![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDIQiULMl3IzQ1N8xLBqWoSDOvts93431eEdVJ43jsYxrX5IUnCHX92BKKO4mYPZ9YgqLjo1rA8qGfM9haJUJW8i5Nxg5c_EbgGLxhT4JJIk8vlx6Az1-zx5ZOh2cPDJ8DaqIAvxBWkfA/s400/batman-03.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhNWx3X37fZ4bBtOkIN2IqjfwFPenFvJc681kv97XZ1Tz7w3aU0o4bwU9QpR4EE5F4HgUdNxzV-Ll_NRPvXrE2ibtfbv1K_zVo93fBnetAUVUHWm-v3M6GI83gzyda91IielwKj6dYVc2s/s400/batman-04.jpg)
These are the covers for Batman: Return of Bruce Wayne #3 and #4. USA Today caught up with Grant Morrison who explained "Return is a fairly intricate time-travel story in which the world's greatest hero, the optimum man, is up against the supreme challenge to his ingenuity and skill. How does Batman get out of the ultimate trap? It has a mystery and an apocalyptic countdown going on, there are some major twists and reveals, and it sets up big changes to the Batman universe status quo. Each of the stories is a twist on a different "pulp hero" genre — so there's the caveman story, the witchhunter/Puritan adventurer thing, the pirate Batman, the cowboy, the P.I. — as a nod toward those mad old 1950s comics with Caveman Batman and Viking Batman adventures. It's Bruce Wayne's ultimate challenge — Batman vs. history itself!" "
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