American popular culture has produced few heroic figures as famous & enduring as that of the Batman The dark mysterious hero who debuted in 1939’s DETECTIVE COMICS 27 as the lone “ Bat-man” quickly grew into the legend of the Caped Crusader After his landmark debut & origin story the Dark Knight was given many seminal elements including his partner in crime-fighting Robin the Boy Wonder & such adversaries as the Joker Hugo Strange & Catwoman BATMAN THE GOLDEN AGE VOLUME ONE collects all of the Dark Knight Detective’s first-ever adventures from DETECTIVE COMICS 27-45 BATMAN 1-3 & NEW YORK WORLD’S FAIR COMICS 2 Meet the Author William Finger was born on February 8 1914 He met cartoonist Bob Kane at a party in 1938 & soon after they were collaborating on several adventure strips Within a year Batman appeared Finger&s fondness for pulp fiction & movies influenced his plots & writing style for comic books He worked on many other DC characters & titles scripted some of the 1940s daily & Sunday Batman & Robin newspaper strip continuities & wrote for Quality Fawcett & Timely Finger&s television credits include 77 Sunset Strip The Roaring Twenties & Hawaiian Eye during the late 1950s & early 1960s His efforts in the super-hero genre also appeared on TV in the 1960s including material for the animated New Adventures of Superman plus a two-part Clock King episode of the 1966 Batman series Finger died in New York City on January 24 1974 He was posthumously inducted into the Eisner Awards Hall of Fame in 1999 Robert Kahn was born on October 24 1916 in the Bronx & at age 18 legally changed his name to Kane In 1936 this self-proclaimed "compulsive doodleholic" pencilled & inked his first comic book work Hiram Hick By 1938 he was selling humorous filler stories to DC Comics including Professor Doolittle & Ginger Snap Kane met writer Bill Finger at a party in 1938 & they soon were collaborating on comic book submissions Their most famous effort Batman first appeared in DETECTIVE COMICS 27 (May 1939) As Batman&s popularity demanded additional output Kane kept up the pace by adding assistants & dropping non-Batman assignments He discontinued his comic book efforts in mid-1943 to pencil the daily Batman & Robin newspaper strip After the strip&s 1946 demise Kane returned to illustrating Batman&s comic book adventures & with the help of several ghosts remained involved with comics until his retirement in 1968 The success of the Batman television series brought Kane & his art back into the public eye in 1966 He was subsequently featured in various one-man art shows at galleries & museums nationwide & released a number of limited-edition lithographs He served as a consultant on the 1989 Batman feature film & its sequels His autobiography Batman & Me was published in 1989 & in 1996 he was inducted into the Eisner Awards Hall of Fame Kane died on November 3 1998