Kindle Price: $19.95

Save $10.04 (33%)

These promotions will be applied to this item:

Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.

You've subscribed to ! We will preorder your items within 24 hours of when they become available. When new books are released, we'll charge your default payment method for the lowest price available during the pre-order period.
Update your device or payment method, cancel individual pre-orders or your subscription at
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Buy for others

Give as a gift or purchase for a team or group.
Learn more

Buying and sending eBooks to others

  1. Select quantity
  2. Buy and send eBooks
  3. Recipients can read on any device

These ebooks can only be redeemed by recipients in the US. Redemption links and eBooks cannot be resold.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

Batman: Knightfall Vol. 1 Kindle & comiXology

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,894 ratings

#1 New York Times Bestseller

The villainous Bane breaks the Bat in one of the most popular and well-known Batman tales! The inmates of Arkham Asylum have broken free and Batman must push himself to the limits to re-apprehend the Joker, Poison Ivy, the Riddler, Killer Croc and more. Pushed to the limits, he comes face-to-face against the monstrosity known as Bane, who delivers a crippling blow destined to change the Caped Crusader forever! Collects Batman vol. 1 #491-500, Detective Comics vol. 1 #659-666, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #16-18, stories from Showcase '93 #7-8, and Vengeance of Bane
Read more Read less
  • Due to its large file size, this book may take longer to download
  • Read this book on comiXology. Learn more

Add a debit or credit card to save time when you check out
Convenient and secure with 2 clicks. Add your card
Next 5 for you in this series See full series
Total Price: $75.26
By clicking on the above button, you agree to Amazon's Kindle Store Terms of Use

More like Batman: Knightfall Vol. 1
Loading...

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Dennis O'Neil is the influential writer of comics including Batman, Green Lantern/Green Arrow, The Justice League of America and countless other titles. He is also the author of The DC Comics Guide to Writing for Comics (Watson Guptill).

Known for his fast-paced, action-oriented plotting, Chuck Dixon is the prolific and acclaimed writer of long runs on
Batman, Robin, Nightwing, Birds of Prey, Green Arrow and, for Marvel Comics, The Punisher and Conan.

Doug Moench has written novels, short stories, newspaper feature articles, weekly newspaper comic strips, film screenplays and teleplays. His first published work was
My Dog Sandy, a comic strip printed in his elementary school newspaper. Moench has worked for DC Comics, Marvel Comics, Dark Horse Comics and many other smaller companies; he has written hundreds of issues of many different comics, and created dozens of characters, such as Moon Knight.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B008RNGCAO
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ DC (October 8, 2013)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 8, 2013
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2041541 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Not enabled
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 634 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,894 ratings

