Do Rorys Rags Ever Work Again

Ragman
Ragman (DC Comics character).jpg

Artwork for the cover of Ragman: Suit of Souls vol. #one, October, 2010
Art by Jesús Saíz

Publication data
Publisher DC Comics
Outset advent Ragman #1
(Baronial/September 1976)
Created by Robert Kanigher
Joe Kubert
In-story data
Alter ego Rory Regan
Team affiliations Shadowpact
Sentinels of Magic
Outsiders
Justice League Dark
United States Marine Corps
Abilities Enhanced physical attributes
Enchanted costume
Limited flight
Skilled in the use of magic.

Ragman (Rory Regan), nicknamed the "tattered tatterdemalion of justice",[ane] is a superhero actualization in American comic books published by DC Comics. He was originally created by writer Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert in 1976.[1] Originally presented as a man of Irish gaelic descent, the character was revised to accept Jewish heritage (his family unit proper name originally beingness Reganiewicz) and a connection to the Golem of Prague (a effigy of Jewish folklore) in a 1991 mini-series by Keith Giffen, Robert Loren Fleming, Pat Broderick, and Anthony Tollin.[2] The same mini-series established Ragman'due south costume equally a "Suit of Souls", repeatedly cartoon him into disharmonize with mystical threats and granting him the power and skills of the souls it has collected. The adjust sometimes desires to collect new souls, forcing Ragman to exert swell volition if he doesn't wish the suit to do so.

In his original stories, Ragman is a Vietnam veteran who is simultaneously electrocuted alongside his begetter and a group of family friends. While the others die, Rory survives and inexplicably gains their collective skills and strengths. Wearing a costume his father made out of rags, he uses these abilities to protect his neighborhood from criminals. Starting in 1991, Rory Regan's origin and nature were revised, making him a Vietnam veteran of Jewish heritage who inherits the mystical Suit of Souls following his father'southward expiry at the hands of criminals.[3] Worn by many champions over the centuries, each patch of the costume possesses the soul of a decadent person who offers their skills, cognition, protection, and force to Ragman in order to earn redemption and release. The serial Shadowpact said Ragman'south costume was beginning created in 1812 BCE and has taken on unlike forms in different eras, simply this idea has not been recognized in other stories.[4] In 2017, a revised version of Rory Regan was introduced with a new origin, advent, and nature.

Ragman appeared in the fifth and last seasons of the Arrowverse television series Pointer, played by histrion Joe Dinicol.

Publication history [edit]

In June, 1976, DC Comics began publishing the bi-monthly comic book serial Ragman (volume 1). The series began in June, 1976 (cover dated September, 1976) and only lasted v issues earlier ending in April, 1977 (cover dated July, 1977). Ragman was created past author Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert.[v] The title character Rory Regan was presented every bit a vigilante who focused on standard urban law-breaking threats such as gangsters, drug dealers, and thieves. Later criminals cause power lines to fall to the basis, Rory, his father, and some friends of the family unit are simultaneously electrocuted. Rory is the only survivor, gaining the collective abilities and physical traits of the other men. The mini-serial depicted Rory Reagan as a immature human being and former agile member of the US Marine Corps who had served during the Vietnam War. The messages page of Ragman #iii (vol. i) specifically stated the grapheme was intended past Kanigher and Kubert to be of Irish descent.

