99 (2002)
Birds of Prey #40 (2002)
Batman #600 (2002)
Batgirl #27 (2002)
Birds of Prey #43 (2002)
Batgirl #29 (2002)
Batman: Gotham Knights #30 (2002)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #91 (2002)
Batman #605 (2002)
Batgirl #25 - #26 (2002)
Azrael: Agent of the Bat #93 - #95 (2002)
Batgirl #30 (2002)
Birds of Prey #44 - #48 (2002)
Nightwing #71 - #73 (2002)
Batgirl #33 (2002)
Nightwing #75 (2003)
Batman: Family #3, #6, #8 (2003)
Birds of Prey #49 - #53 (2003)
Batgirl #35 - #37 (2003)
Nightwing #77 - #79 (2003)
Birds of Prey: Catwoman/Oracle (2003)
Batgirl #39 - #42 (2003)
Birds of Prey #54 - #55 (2003)
Nightwing #81 (2003)
Detective Comics #790 (2004)
Nightwing #83 - #89 (2003 - 2004)
Batgirl #45 - #54 (2003 - 2004)
Birds of Prey #56 - #74 (2002-2004) [Gail Simone’s iconic run on Birds of Prey begins with issue 56 and goes until 108. This is an absolute must-read for any Oracle/Barbara Gordon fan]
Birds of Prey: Secret Files & Origins (2003)
War Games
Detective Comics #797 (2004)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #182 (2004)
Nightwing #96 (2004)
Batgirl #55 (2004)
Batman #631 (2004)
Detective Comics #798 (2004)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #183 (2004)
Nightwing #97 (2004)
Batman: Gotham Knights #57 (2004)
Catwoman #35 (2004)
Batman #632 (2004)
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #184 (2004)
Nightwing #98 (2004)
Robin #131 (2004)
Batman: Gotham Knights #58 (2004)
Batgirl #57 (2004)
Catwoman #36 (2004)
Batman #633 (2004)
Birds of Prey #75 - #90 (2004 - 2006)
Batgirl #67 (2005)
Nightwing #117 (2006)
Villains United: Infinite Crisis Special #1 (2006)
Robin #148 (2006)
Birds of Prey #92 - #95 (2006)
52 #34 (2007)
Nightwing Annual #2 (2007) [Although this issue is all about Dick and Barbara’s relationship, I would not recommend reading it as it treats both Barbara and Dick’s ex Starfire/Koriand’r incredibly poorly.]
Hawkgirl #64 (2007)
Birds of Prey #96 - #108 (2007)
Black Canary Wedding Planner (2007)
Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special (2007)
Birds of Prey #109 - #123 (2007 - 2008)
Batgirl #2 - #3, #5 - #6 (2008)
Nightwing #150, #153 (2009)
Green Arrow and Black Canary #16 (2009)
Birds of Prey #124 - #127 (2009)
Oracle: The Cure #1 - #3 (2009)
Adventure Comics #516 - #518 (2010) [Appears in the backup feature “The Atom”]
Batgirl #1 - #12 (2009 - 2010)
Detective Comics #862 (2010) [Oracle appears in backup feature “The Question”]
Bruce Wayne: The Road Home: Batgirl (2010)
Bruce Wayne: The Road Home: Oracle (2010)
Birds of Prey #1 - #7 (2010 - 2011)
Batgirl #15 - #16 (2011)
Birds of Prey #8 - #10 (2011)
Batgirl #19 - #21 (2011)
Birds of Prey #11 - #13 (2011)
Batman Incorporated #8 (2011)
Detective Comics #872 - #873 (2011)
Detective Comics #879 - #881 (2011)
Batgirl #24 (2011)
Birds of Prey #14 - #15 (2011)
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