Skip to Content

Free pickup-point delivery available — Tracked home delivery

Tom King
Writers

Tom King

King writes superheroes as damaged people trapped in patterns: war, marriage, duty, depression, performance and escape. His Batman is romantic and fractured, while Mister Miracle and wider DC work use repetition and formal control to make trauma visible.

Filters

Grayson: The Superspy Omnibus

Dick Grayson, presumed dead after Forever Evil, becomes a secret agent working for Spyral — a shadowy intelligence organisation targeting superheroes. Tom King and Tim Seeley write Grayson with the wit and physical grace that defines the character, while Mikel Janín provides some of the most visually inventive pages in DC publishing of the era. A complete genre switch for a character who had always been a superhero, proving that Dick Grayson works in any narrative One of DC's most creative series of the 2010s.
73.90 € 100.00 € -26%

Batman by Tom King Omnibus Vol. 2

Batman by Tom King Omnibus Vol. 2 carries the run through collapse, aftermath and emotional reckoning, with Bruce Wayne forced to confront love, fear and the idea that Batman may not be enough to protect him from himself. Tom King treats the symbol like a wound that keeps reopening. For Batman readers, the value is the tension between casework and psychology: Gotham is not only a backdrop, but a pressure system that keeps exposing what Bruce can and cannot control.
94.90 € 125.00 € -24%

Batman by Tom King Omnibus Vol. 1

Batman by Tom King Omnibus Vol. 1 begins a psychological Batman run where romance, trauma, war stories and impossible heroism all press against Bruce Wayne at once. The book is less interested in Batman as a flawless machine than in the cost of asking one damaged man to become a symbol forever. For Batman readers, the value is the tension between casework and psychology: Gotham is not only a backdrop, but a pressure system that keeps exposing what Bruce can and cannot control.
94.90 € 125.00 € -24%

King omnibus editions are important for readers who want modern DC where emotional structure matters as much as plot.

Contact us