The Further Adventures of Li’l Bruce Wayne

From Wikipedia:

Often disregarded as part of any continuity, Li’l Bruce Wayne was a long-running series of light-hearted comic books aimed at children, detailing the life of a young, fantastically wealthy Bruce Wayne (known in the series as “The Happiest Kid On Earth”) in the years before the deaths of Thomas and Martha Wayne and his subsequent transformation into Batman

The series was originally created by Bill Finger and Jerry Robinson to fill a gap in DC’s publishing schedule after the cancellation of More Fun Comics in 1946, and ran through the majority of the Silver Age despite being regarded by editors and fans alike as being “extremely depressing” [citation needed] and is usually left out of any discussion of the character. It is notable, however, as being the first published comic book work of writer/artist Frank Miller.

 

 

 

 

Truly, a forgotten treasure.

41 comments

  1. Kevin Church says:

    I’d like to point out that Miller has frequently refuted the claims that this is his first published work, stating that his very early stint with Dell’s Twilight Zone comic served as a debut, but the fact is that “Miller Franklin”’s art carried many elements that we’d later associate with the Sin City creator, including “cinematic” on-page presentations, heavy use of shadow and light, and facial expressions that leaned toward the grotesque.

  2. Dave says:

    By the third one, I was laughing uncontrollably. Li’l Bruce Wayne is quite possibly the greatest fake comicbook I’ve ever heard of.

  3. Did you actually create a wikipedia page?

  4. Never mind, I see you just linked to actual pages in your fake one. Pity, I wonder how long a Lil Bruce Wayne page would stay up…

  5. Bapho says:

    The last issue is outstanding :bow:

  6. Kara Z L says:

    In 2007, Grant Morrison announced that the Li’l Bruce Wayne adventures would be reincorporated into the Batman mythos during his tenure on the Batman monthly. Elements of the Li’l Bruce Wayne storyline had previously been introduced piecemeal by other writers, most notably by writer Jeph Loeb in his collaboration with artist Jim Lee in 2002’s Hush arc, where Li’l Bruce’s pal Tommy, a precocious, soft spoken and kind hearted boy, was re-introduced as an adult as a bandage wrapped, psychotic supervillain with a propensity for quoting Aristotle.

  7. Wulfo says:

    Just to tell you, I love these.

  8. Radical Dreamer says:

    That might be the single greatest/most horrible think you’ve ever done…

    …next time you get sick, just post one of these and I’ll be happy for a week.

  9. oh lord, that’s morbidly entertaining…

  10. TheImpossibleMan says:

    Best slash worst slash best again thing ever on this site.

  11. Sallyp says:

    This…THIS is literature!

  12. Didn’t it get retconned that Lil’ Bruce Wayne was really going to see Bambi?

  13. bookrats says:

    My God — the theater usher is Jim Shooter!

    That explains everything!

  14. Morgan says:

    Either Li’l Bruce Wayne is not so little, or he has just subdued himself a pygmy bank robber.

  15. Sleestak says:

    No Go-Go checks?

  16. Trevor says:

    This is trage-larious!

  17. Derek says:

    I loved the Corrigan, the Friendliest Spectre issues.

  18. Julio Dvulture says:

    We should lobby for Chris’ Invincible Super Wiki. Can you imagine other articles about the forgotten, the damned, the shamed of comics? What about a Kick to face article detailing its long tradition and significance? A Cheer-exploitation category?

  19. Tim C says:

    The little touches are what puts it over the top. The backwards-numbering of the series to end on #1, the fact that the final issue isn’t Code-Approved…that’s what separates a merely hilarious joke from an extremely hilarious sign that something’s seriously deeply wrong with you Chris. Seek help, you hilarious mofo.

  20. Tim C says:

    Whoops, my mistake. Didn’t see the Code seal on the last one. Maybe you’re just hilarious after all, sir.

  21. JimShelley says:

    Absolutely Brilliant!

  22. FreakOn says:

    SOOOOOO much awesome.

  23. bookrats says:

    Remember the Marvel rip-off of this series, Plucky Matt Murdock?

    I think it was the last book Harold Gray wrote before hippies made his head explode.

  24. Man, this is brilliant. I totally bought it outright. This is as good as MGK’s ‘plagiarized’ riff the other week. I just love that last cover, too.

    Well done indeed.

  25. Vermic says:

    Oh please, please tell me the next installment will focus on the young Gol-Darn Batman’s best friend, Jackie Joker.

    Please.

  26. artie simek says:

    I understand in Li’l Infinite Crisis, the mugger is Jean Loring.

  27. Oooo. That last cover is heart-breakingly cold.

    Love it, though

  28. John Platt says:

    Great googly moogly! Outstanding!

  29. Torsten Adair says:

    The spinoff titles featuring Alfred, Ace, coniving Selina, etc. are very hard to find, as most ran for less than 12 issues over the years. Some fans argue that Li’l Brucie’s ghost was Jasper The Smiling Spirit, but DC officially denies this.
    One of the first comicbook theme park rides was based on this comic, located in the Bronx at what is now Coop City. Ads can be found in the comics. More bizarre are the photos of a Brucie mascot appearing at various Junior Achievement events.

  30. Looking at these again, I see that the issue numbers are actually going BACKWARDS. Oh Countdown was there nothing you didn’t steal from DC’s “Li’l” line?

  31. Yining says:

    That hair colour really suits him better.

  32. Blah! says:

    Since the nice details were brought up, you might want to change the “R” on the gun case to a “W.”

  33. Roger Davis says:

    You are a wrong man, Chris.

  34. Jon says:

    I am convinced that this is the Greatest Thing To Happen. Ever.

  35. John says:

    My brother would like to know if you have any covers from the companion series, Spectre the Friendly Ghost.

  36. The Game says:

    Clearly, the theater usher’s BRUCE CAMPBELL! or LUPIN.

  37. Don says:

    I used to love these comics as a kid, but I never – duh! – made the connection until I saw this post!

    I stopped reading it before the last issue, so I found #1 on BitTorrent, and it is awesomely disturbing, but it’s a perfect ending to LBW’s childhood adventures.

    I don’t know who the artist is, but the six-and-a-third-page fold-out center spread of L’il Brucie’s parents dying, with the whole cast of characters gathered around them (even L’il Jonn Jonzz!) is so perfect, I printed it out poster-size and hung it in my studio.

    I’d forgotten how many great supporting players this cast had, and how few of them made it into the “adult” comics. Let’s lobby DiDio to bring L’i Brucie’s robot maid into the post-Final Crisis DCU!

  38. George says:

    There are not words for how wrong this is. I am in awe. WIN!

  39. Brian says:

    This just made me laugh for five minutes. Thank you sir.

  40. I am very happy that I found this site.

  41. Martin says:

    This is…the greatest thing on the internet. The Final Issue had me laughing uncontrollably.

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