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A selection of Daredevil collected editions. The Marvel Comics character Daredevil first appeared in 1964 in Daredevil #1, written by Stan Lee and drawn by Bill Everett. [1]The character's various appearances have been collated into hundreds of trade paperback, hardcover and omnibus collections.
Daredevil #1/2 (17 page comic published within Wizard #96, Aug. 1999) Daredevil: Ninja #1–3 (Dec. 2000 – May 2001) by Brian Michael Bendis and Rob Haynes; Daredevil: Yellow #1–6 (Aug. 2001 – Jan. 2002) by Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale; Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra #1–4 (October 2002 – February 2003) by Greg Rucka and Salvador Larocca
Daredevil: Born Again, Best Writer/Artist (single or team), Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli – 1987 Kirby Awards; Daredevil: The Man Without Fear, Favorite Limited Comic-Book Series – 1993 Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Award [172] Daredevil by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Alex Maleev, 2003 Eisner Awards (for works published in 2002 ...
In July 2011, Daredevil relaunched with vol. 3, written by Mark Waid. Waid focuses on the character's powers and perception of the physical world. [123] The Waid period also emulates Stan Lee's earlier, more light-hearted tone. [124] Waid won the Eisner Award for Daredevil in 2012. [125] Daredevil vol. 3 ended at issue #36 in February 2014. [126]
"Shadowland" is a 2010 comic book storyline published by Marvel Comics, focusing on Daredevil and other "street-level" superheroes in the Marvel Universe. [ 3 ] [ 20 ] The storyline started in the Daredevil comic and was expanded upon in the Shadowland five-issue mini series as well as four tie-in mini series, four one-shots, and two issues of ...
This original Daredevil was created by Jack Binder for an eight-page backup feature in Lev Gleason Publications' Silver Streak Comics #6 (Sept. 1940). [4] Upon his partial revamping in the issue following his debut, only Hill's identity, spiked belt, and the boomerang remained; the mute angle was dropped without explanation, and his original symmetrically divided bodysuit of pale yellow and ...
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Starting with issue #70 (January 1951), he disappeared completely; the book was still called Daredevil Comics, but only the Little Wise Guys remained. [4] The titular star briefly reappeared in issues #79 and 80, but that was the end of him. Daredevil Comics ended with issue #134 (Sept. 1956), and the Little Wise Guys vanished along with it.