About the authors

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
1,894 global ratings
DC Finally Getting Serious About Collecting All of the Knightfall Saga...and it Looks Good so Far.
5 Stars
DC Finally Getting Serious About Collecting All of the Knightfall Saga...and it Looks Good so Far.
When I was 7 years old, Knightfall hit the comic world like a ton of bricks. Being 7 made it where I didn't understand comics all that well, but I was enthralled with the designs of Azrael as Batman and the monstrosity that is Bane. It was enough where my father would allow me to pick up the Knightfall issues every 2 weeks. I didn't pick up the entire Knightfall saga because of the hefty amounts of issues involved, but I have scattered issues to this day on the event. And if you're like me, you definitely have been looking around to one day getting the entire event for yourself in some shape or form, either it be single issues or trade paperback. Thankfully, DC has given fans the opportunity in the past 15 years or so in trade forms. But the thing is: it's never been complete.Batman Knightfall is the first ever Batman event made and DC wanted to make one hell of an impact on that notion. Coming in the middle at the time of the famous Death of Superman story (specifically World Without Superman arc), Knightfall was unleashed to the masses that almost lasted 2 years worth. The event is made up of 3 made sections of the event, with sub-sections. Batman Knightfall the 1st main section, with sub-sections "Broken Bat" and "Who Rules the Night". Batman Knightquest is the 2nd main section, with sub-sections "The Crusade" and "The Search". And finally the last section Knightsend, with the sub-sections "Knightsend Aftermath", "Prodigal", and "Troika". In all 15 years or so, DC has had various reprints of Knightfall and Knightsend, with numerous issues being exempted in-between all the reprints. One of which being the "Prodigal" son trade (which is a small fortune), the "troika" arc, and most famous arc missing every issue: Knightquest. That's about to change.With the up coming The Dark Knight Rises this year, DC is re-releasing material based off of the villain Bane (and to a certain extent, Ra's Al Ghul) for the films marketing. This includes Batman: Birth of the Demon, Batman Versus Bane, and the preempt story Batman: Venom as buildup to the grand story of Knightfall event re-print. BUT...DC looks to have finally gotten the hint from the fans concerning the lack of incomplete issues and demand regarding them over the years. It looks like DC is actually going to release the entire Knightfall event in proper older and affordability. And from what it looks like, DC means business.BATMAN: KNIGHTFALL VOL.1 NEW EDITION collects the entire sections of "Broken Bat" and "Who Rules the Night" arcs:BATMAN: VENGEANCE OF BANE SPECIAL #1BATMAN #491-500DETECTIVE COMICS #659-666SHOWCASE '93 #7 and 8BATMAN: SHADOW OF THE BAT #16-18[Aside from Vengeance of Bane #1, all of the other material comes from Batman: Knightfall, Part One: Broken Bat and Knightfall: Part Two - Who Rules the Night [BATMAN KNIGHTFALL]. Please click on the links for far better and detailed reviews of the content. I will not go as in-depth as the other reviews since they do explain it much more.]Batman Vengeance of Bane #1 shows an entire origin story of the Bane, including growing up at birth in a prison, his ideology, and training Bane endured his whole life to lead him to the beginning of Knightfall. For the longest time, this was a rare and expensive story to get a hold of, but is now included to help setup Bane. This is a phenomenal introduction of Bane and you really believe in his whole being to possibly being Batman's equal.Batman Knightfall deals primarily with the introduction of Bane, a powerful and well-educated man from prison out to take the Batman and take over Gotham. Bane breaks out all of the Arkham inmates, causing chaos among Gotham. Batman gets put to the test of his very being fighting and re-capturing all the inmates, while slowly being worn out for the big fight with Bane. Bane does his famous "back-breaker" and decommissions Bruce Wayne as Batman. This leaves Gotham at the mercy of Bane, in which the possible Bat-replacement Jean-Paul Valley takes over the reigns as the new Batman. He goes on a savage take-back of Gotham his own way, which finally makes it way to the battle of Jean-Paul and Bane.Batman Knightfall is big mainstay in the Batman mythos. We get the obvious introduction of Bane, the first real time Batman physically and mentally gets pushed and broken to the limit, the perils of working alone, and the theme of a Batman that embraces brutality and even possibly murder. And yes, all of this is here in this book (which tells you a lot, considering we still have Vol.2 and Vol.3 coming down the pipeline.) If you're a new reader that's reading Snyder's current run on Batman Vol. 1: The Court of Owls (The New 52), then you have to see the first time Batman really fall hard and have epic scope at the same time. There isn't anymore I could say the other reviews can explain better, so look that up.On the flipside of this book, the book does suffer from typical problems most comic events have: some filler material, possibly being too long, consistent change in writing and drawing, and various information leading up to the event that's not explained well for readers not caught up in the story. Most