Later on his mini-series, this incarnation of Ragman did non appear regularly in the DC Comics universe across a modest cameo during the company-broad crossover Crisis on Infinite Earths. This aforementioned crossover resulted in much of DC Comics superhero canon being revised or rebooted. A new incarnation of Ragman with a new origin story was then presented in an 8-consequence mini-series Ragman (vol. 2) which was published from July, 1991 (cover dated Oct, 1991) until March, 1992 (comprehend dated July, 1992). The mini-series was plotted past Keith Giffen, scripted past Robert Loren Fleming, illustrated past Pat Broderick, and colored by Anthony Tollin.[two] The mini-serial reinterpreted Ragman equally a magic-empowered character native to Gotham City who deals not only with urban criminal offense but likewise mystical threats. Rory Regan is however a veteran of the Vietnam State of war, with the story establishing him now equally a divorced man who is "pushing middle age" when he offset dons the costume. The mini-series reveals that Rory'southward father was a Jewish homo born with the name Reganiewicz, which he inverse after immigrating to the Us. The mini-serial established the Ragman costume is a mystical "Suit of Souls" created during the 16th century by the same people who created the Golem of Prague (a figure of Jewish folklore).[ii] [3] After the Golem is accounted dangerous, it is decided a homo champion should be empowered rather than a soulless being made of clay. The mini-series establishes there have been several to carry the drape of Ragman before Rory, including his own father Gerry who attempted to protect Jews from Nazis during World War Ii. Now inheriting the costume and function, Rory Regan is depicted as a hero who struggles to command the Suit of Souls and non give into his ain acrimony or feelings of vengeance when facing criminals. The mini-series includes a cameo by Batman and ends with Rory leaving Gotham City in order to relocate to New Orleans.

A year later, Ragman appeared again in the 6-issue mini-series Ragman: Cry of the Dead, published from May to November of 1993. The story takes place in New Orleans and involves Voodoo magical practices and beliefs. The story also details more of Rory's romantic past concerning a lost love and his afterward marriage and divorce involving another woman.[6]

Ragman appeared again in a two-part story published in Batman (vol.1) #551 and 552, published in December, 1997, and Jan, 1998, respectively (though the issues are embrace dated equally February, 1998, and March, 1998). The story depicts Rory returning to Gotham City from New Orleans, simply to then lose control of his Suit of Soul as it hunts down evil men to kill and absorb. After seeking assist from Batman and a rabbit, the story ends with Rory regaining control of his arrange.[7]

In 1999, Ragman plays a role in the Day of Judgment mini-serial, acting every bit a defender for Earth against a demon invasion. At the conclusion of the Twenty-four hours of Judgment mini-series, he joins a loose organisation of mystically-empowered heroes known as the Sentinels of Magic.[8]

In the 2005-2006 mini-series 24-hour interval of Vengeance, a necktie-in to the company-wide crossover Space Crunch, Ragman joins a group of magic-users who oppose the Spectre. This group is chosen Shadowpact. Following Infinite Crisis, Ragman is a regular instance fellow member of the Shadowpact comic book serial. The series was published from 2006 to 2008, ending later 25 issues, and revised parts of Ragman's history, proverb the costume had originally come into being in 1812 BCE and could have on different forms (such equally a knife or spear) without altering its powers.[4] In the series, the Shadowpact group faces a grouping of villains known equally the Pentacle, a member of whom is an evil Ragman counterpart known as Bagman.[9] The squad, Ragman included, then appeared in DC'south Reign in Hell crossover mini-series in 2008.

In 2010, a one-shot comic entitled Ragman: Accommodate of Souls was produced by writer Christos N. Gage, creative person Steven Segovia, colorist David Curiel, and letterer Rob Leigh. The i-shot did not reference revelations about the graphic symbol made in the Shadowpact series. While retelling the origin established in the 1991 mini-series, the comic added that Gerry Regan had already been middle-anile or older when Rory was born and that Rory notwithstanding seemed to be a man in his 40s due to the Suit of Souls slowing down his crumbling. This was to allow for Rory to go along being a Vietnam War veteran with a father who had been agile as Ragman during Earth War Ii. The ane-shot established that the souls of Ragman's costume are redeemed in part by acknowledging and understanding the damage they caused.[10]

In 2011, DC Comics revised its entire superhero universe with its "New 52" line of comic books. In 2015, the New 52 version of Rory Regan appears equally someone identical in nature and appearance to his Postal service-Crisis/Pre-New 52 incarnation.[11] DC Comics then revised big parts of its New 52 canon during the 2016 event DC Rebirth.

