A very average Detective Comics collection with no particular standouts if not for the popularity of Anarky, since this is his first appearance. But… it's Batman. So thoroughly enjoyable!
Tulpa is the first story and probably the worst in the collection, though it's by no means bad. I was enjoying it when Jason Blood/Etrigan entered the picture, but before that it seemed like every other Grant/Breyfogle tec issue without the creativity. 3.5 stars because of Etrigan.
Next is Blood Secrets, an unexpected Mark Waid annual about the KKK. Reading this concurrently with the release of the Batman: Caped Crusader show (with the 40’s setting I expected bigotry but it's surprisingly clean) has me wondering why a city as corrupt as Gotham doesn't have writers touching on racial tension more frequently. Not complaining, though. The story is good. Another story of Bruce Wayne traveling before he was Batman. 3.5 stars, maybe 4?
The Mud Pack is a decently sized 4-issue story of every (living) Clayface coming together to scheeeeme. I didn't find it overlong and breezed through it with enjoyment. It made the amount of Clayfaces a lot easier to visualize because I knew there were several but had no clue there were 4 or what their names were. In fact, I also thought Crisis retconned Basil Karlo out of existence. It's nice to see he's still around in post-crisis continuity. This one has an unexpectedly wholesome ending, too! 4 stars.
And then - Anarky! The most enjoyable out of every story in this collection, to me, and I'm glad to finally get to know this character after hearing a lot of discussion about him, but I fail to really understand why Batman can't tolerate his methods. Maybe I'm equating an edgier take on Batman that I've seen with Alan Grant's possibly more peaceful Batman, but he's surely reached Anarky's level of violence before. Although, that's generally a means to get a criminal into police custody, whereas Anarky's is simply an assault. So maybe that's the difference? Either way, good stuff. Another 4 star.
To finish things off, we have Snow and Ice, AKA the death of The Penguin! I wonder if anyone will ever bring back Kadaver, because after 3 or so stories, Alan Grant kind of forgot about him and nobody's attempted to follow up on it. At least I will soon be able to easily say I've read every appearance of Kadaver. I've had the first issue of this story framed on my wall for a while (bought solely as decoration when I realized I could frame comics for my wall) but didn't actually read it because I knew I'd get to it either way and didn't want to spoil any context for myself. I don't normally love Penguin stories but he's good in this. Maybe I'm warming up? 4 stars once again.
And from here on out it's all Batman stories with Tim in them! Cheers!