the problems listed are minor in my opinion and don't really affect the overall saga, but could disrupt some readers. The only thing readers could look into is the Knightfall prelude information. Characters like Jean-Paul having no introduction (checkout Batman: Sword of Azrael (Prelude to Knightfall) for that), Riddler being high on Venom, Black Mask attack to Batman, Bane attacking Jean-Paul, Bane attacking Killer Croc, and Batman being mysteriously exhausted all the time (presumably after the death of Jason Todd with Batman: A Death in the Family) are all information that's not explained at all in this book. It's all information that is explained before Knightfall, and hopefully if the entire 3 volumes of the Knightfall saga sell well and the fans like it...maybe we can ask DC to make a Knightfall Prelude trade collection that includes this information in the future.Art is another big deal that has to be mentioned. If you're not accustomed to the older drawings of 1993, most of the art might seem archaic by today's standards. People who grew up and are more accustomed to this level of art will see no problem in the process, but again...new readers might really be turned off by 19 old art. I still think the art is fabulous for it's time and age, but again, it won't be for everyone.Okay let's talk about this new 2012 edition. The book has colored paper, but the paper is more akin to the older trade paperbacks paper (but I feel the color stands out a bit more), has complete original covers before each issue, and has the original trade paperback covers and fold-out cover of issue #500. That's about it for extras, but it's insignificant to the rest of the trade. What I also have to mention and this applies for the upcoming Vol.2 and 3 editions, is the solicitation regarding the books. All editions have information of what DC has listed for the contents, and the all 3 don't have wrong information...but incomplete information. DC's solicitation of Knightfall has everything listed EXCEPT Detective Comics issues #661-666 and Shadow of the Bat #16 for example. It's collected here, but those that want the complete Knightfall Saga really need to know exactly what each book has and we all want the complete saga. So for Vol.2 and 3, you might want to wait until you get complete confirmation (Youtube, a friend, or go to your comic shop and look at the books description personally)about what each book has before buying. Just to make sure.BATMAN KNIGHTFALL VOL.1 NEW EDITION is great start to what might be the true and complete collection of this sought after saga fans have wanted done right for years. At 600+ pages for the pricing that you can't beat, and combined with all the Batman mythos so strongly here...I gave this a 5 score, which I think outweigh the faults. The thing is most of this collection has been available for some time now in other trades...and the real test of the Knightfall saga will come with Knightquest (Batman: Knightfall, Vol. 2) which will be available for the first time ever in trade form and KnightsEnd (Batman: Knightfall, Vol. 3) which includes the "Prodigal" storyline at an affordable price. Highly recommended for the price and content.
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2024
Loved this story. Told great, and for an older comic still so violent and just visceral. Loved the artwork and again for the old school style even the dialogue wasn't as weak as some of the others of this time. Just filled with ups and downs, seeing batman be broken was just one of the most heartbreaking sequences of panels I've ever seen in comics. It was like seeing you should never see or have felt with batman and it shows how sometimes even the best sometimes meet their match and how will you come back after loosing for the 1st time so to speak. Banes sidekicks are hacky typical looser comic bad guy sidekicks and are wack but still funny to just laugh at. If your a batman fan you should definitely read this for many reasons.
2 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2012
As the new Batman movie rises to fame in the theaters, fans from all over, new and old, are interested in reading, or re-reading, the story that inspired the movie itself. Spanning Batman 491-500 and Detective Comics 659-666, Knightfall follows Batman in his quest to stop Bane, and Batman's subsequent defeat and approval of his replacement. This new version of the Knightfall TPB starts off with the Vengeance of Bane Special #1 in which you learn of Bane's past at the Santa Prisca prison and his hatred for a caped crusader he's never met and the desire to rule a town he's never been to. Fast-forward to Batman #491 and Detective Comics #659 and we bounce around between those two series as Batman and Robin are forced to deal with Bane's prison escape, and Bane's hand at letting everyone in Arkham Asylum out loose in Gotham. As chaos ensues, Batman (already in bad shape , is forced to mop up and take everyone he can in as quickly as possible before the kill count rises any more. However, it all leads to Batman #497 where Bane's evil plan to break the bat comes to its peak. The evil mastermind of crime takes advantage of Batman's sheer lack of strength and energy and uses it to break him and show the people of Gotham that Batman is no more. As Bane finally gets a hold on Batman, Gotham goes into a frenzy as crime shoots through the roof and the police are unable to handle it.

