Once again, I find myself not actively hating Tony Daniel's Detective Comics unlike quite a lot of the reviews I've seen. And once again, like volume 1, this is solid, if unspectacular - at least for the most part.
Issue 8 is a done-in-one Scarecrow tale which is decent enough, and picks up on that Eli Strange story from back in volume 1 that I thought wouldn't be revisited, so kudos to Daniel for surprising me. Issue 9 is the Court of Owls crossover issue, and whilst it's a basic 'Talon-Attacks-Important-Person' story like most of them, it does set up the events of the Annual, which we'll get to in a sec.
Issues 10-12 are a three part story that not only revists Hugh Marder and Charlotte Rivers (even if it's just to shuffle Charlotte off out of the way), two characters I again thought Daniel would forget about, but instead draws into a head-scratching mystery. It's not completely satisfying, but it's decent enough.
Next comes the Annual, which is a mess. It's 40 pages of Black Mask, who is now oddly hypnotic, and the Mad Hatter trying to kill each other, and Batman getting in the way. Add in some basic art from Romeno Molenaar and Pere Perez (who I thought was much better than this) and this is a waste of space.
A #0 issue comes next, which details Bruce's training in Tibet. It's mostly predictable, to be honest, but it's not actively insulting or anything. That's saved for the next bit of the trade.
The back-up stories that were featured in issues 8-12 and #0 are also collected here, and that's where things start to go a bit wrong. The opening story seems to be from the #0 issue, showing Bruce come back from all his training, and this is okay. There's also a prelude to Death of the Family at the end, which is chilling indeed. But the middle ones are all about Two Face, as he...I'm really not sure. Goes undercover in a cult? Gets mixed up in some weird stuff with the District Attorney? It's really unclear. The story goes nowhere, and it's all a bit rubbish really.
Tony Daniel's Detective Comics (bar the back-ups) is a book I'd recommend to new comic readers, who haven't touched anything before. It's not too difficult to get into, it doesn't offer up anything particularly complicated to understand, but it'll whet the appetite and cue you up for enjoying much better books out there.