Another version of Rory Regan appeared in the 2017 vi-issue mini series Ragman vol. iii. The mini-serial was written by Ray Fawkes, illustrated by Inaki Miranda, and colored past Eva de la Cruz, with covers by Guillem March. This mini-serial depicts a Ragman with an entirely new appearance and slightly different abilities, now using souls straight as fuel for his powers.

Fictional character biography [edit]

Pre-Crunch [edit]

A Vietnam veteran, Rory Regan had grown upwardly helping his father, a junk homo who owned a pawn shop named Rags 'northward' Tatters. His father e'er dreamed of making a amend life for Rory and constantly promised that anytime he would make Rory rich. While drinking with his friends one night, his male parent discovered 2 meg Us dollars stuffed within an old mattress that had been pawned merely recently. He and his friends decided to hibernate the money for Rory, since they were as well old to truly benefit from it. The money turned out to be the loot from an armored machine heist and when the hoods came to the store to get it, they shot downwards some electrical wires and used them to torture Rory's father and his friends into revealing where the coin was subconscious. Rory arrived soon after and, seeing his father in agony, attempted to free him from the wires. A final shock of power ran through the onetime men and grounded out at Rory, knocking him unconscious. When he regained consciousness, his father and friends were dead and the hoods responsible were gone. Using a costume made out of old rags (his father had bought information technology from a stranger before he died and left a annotation saying Rory could article of clothing information technology to a costume party) he became Ragman, "the Tatterdemalion of Justice." Rory appeared to have gained the physical abilities of the men who were electrocuted since they were all touching every bit the last current of electricity flowed through them and into Rory. He gained an acrobat's agility, a strongman's forcefulness, and a boxer's skills.[12]

In his Pre-Crisis incarnation, Rory Regan was Irish, not Jewish, as explicitly stated in the messages folio of Ragman #3.

Postal service-Crunch [edit]

Rory Regan is a junk man, doing expert in his community by buying used items from people who need coin. The arrange of rags that he wears, as mentioned above, was originally just a costume made from materials found around the rag store, Rags'due north'Tatters, that he shared with his male parent. This was retconned in a 1991-92 eight-issue limited serial[ commendation needed ], and currently each of the patches in the adjust is made from the soul of an evildoer that Ragman had punished and absorbed.

The assimilation of these souls caused a problem for Rory at one bespeak, when the evil souls hungered for murder and finally freed themselves of Ragman. It was only with the support of Batman and Rory's old friend, Rabbi Luria, that he regained control, though at the toll of Luria'due south life. Ragman'south powers have increased since then.[ commendation needed ] Currently, he tin absorb souls into his costume. With each new soul added, a rag is added. He can phone call upon the souls in his costume to lend him their attributes or power.[ commendation needed ] He is also a very proficient magic user.[ citation needed ]

Judgment and vengeance [edit]

During the Day of Judgment limited serial, Ragman is active in destroying many of the demons invading Earth. This would earn him the wrath of the Diablos, a group of demons who style themselves after the Mafia. Wanting to gain revenge for demons lost during the Twenty-four hour period of Judgment, they attack Ragman, injuring him and tearing off parts of his costume. They mistakenly believe him to be dead.

Ragman is one of the members of Shadowpact, a team that formed to face the Spectre in DC Comics 2005 Day of Vengeance limited series, a pb-up to the seven-outcome Infinite Crunch limited serial.