We learn in Showcase '93 #7-8 of Batman's attempt at bringing Harvey Dent back into the Asylum prior to his encounter with Bane, and in Batman: Shadow of the Bat #16-18, we learns of Scarecrow's origins and his grand scheme that puts the new Batman, formerly Azrael, in charge of cleaning up the mess that Bane has created. However, Jean-Paul's Batman doesn't have time for sidekicks and he surely doesn't have time to hold back on the murderers and thugs of Gotham.

One of Batman's greatest stories ever told is reprinted here in a more complete volume that spans over 600 pages! Although you get a whole mess of content to read through, you're still left wondering who in the world this Azrael guy is and why Bruce is messed up already as you're barely into the first issue. Also, you get no introduction to Azrael's partners nor an origin to Bane's venom toxin. However, you do get a lot of content that makes the story fairly easy to follow despite the few missing links. The art's consistently nice aside from perhaps the Two-Face and Scarecrow story arcs. The writing is superb with every page making you want to keep it turning and the eventual breaking of the Batman as powerful an image as ever. This is definitely a story to read even if you just jumped into the New 52 era of Batman. Seeing Jean-Paul become Batman makes you start to hate him as he turns more and more into a villain instead of a Batman-clone. His desire to take over what Bruce has becomes a scary reality to what Tim Drake has to face while Bruce is confined to a wheelchair. However, the entire book really makes you think about what Gotham would be if Batman were to suddenly cease to exist and how easily a maniac like Bane could take over.

The book comes with all the comic covers as well as the Batman #500 variant and the Knightfall TPB covers as well. So, there isn't a whole lot of extras but they're there. Overall, definitely a book to get for a classic story!
6 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2024
Exactly as described. Excellent!!
One person found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2012
The '90's were not kind to comic books. Aside from a few exceptions, that decade was characterized by mediocre storytelling, sensationalized, gimicky, over-the-top plots, and flashy art. In Batman Knightfall, you get two of the three: the writing is okay but not great, and the plot leads up to Batman getting his spine broken by a new and more vicious supervillain. The art is more serviceable than flashy -- mostly handled by the likes of Jim Aparo, Norm Breyfogle, and Graham Nolan, and it all flows very sequentially and creates an easy-to-follow story, but none of the panels really stands out in a way that would make you want to pause and take a second glance. The storyline also has a lot of plot holes. To name a few:
[SPOILER ALERT]
The villain Bane has a very superficial reason for wanting to take over Gotham and hurt Batman, and once Batman's rogues gallery is released from Arkham, they all immediately assemble criminal gangs and begin committing crimes, with no other motivation given except that they're all crazy and that's just what they do. Bane always has a henchman who just happens to know the location where the next villain will strike, so that he's able to relay info on Batman back to villain HQ, and Bane figures out Batman's secret identity just by watching Bruce Wayne from afar and recognizing that he must be Batman.
[END SPOILERS]
If there's a strength to this volume, it's in the incredible length of the storyline, which stretches over a full 24 issues (one of which is a 63-page special), and that just sets up part 2 of the story in Knightquest. A sustained plotline that stretches that long is pretty impressive, even if the motivations of the villains are pretty poorly defined. This is fun, fun, fun to read, and it does cover a pretty pivotal and devastating event in the life of the Dark Knight. Also, even though the interior art is nothing to marvel at, the cover art looks fantastic, and it is all reprinted here as well. Most of the covers are done by Kelly Jones, and they all have an eerie, spooky, stylistic look to them. You also get 2 characteristically weird-looking covers by Sam Kieth, an alternative wraparound cover to Batman 500 by Joe Quesada, and the Mike Deodato covers to the original 2 trade paperbacks that are included in this one single volume, and they all look great.

