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The book is a story told by the now powerless Barry Allen, as he writes down the known history of the DC Multiverse, starting with the creation of the Multiverse. It’s a great choice, partly because Barry hasn’t really had anything to do since he lost his powers (other than scolding Wally West in recent issues of The Flash about his actions in the war against Eclipso,) but also because Barry Allen is such an important part of DC history. He’s the one who heralded in the new DC Universe of the Silver Age, so making him the chronicler of the history of DC is exactly what the doctor ordered. Waid is well-known for his love of the Flash — it was writing Wally West that made him a star — so the writer using Allen as the person telling the story of DC is fitting. From there, readers get an amazing look at the history of DC. For anyone who’s owned a DC Encyclopedia, this book is full of characters you’ll recognize but rarely read a story about, from Anthro to Viking Prince to Arak, Son of Thunder to the Western heroes besides Jonah Hex to Enemy Ace and the WWII war story heroes.
For longtime DC fans, this is a comic that will have you smiling. Waid is able to cram a lot of DC history into the book’s captions, giving readers just what they need to know about each one. I find myself pointing and smiling, calling out with happiness every time some esoteric DC character that I haven’t seen in a book was brought up. A lot of people might think that a book like this, which is just a history lesson on a fictional multiverse, could be boring, but there’s something undeniably fun about the whole thing. Waid’s love of DC comes through on every page and it’s honestly nice to know exactly what happened in the history of DC. There have been plenty of times when this sort of thing would make fans very happy — one of the biggest problems with the New 52, for instance, was the lack of knowing what was and wasn’t canon — and this is the best time for it. For fans that aren’t as familiar with DC, this is the perfect primer. I really hope DC plans on reprinting a lot of the classics that this book references, because this book is going to make people want to known even more.








