Batman: One Bad Day: The Riddler by written by Tom King and illustrated by Mitch Gerads
The Riddler is a member of Batman's rogues gallery that usually does not get much respect. His M.O. is giving clues to the crime he is about to commit. That turns out to be counterproductive, though it makes for entertaining stories. Who doesn't like a good riddle? In this book, The Riddler has moved on from his usual shtick. He kills a man in broad daylight without any prelude and waits around for the cops to cart him off to Arkham Asylum for the Criminally Insane. He makes repeated efforts to get Batman to visit him, increasing his brutality towards fellow inmates and guards. The contemporary story is intercut with scenes from The Riddler's adolescence at a prep school where he is forced to excel by his father, who happens to be headmaster. His unhappy childhood led to his unhappy livelihood.
This book is inspired by Alan Moore's The Killing Joke, where The Joker creatively and brutally tortures Jim Gordon in an attempt to make him insane. The theory is that "one bad day" can turn any good man to madness or evil. This story seems more like The Riddler had the "one bad day" and has changed from a less-than-serious opponent to a full-blown psychopath who scares everyone on the police force...and maybe even Batman himself. The plot is very grim and has a lot of violence without the levity or cleverness of a typical Riddler story. I can see what the creators were going for but I found it hard to read and hard to enjoy.
Not recommended.
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