During the Infinite Crisis storyline, Ragman and Nightshade are seen continuing side by side equally part of the line of superheroes defending City from set on from dozens of villains.[ commendation needed ]

During the series Day Of Vengeance, Ragman is i of the few volunteers willing to take on the rampaging Spectre, who has decided that all magic is evil. During a planning session, he is taken bated by the Enchantress and given a mystical gun. She entrusts him with it, as it can kill her if she goes too far with her magic, a scenario that she believes is all likewise possible. He tells her if she truly turns evil, his costume volition accept her. He so tries to osculation her, but his feelings are not returned and Enchantress even mocks him for it in forepart of the other heroes.[ citation needed ]

Shadowpact [edit]

In the Shadowpact serial, Ragman, along with his teammates, was trapped within a shield of solid blood that grew over the town of Riverrock, Wyoming. Ragman and the balance of the team spend a very short catamenia of time inside the shield, but due to magical after-furnishings, a full year passes outside. Diverse mystical heroes, such as Phantom Stranger and Male monarch the Wonder Dog keep watch outside the town's borders.

While inside Riverrock, Rory met an evil counterpart of himself belonging to the supervillain grouping that had formed the shield, the Pentacle. His counterpart is named Bagman. He/information technology dresses in like light-green garb, and can plough his torso to goo and absorb people while in this form. While inside Bagman they either suffocate or they are digested. Bagman even mentioned how oddly similar the Shadowpact and the Pentacle are. Rory only survives this come across because Bagman's boss does not want the heroes to be killed. After the Riverock run into, Rory must bargain with the severe disruption to his life, as everyone had thought he was dead. He, similar most of the team, ends up having to find a new source of income, a place to stay and the oddity of encountering a memorial statue to the entire team.

In Shadowpact #8, Rory was temporarily trapped in the limbo dimension of his own cloak. He met the soul of an ancient centurion working off his crimes. This man, Marcus Liberius, first saved him from the beating several other of the murderous souls were giving Rory. Marcus reveals that the cloak was actually the "Great Collector Artifact", which has been in existence in many forms since the time of Abraham. Ragmen in Rory's line have been in action since 1812 BCE.[thirteen] Marcus also helped Rory, who had become disenchanted with the job of collecting corrupted souls, to see that he is not a punisher but a redeemer — allowing a ameliorate afterlife for those who work for it. This piece of work usually takes the grade of suffering on Rory's behalf. For instance, Rory had been recently blinded by magic. Marcus willingly takes this blindness on, calculation to previous injuries he had suffered. This terminal sacrifice allows Marcus, in the full view of the remainder of the Shadowpact, to arise to a higher realm.[14]

Rory, forth with Nightmaster and Nightshade, attempted to teleport to Washington D.C to interruption up a bank robbery. They were trapped in mid-transit in the Land of Nightshades.

Trinity [edit]

In Trinity #18, Ragman appears to save a man from a gang of muggers, when reality has obviously been warped and in that location is no "Trinity" of Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman, and evidently never has been. Ragman is joined past a sidekick named Tatters, wearing a green tattered hoodless costume and mask. At first, he is seen confronting an alternate version of Green Arrow, a vigilante on the service of the wealthy who ignores the poor, and later, due to a chronal boom, is seen assuming Batman's position equally premier vigilante of Gotham.[fifteen]

"Battle For The Cowl" [edit]

Ragman briefly appears in The Network one-shot for the "Boxing for the Cowl" storyline, profitable Cassandra Cain and the Huntress in tracking downwardly a group of hostages effectually Gotham. After removing the duct tape from the oral cavity of a gagged woman, Ragman proceeds to counsel her for her apparent drug addiction, telling her that she volition never truly exist gratis until she takes hold of her life.

"Blackest Nighttime" [edit]

During the 2009-2010 "Blackest Night" storyline, Nekron completely close down Ragman'due south suit by using the Black Lantern rings to reanimate all the souls attached to his body.

Suit of Souls [edit]

In October 2010, Ragman starred in the one-shot Ragman: Suit of Souls. It was written by Christos Cuff and fatigued past Stephen Segovia.[sixteen]

Later, Ragman is shown aiding the JLA during their mission into Hell, where he helps Green Arrow defeat the demon Anger.[17]

The New 52 [edit]

Rory Regan is the possessor of the book and antique shop Rags 'n Tatters who moonlights as the costumed vigilante Ragman.

