by AcidDragon » Mon Nov 11, 2013 3:48 am
Hey Gianni,
First- Welcome to the forums!
Ah Golden Age, it's certainly a bit difficult to read the material sometimes when you compare it to a lot of the more modern works. Golden Age has it's charm but it's certainly not for everyone. There are certain comics that I would suggest reading although you may find them equally difficult to get through as some of it is comparable to Golden Age material but I would still consider important milestones in Batman's history. First, I'd really recommend reading Superman #76. That's the first time Superman and Batman formed a team together. It's not the most exciting comic but it's historically important.
Then there's Detective Comics #327 which is a soft reboot for Batman. They brought in Carmine Infantino to do the art and the stories were decent for their time. You can read on until about the '66 issues. You can pretty much skip everything in-between unless you want the campy Adam West stuff. From this point, you'll want to go with Detective Comics #395 which features amazing artwork by Neal Adams. You can pretty much read anything from that point onward and get some degree of satisfaction from it. I still find those issues highly readable and worth owning for the artwork alone. Especially with the cheap-o "Millennium Edition" reprints they have at LCSes for a buck or less.
Not sure if you like the Teen Titans but if you do, I highly recommend reading Marv Wolfman's 1980s run of the New Teen Titans side by side with the Batman/Detective Comics issues that ran at the same time.
"Finally got all the way through that 'Death of Superman' video game...as Steel. Play Superboy and you're history by level three, right? But Steel..." - Kon-El AKA Superboy