This is a great collection to read, for the historical perspective, if nothing else. The hardcover collection reprints the first four issues of Batman from 1940-41 (not the first Batman stories, as those appeared in Detective Comics a couple of years previous, and have been reprinted elsewhere). Here we get the first (and 2nd, 3rd, & 4th) appearance of the Joker and the first (and 2nd & 3rd) appearance of Catwoman. In addition, Batman spends a lot of time fighting mobsters and gangsters, as well as a few weird stories ("The Case of the Missing Link" from issue #2 was particularly strange). One of the things I noticed about it was the occasional poor placement of the word balloons and (especially) captions, which made it difficult to follow the order in which they were to be read. Probably the biggest differences between these stories and modern comics comes in the art. I was surprised by how good and detailed the art actually was, and also the predominance of full figure action shots. Today we'd see lots more close-ups, but in these stories we see lots of long distance shots of complete figures. I'm not sure what that means, but it was the most obvious thing about the art. There are four stories per issue (16 in all) and they all wind up in the 13-page format. This is not the grim, dark knight version of the Batman (despite the title) that has been prevalent since the '80s. This Batman is a wise-cracker on a par with his partner Robin, who appears in (almost) every story here. These aren't earth-shattering stories, but historically fascinating.