At his shop, Rory Regan appraised a Celtic amulet equally being nearly 500 years old - and worth more than he could pay out. His customer's urgency and insistence in selling the amulet made him suspicious that it had been stolen, but the man insisted that information technology was just an heirloom. Reluctantly, Rory offered $750, and the man accepted, hurrying away. Despite getting a bargain, Rory worried that he would regret the purchase.

Above his shop, Rory was roused from his slumber by a ghostly voice, alert that he was needed. He hurried down stairs to find a pair of thugs attempting to steal an aboriginal artifact from his safe in the store. Angry, he followed them in the uniform of Ragman. Rory followed the thieves to their employer, where the remaining cultists intended to use Clayface and the stolen antiquity to resurrect Morgaine le Fey.

At the price of Clayface'south discomfort, the Arthurian witch succeeded in returning to life in the nowadays. While as well late to forbid her revival, Ragman joined upwardly with Etrigan and Batwoman to fight her, introducing himself equally his alias. When Etrigan, desperate to destroy the witch, broke a gas main in the one-time business firm the ritual took place in and breathed his burn on it, Ragman, Batwoman, and the now-amnesiac Clayface had barely whatsoever time to become out of range of the resultant explosion, but managed it. According to Etrigan, who likewise survived, information technology was likely that Morgaine as well managed to live through the explosion.

Knowing that Clayface belonged in Arkham Aviary, but that Morgaine could easily intermission him gratuitous on a moment's detect from there, Ragman offered to assuage Batwoman'southward worries thereof by taking Clayface into his ain custody, hoping to help him find his memories. The group parted ways, and Etrigan promised that when next the time came to fight, he would be there.

Rory Regan dumped Clayface into his bathtub, for one time thankful for being single and thus not needing to explain himself to anyone. Hungry, he checked his refrigerator and could non find anything flavory, just was startled suddenly when Clayface appeared behind him and warned him that Morgaine would impale again.

DC Rebirth [edit]

Ragman returned to DC Comics in a half dozen-issue series written by Ray Fawkes and illustrated by Inaki Miranda and colored by Eva de la Cruz, with covers by Guillem March.

Powers and abilities [edit]

The original Pre-Crisis incarnation of Ragman possesses the physical abilities of his father's friends who died in front end of him. This includes: the strength of a circus strongman, the fighting skills and stamina of a heavyweight boxer, and the agility of a world-course acrobat. This version of Ragman wears a costume of ordinary patchwork cloth made by his father.

Equally established in 1991, the Post-Crisis incarnation of Ragman wears a Suit of Souls fabricated up of decadent souls different Ragmen have encountered over the centuries. This collection of souls lend their power to Ragman, giving him superhuman forcefulness, speed, and stamina, as well as mystical abilities such every bit gliding on air currents, mentally manipulating his cloak and rags to attack or ensnare others, and beingness able to sense magical and demonic forces. The suit protects Ragman in a few different ways, healing him from injuries, shielding him from concrete and magical attacks, or temporarily dispersing his torso as a collection of rags so that attacks simply pass through him. On at least 1 occasion, the suit protects Ragman from the vacuum of space and provides him air to breathe.[11] If he focuses, Ragman can mentally connect with the souls making up his suit and speak to each one individually to draw on their noesis. The Suit of Souls automatically materializes around the electric current Ragman when they are all to answer an act of evil or when the Ragman is in danger and needs power.