The 3 storylines that I have always thought best exemplified the depths to which 1990's comics sunk to, were Spider-Man's Clone Saga, the Death of Superman, and Batman Knightfall. But now that I've actually read through it, I have to admit that Knightfall is an enjoyable read, as long as you know what to expect. There are no clever villain schemes or key insights into Batman's character, but you do get a fast-moving and epic-length (600+ pages!) account of one of the most traumatic events in the Batman's crimefighting career. Recommended, because even if you know where the story is going (with Batman breaking his back, renouncing the mantle of the Bat, and eventually taking it back again), the journey there is a good one.
10 people found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
GreyGod
5.0 out of 5 stars Great story
Reviewed in Canada on May 13, 2022
Great art/story about Batman and Bane. Only complaint is the quality of paper used, but it’s not that big of a problem.
Kyriakos
5.0 out of 5 stars Great seller!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 27, 2024
Excellent item!
Mr. Sunil Sheoran
5.0 out of 5 stars Great packing and great story
Reviewed in India on September 9, 2023
The book was packed safely and it's story is awesome
swedishhulk
5.0 out of 5 stars THIS is the Knightfall saga nicely collected and finaly all story pieces are there!
Reviewed in Sweden on February 27, 2023
The Batman Knightfall story arc is my favourite Batman story of all times in so many ways.
I bought the Knightfall trilogy books 10 years ago or more, but always felt it missed a lot...
I was frustrated on not having all the pieces that could tell/explain how things came to be and why (?).

How Bruce Wayne became ill?
How did he became this beat-up and weaked before the ill-fated Arkham break-out?
How Bruce Wayne got to know about Jean-Paul Valley aka Azrael?.
How did the Riddler get the Venom toxin before the breakout?
Why was not all pieces there to tell about Azrael-Batman's Knightquest time?

So when they many years re-published the Knightfall saga and I realized I had only read about the "basic" trilogy...I felt I MUST HAVE THE WHOLE STORY COLLECTED LIKE THIS!
I love Omnibus books and they look so niecly in my book-shelfs and all the stories I grew up with in comic books I so enjoy having them re-printed and collected instead of a ton of loose magazines and puzzle iy up -

(For those who are knew to the Knightfall saga or any other great story arc from DC or Marvel, there was a NO easy way to get all stories in the 90's due to that they spread out the storries in amny variants of comics, 10 variants of Batman, 10 varients of Spider-Man etc-etc it was insane)

So yeah, this was money well worth spent and I'm glad I now have them.
Now I can look for other great Omnibus books that collects stories from the 80's-90's and early 00's I missed out on from Marvel & DC.
Oscar
5.0 out of 5 stars Cómic más completo que los de editorial vid!!!
Reviewed in Mexico on February 3, 2021
Excelente artículo de colección, viene en un solo cómic como se muestra en las imágenes.
Lo mejor de todo es que inicia con el origen de Bane, cómic que no viene incluido en las ediciones mexicanas de editorial vid.
Llegó en excelente estado a pesar de llegar en una bolsa con burbuja.
Si no tienen problemas con el idioma inglés, lo recomiendo ampliamente!
El precio también es una muy buena opción, yo lo conseguí con promoción de libros y me salió en $476! Y con el precio actual, sigue siendo un coleccionable digno de cualquier seguidor de Batman!
Customer image
Oscar
5.0 out of 5 stars Cómic más completo que los de editorial vid!!!
Reviewed in Mexico on February 3, 2021
Excelente artículo de colección, viene en un solo cómic como se muestra en las imágenes.
Lo mejor de todo es que inicia con el origen de Bane, cómic que no viene incluido en las ediciones mexicanas de editorial vid.
Llegó en excelente estado a pesar de llegar en una bolsa con burbuja.
Si no tienen problemas con el idioma inglés, lo recomiendo ampliamente!
El precio también es una muy buena opción, yo lo conseguí con promoción de libros y me salió en $476! Y con el precio actual, sigue siendo un coleccionable digno de cualquier seguidor de Batman!
Images in this review
Customer image Customer image Customer image Customer image
Customer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer image
One person found this helpful
Report
Report an issue

Does this item contain inappropriate content?
Do you believe that this item violates a copyright?
Does this item contain quality or formatting issues?