DC Ink & DC Zoom: Our Most Comprehensive Look Yet
DC Comics is Slowly Fleshing Out Details on its Young Adult & Middle Grade Imprints
Main Art by Chris Wildgoose
DC Comics made major waves last year when it announced DC Ink and DC Zoom, in-house imprints focused on Young Adult and Middle Grade graphic novels, respectively. While there were flashy names from both the comics and prose publishing world used to break the news, titles like Danielle Paige’s Mera: Tidebreaker and Gene Luen Yang’s Superman Smashes the Klan were initially hyped without attached artists, leading to an incomplete picture of what DC Ink and DC Zoom will (quite literally) look like. Now, following a morning announcement out of San Diego’s Comic-Con International, we have our most comprehensive look yet at what to expect from DC’s YA and Middle Grade offerings.
First up, a fleet of brand-new DC Ink YA announcements: Marieke Nijkamp (This Is Where It Ends) will take on a teenage Oracle, the superhero alter-ego that Barbara Gordon assumes after an encounter with The Joker confines her to a wheelchair, in Oracle Rising. Another teenage Batgirl, Cassandra Cain, gets the spotlight in Shadow of the Batgirl, written by Heroine Complex writer Sarah Kuhn. Notably, neither of these characters currently use these alter egos in the mainstream DC Comics universe. Bruce Wayne isn’t left out of the fun, either: as seen below in the first look at the cover, Chris Wildgoose will draw Stuart Moore’s adaptation of Marie Lu’s Batman: Nightwalker novel.
Batman: Nightwalker Cover Art by Chris Wildgoose
Additional DC Ink titles announced today include the Aqualad-focused Truth or Consequences: A Jack Hyde Story (working title) by pioneering gay YA author Alex Sanchez (Rainbow Boys); Dick Grayson: Lost Carnival by DC Talent Workshop graduate and novelist Michael Moreci (Black Star Renegades); and an adaptation of Leigh Bardugo’s Wonder Woman: Warbringer YA prose novel, scripted for comics by the legendary Louise Simonson.
DC Zoom, aimed at slightly younger readers, also announced its first Wonder Woman story: Diana, Princess of the Amazons, written by Shannon and Dean Hale, who also writer Marvel’s bestselling The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl prose novels. Shannon Hale is also the Newbery Honor-winning author of the Princess Academy series and the Real Friends graphic novel with artist LeUyen Pham.