Ragman'southward Suit of Souls is drawn to evil people and hungers for new souls to absorb. Ragman can permit this or try to restrain the rags, as the person targeted will dice in the process. The suit seems to just absorb souls information technology deems truly evil and who have faced no justice. The suit would non absorb the soul of supervillain Blue Moon who had already served time in prison house, thus non requiring special punishment. The adapt also would not assail teenager and hero Billy Batson, accounted "innocent.", and thus couldn't be harmed. Taking a soul adds a new patch of cloth to the suit and increases Ragman'due south power, though the process of acquiring a new soul causes Ragman to feel sick temporarily. Information technology has been indicated that some souls are released later on helping Ragman for long plenty time while others leave and gain redemption only after they as well understand how their actions in life were harmful. The number of souls Ragman's suit possesses is unknown, but he remarks information technology is "somewhere over 100."

In the 2006 series Shadowpact, it is said the suit can accept on other forms and has done so repeatedly over the years, appearing equally a cloak in aboriginal Egypt, a spear during the Roman Empire, and a dagger in Victorian England.[14] Subsequent stories practise not reference this as role of the suit's nature.[ten]

In the 2017 Ragman mini-series, a version of Ragman is presented with a different origin and nature. In this version of the character, the suit can absorb the souls of anyone, not but the corrupt. Those souls human action as fuel for Ragman's powers and are released when their energy is spent.

Other versions [edit]

Alternate Realities [edit]

In 2008, a version of Ragman from an alternate timeline features in the DC mega-serial Trinity (featuring Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman) in event #18.[xviii] Another alternate universe version of Ragman is seen in Multiversity Guidebook in 2015.[19] This incarnation lives on Globe-13, a reality where magic is the primary strength rather than science, and is a member of the League of Shadows, his world's version of the Justice League.

DC Animated Universe Comics [edit]

Ragman appears in Justice League Unlimited tie-in comic #xv.

All-New Batman: The Brave and the Bold [edit]

Ragman appears in All-New Batman: The Brave and the Bold #14 (February, 2012). Afterward his father died, immature Rory Regan inherited his family'south antique store, every bit well as the enchanted Ragman suit. Using the magical costume, Rory took up his family destiny to protect the Jewish community of Gotham from their enemies. Though he was considered a hero by his neighbors and past Gotham'southward other resident crime-fighters, Rory began to feel undervalued and unappreciated, feeling he could do ameliorate than protecting a few city blocks from muggers, vandals and the occasional skinhead. Rory began to openly resent his father for forcing him to remain in their neighborhood and look afterward the shop. One holiday flavour Batman pursued the super-criminal MacGuffin into Ragman's neighborhood. Over the course of the adventure, Batman helped Rory come to terms with his feelings toward his father and encounter the skilful he had done for his community.

Injustice: Gods Among U.s. [edit]

In Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year Iii, Ragman teams up with John Constantine and Klarion the Witch Boy to jump a trap on the despotic Superman. Ragman first takes Raven's grade after she is tricked into luring Superman to her bounden place in Gotham City. Superman though supposedly frees "Raven", who is later on revealed to be Ragman as he warns Superman that his senses can be fooled and then proclaims that he can feel his murdering soul. He then uses the rags from his suit to demark Superman. While Constantine brags to Superman about the process, Superman manages to free himself. While Ragman believes that he is as well stiff, Constantine tells him that Superman'due south soul belongs inside his conform with the rest of the corrupted souls. Earlier he ensnares Superman again, Superman uses his communicator to call onto Shazam. Ragman though is unable to harm Shazam, due to him being innocent, as Shazam orders him to release Superman. Ragman tries to reason with Shazam, simply Shazam calls down his lightning, freeing Superman and stunning Ragman. The Spectre then appears and proclaims punishment on the tortured souls within his suit and destroys part of his accommodate, freeing them as he declares that their time has come. He and so removes Ragman's mask equally Rory calls out to Constantine for help, but he refuses to do then. The Spectre then kills Rory every bit Shazam watches in horror.

