A quick bit of housekeeping. The collection listed here is an odd one. It collects Batman: Gotham Knights #50–55 & #66. This is not, as you might assume, a complete arc plus a later related issue. Rather, issue #50 (I believe Hush's first appearance since the famous and incredibly overrated story arc Batman: Hush ended less than 6 months earlier) reintroduces Hush as new lead villain of Gotham Knights, which continues for much of the next 2 years of this title. So, this collection gives you the first run of issues featuring Hush (his first arc in this series, let's say), and then a random, tenuously connected issue from later on in the series. That issue does not clearly follow from the earlier ones, nor does it wrap anything from the previous issues up. So, in search of something like closure, I read basically all of those 2 years of Gotham Knights (minus a few months where it was part of the War Games crossover event, which apparently features Hush but was not following the ongoing Gotham Knights storyline). The irony being that, as it turns out, Gotham Knights was cancelled after issue #74, leaving its 2 year Hush storyline unresolved.
Still with me? I wouldn't blame you if you weren't. Anyways, this is a pretty bad comic book. Hush, in his famous storyline, was a terrible villain with a backstory and motivation so stupid that you almost feel embarrassed for all of the professionals who had to put their name on the comic, but his characterization was thin enough that a new writer could really mold him into whatever they wanted. How they blow it so bad, I don't understand. His whole deal was that he was some sort of mastermind who is obsessed with getting revenge on Bruce Wayne, but here experiences some serious mission drift by deciding that he wants to become a major crime boss in Gotham, and spends the series doing things like feuding with the Joker, becoming BFFs with Poison Ivy, and trying to turn himself into a new Clayface for some reason. He also has a whole scheme (that doesn't work) to convince Bruce that he's not actually Bruce's childhood friend Tommy even though the entire climax of Batman: Hush was him revealing who he is and what his motivations were in excruciating detail.
I suspect there were editorial problems during this run, because plot threads are introduced, dropped and picked back up again with wild abandon, to the point of near incoherence. There's other weird shit. The Joker stuff ties directly into his backstory from The Killing Joke, to the degree that this is partially a sequel, but with prominent retcons, and then the whole thing is forgotten. Hush teams up with Prometheus, who is suddenly very bad at his job, and there's an issue that is mostly devoted to telling Prometheus's backstory WHICH HAS ALREADY BEEN TOLD IDENTICALLY AND AT GREAT LENGTH IN PROMETHEUS: NEW YEAR'S EVIL but hey instead of just putting in an editor's note why not just re-tell the plot of a 7-year-old comic scene for scene in the panels of an unrelated comic, BUT WAIT because immediately after that an editor's note does helpfully tell us that Prometheus's story will continue in a different series, and he doesn't show up in Gotham Knights again. (Additionally, the internet tells me that the Prometheus in this series is later retconned to not be the real Prometheus but rather a protégé of his, which makes sense because this version of the character sucks, but also makes his recitation of his backstory even more pointless since it's not actually his backstory).
Anyways, I'm getting angry about the continuity in a forgotten and relatively short-lived Batman title, which means that I've reached phase 3 of my Batman project and am officially an insufferable Batman nerd.
D