
Book #85 of 2026:
Daredevil: Born Again by Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli
I don’t read a lot of actual comic books, but I bought this in the airport on a recent whim, having heard how classic and influential it’s considered in such circles. (It’s also in part the basis for certain arcs on Marvel’s Daredevil show — although ironically not the Disney+ revival that actually shares its name.) And I am indeed impressed! I’m by no means an aficionado of these things, but Frank Miller’s writing is probably the strongest I’ve seen in this medium outside of Watchmen. The story is great too, telling a fairly self-contained plot in which the villainous Kingpin, learning that his superhero nemesis Daredevil is secretly the lawyer Matt Murdock, proceeds to use every subtle influence and piece of blackmail in his vast criminal network to ruin the man’s life. His career falls apart, his friends abandon him, his assets are frozen, and his house is destroyed, all without the antagonist openly revealing his schemes.
That tale originally played out over the serialized pages of Daredevil issues #227 – #233, 1985 – 1986, as a collaboration between Miller and artist David Mazzucchelli, each of whom had previously contributed to the series independently with different collaborators. (This bound 2025 edition includes their first team-up as well, the standalone #226 that directly preceded the Born Again run, although it’s confusingly presented at the end of the volume instead of the start.) The result here is pretty powerful, bringing the hero to his absolute lowest point before allowing him to build himself back up again and find a degree of triumph.
If I’m being nitpicky, not everything wraps up neatly in the end, which is partly why I tend to steer clear of this world. There’s no immediate follow-through to developments like Matt discovering his mother’s identity, even if some author presumably did something more with that concept eventually, and the status quo at the close is remarkably similar to where we begin. It’s also funny as a non-reader to remember how interconnected this continuity is, even beyond the Marvel Cinematic Universe adaptations that I’m more familiar with. Captain America pops up for some late assistance against the henchman Nuke, for example, and reporter Ben Urich’s editor is J. Jonah Jameson, whom I only knew as a Spider-Man character before this. Their inclusion lands somewhere between a distraction and a fun cameo, at least for me.
This hasn’t necessarily converted me to reading further in this line — though I might need to rewatch the old Netflix program now — but it’s been a good time regardless, and I could see myself checking out more of Miller’s work specifically at some point later on.
[Content warning for drug abuse and gun violence.]
★★★★☆
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