In other media [edit]

Television [edit]

  • Ragman appears in Arrow, portrayed by Joe Dinicol.[twenty] This version is the sole survivor of the nuclear devastation of Havenrock and wears ancient rags from the Devarim era.[ citation needed ] He start appears in season five episode "The Recruits", where he comes to Star City to seek vengeance by attacking Evan Wander and Janet Carroll, the Vice President and CEO of AmerTek, who developed the nuclear missiles that destroyed Havenrock. While contesting with Tobias Church building/Charon, Oliver Queen / Greenish Pointer convinces him to let his quest for vengeance become to become a hero and he agrees to join Green Pointer's squad.[21] In "Bratva", when the team travels to Russia, Rory is willing to risk his life to stop a nuclear bomb by enclosing it within his suit. Though he survives, he reveals that his rags accept lost their power. Considering himself a liability without his powers, Rory leaves the team, but tells Felicity Smoak that he volition return. In flavour seven, Rory has a cameo appearance equally part of the "Emerald Archer" documentary, where his identity is made public, and returns to Star City for Oliver Queen'south funeral, where he helps Team Arrow rescue Oliver's son, William.

Video games [edit]

In Injustice ii, Ragman is briefly mentioned during a pre-fight interaction between Green Arrow and Scarecrow, where Green Arrow will mockingly quip "Oh no, information technology's Ragman!".

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Ragman (vol. 1) #ane-5. DC Comics, September 1976 - July 1977.
  2. ^ a b c Ragman (vol. 2) #one-eight. DC Comics, July 1991 to March 1992.
  3. ^ a b Ragman's Jewish heritage is discussed in the nonfiction volume From Kraków To Krypton, written past Arie Kaplan (Jewish Publication Society, 2008), p. 125 ISBN 978-0-8276-0843-six
  4. ^ a b Shadowpact #eight (DC Comics, 1997).
  5. ^ McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1970s". DC Comics Yr By Yr A Visual Relate. Dorling Kindersley. p. 171. ISBN978-0-7566-6742-9. Author Robert Kanigher's origin of the frayed hero was pieced together into moody, coarse segments by Joe Kubert and Nestor, Frank, and Quico Redondo.
  6. ^ Ragman: Cry of the Expressionless #i-half dozen. Published by DC Comics, 1993.
  7. ^ Batman (vol. one) #551-552. DC Comics, 1997-1998.
  8. ^ Day of Judgment #ane-five (DC Comics, 1999). Day of Judgment Secret Files and Origins #i (DC Comics, 1999).
  9. ^ Shadowpact #ii (DC Comics, 2006).
  10. ^ a b Ragman: Conform of Souls (DC Comics, 2010).
  11. ^ a b Batwoman vol. 2 #35 (DC Comics, 2014).
  12. ^ Markstein, Don. "Ragman". Don Markstein's Toonopedia . Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  13. ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008). The Essential Batman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 304–305. ISBN9780345501066.
  14. ^ a b Shadowpact #8 (Feb 2007)
  15. ^ Trinity Volume 2 (collecting Trinity #xviii-35, 424 pages, September 2009, Titan Books, ISBN i-84856-301-ix, DC Comics, ISBN 1-4012-2318-iv)
  16. ^ DC Universe: The Source » Blog Archive » Ragman returns in Adapt OF SOULS
  17. ^ Justice League of America 80-Page Behemothic (2011)
  18. ^ Trinity (vol. 1) #18 (DC Comics, 2008).
  19. ^ Multiversity Guidebook #1 (DC Comics, 2015).
  20. ^ Abrams, Natalie (July 23, 2016). "Arrow books Blindspot star as Ragman — exclusive". Amusement Weekly.
  21. ^ "'Pointer' Epitomize: Ragman Becomes Oliver's First Recruit".

External links [edit]

  • The G Comics Database - Index for Ragman vol. 1.
  • The One thousand Comics Database - Index for Ragman vol. 2.
  • The Grand Comics Database - Index for Ragman: Cry of the Expressionless.
  • Ragman at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on November four, 2016.

larsenwomess53.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragman_(character)

0 Response to "Do Rorys Rags Ever Work Again"

Enregistrer un commentaire

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel