

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Japan.
desertcart.com: DC Comics novels - Harley Quinn: Mad Love: 9781785658150: Dini, Paul: Books Review: Forget the Batman tie-in: this is just a great book - I wasn't sure what to expect from this book. I'd heard that the first one in the novelization series (Killing Joke) wasn't very good. But I'd already pre-ordered, so I decided to give it a chance. WOW. You could completely forget the entire idea that this has anything to do with Batman, comics, a TV show, or any character you've ever seen before. You could come to this book completely fresh, knowing absolutely nothing about who Harley is, and still get at least as much out of it. This is just an amazingly well-written story. What makes it so good? I think the biggest reason is that the author weaves together a lot of the backstory we already know in a very clever way BUT also makes the entire story seem so fresh. You'll recognize a number of elements that we've seen in Harley's story before, in some cases, pieces that were there from the very beginning. But they're put together in new ways (sometimes even neatly retconning things that didn't make sense at the time.) And it somehow all seems so new and unexpected. Even though we KNOW that Harley is going to have to end up with the Joker, for example, it really seems like she might not, like she might be able to pull herself back from the edge in time. We feel her conflicted emotions and thoughts, and we feel how she's pulled into his seductive web, day by day. This is when we really see how smart it was to turn this story into a book. There are ways that we just can't get into the character's head from visual media, but in a book, we can. Harley's motivations have never felt so understandable before, and I think that the author also does a good job of showing how and why she was able to escape the Joker's spell. But the ending of the book is also understandable (I won't give it away here, because even though we've seen the events before, I don't think readers have ever really understood so completely why Harley ended up where she did at the point where she finally got away from the Joker.) If there's a weakness in the writing, I think it's that we're never really shown exactly why the Joker continued to be so appealing to Harley after she got him out of Arkham. This is not a book meant for little kids, so couldn't we have seen a little of the intimate spell he clearly cast over her? There are hints that the sex was amazing, but really... I think we could have gotten a little more, and it could have seemed more believable that Harley would have stuck with him. On the other hand, one thing the author does that is very clever is to shorten the amount of time that Harley was actually in a relationship with the Joker. We never know exactly how long it was, but there are enough pop culture and current tech references so that it's easy to figure out that it couldn't have been too long. My guess is about a year, no more than two, and the way that he treated her really started to go downhill a few months before the end. Keeping her with him as long as they were together in the comics would have made Harley's character ridiculous. Overall, I guess I would say that with a few flaws, this is a really good book, probably much better than it had any right to be. You don't need to have read every single comic that ever existed and dissected them all on your own Youtube channel to appreciate this. (I guarantee that I haven't.) Pick it up for an engaging, fascinating, and thought-provoking read. Review: A Great, Updated Retelling of Harley Quinn's Origin! - Paul Dini and Pat Cadiganโs โMad Love: A Batman Novelโ retells Harley Quinnโs origin. Dini and Cadigan begin with Quinn as a child, seeing her happy world shatter when police arrest her father after a wonderful day on Coney Island, thereby giving Quinn an early distrust of authority. They follow her through her gymnastics training and college, before showing how Quinn was a rising star at Arkham Asylum until she grew fixated on the Joker. The story follows Diniโs original one fairly closely from there, but expands on it so that Quinnโs time at Arkham and her growing dependency on the Joker develop gradually. Dini and Cadigan also demonstrate how Quinnโs early distrust of authority led her to distrust Batman, viewing him as someone who harms the sick patients that end in Arkham. Here, too, they break from many portrayals of mental illness in Batman by avoiding the common tendency to equate mental illness with violence in the Batman mythos. The story also has a different ending than the original, with Harley undergoing treatment at Arkham after her arrest in order to accept that any relationship with the Joker is abusive and to develop strategies to overcome her dependency. The story itself has appeared several times. โMad Loveโ first appeared as a one-shot comic from Paul Dini and Bruce Timm in December 1993, tying into โBatman: The Animated Seriesโ and exploring Harley Quinnโs backstory. Dini later adapted the comic into a teleplay for Butch Lukicโs January 16, 1999 episode of โThe New Batman Adventures,โ also titled โMad Love.โ In October 1999, Dini again adapted parts of his โMad Loveโ story with Yvel Guichet for the โBatman: Harley Quinnโ one-shot comic that introduced Harley Quinn into the mainstream Batman comics continuity. Since then, elements of the story have appeared in Karl Kesel, Terry Dodson, and Rachel Dodsonโs โHarley Quinnโ comic series that ran from December 2000 โ January 2004, Dini and Guillem Marchโs โGotham City Sirensโ series that was published between August 2009 โ October 2011, and in Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiottiโs โHarley Quinnโ series that began in January 2014 and have been part of the New 52 and DC Rebirth. Finally, Diniโs story also played out in the 2016 Academy Award-winning โSuicide Squadโ film. In September 2019, Stjepan ล ejiฤ began his own take on Harleyโs origin in โHarleenโ for DC Black Label. Dini and Cadiganโs latest retelling includes all the story beats fans expect, but also offers the greater character development and sense of pacing of a prose novel. They update the story for 2019, with modern technology and a better understanding of domestic violence and mental illness. Fans of Harley Quinn looking for a serious, yet familiar, take on the character are sure to enjoy โMad Love: A Batman Novel.โ
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,329,265 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #475 in Superhero Science Fiction #867 in TV, Movie & Game Tie-In Fiction #11,703 in Action & Adventure Fantasy (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,095 Reviews |
A**E
Forget the Batman tie-in: this is just a great book
I wasn't sure what to expect from this book. I'd heard that the first one in the novelization series (Killing Joke) wasn't very good. But I'd already pre-ordered, so I decided to give it a chance. WOW. You could completely forget the entire idea that this has anything to do with Batman, comics, a TV show, or any character you've ever seen before. You could come to this book completely fresh, knowing absolutely nothing about who Harley is, and still get at least as much out of it. This is just an amazingly well-written story. What makes it so good? I think the biggest reason is that the author weaves together a lot of the backstory we already know in a very clever way BUT also makes the entire story seem so fresh. You'll recognize a number of elements that we've seen in Harley's story before, in some cases, pieces that were there from the very beginning. But they're put together in new ways (sometimes even neatly retconning things that didn't make sense at the time.) And it somehow all seems so new and unexpected. Even though we KNOW that Harley is going to have to end up with the Joker, for example, it really seems like she might not, like she might be able to pull herself back from the edge in time. We feel her conflicted emotions and thoughts, and we feel how she's pulled into his seductive web, day by day. This is when we really see how smart it was to turn this story into a book. There are ways that we just can't get into the character's head from visual media, but in a book, we can. Harley's motivations have never felt so understandable before, and I think that the author also does a good job of showing how and why she was able to escape the Joker's spell. But the ending of the book is also understandable (I won't give it away here, because even though we've seen the events before, I don't think readers have ever really understood so completely why Harley ended up where she did at the point where she finally got away from the Joker.) If there's a weakness in the writing, I think it's that we're never really shown exactly why the Joker continued to be so appealing to Harley after she got him out of Arkham. This is not a book meant for little kids, so couldn't we have seen a little of the intimate spell he clearly cast over her? There are hints that the sex was amazing, but really... I think we could have gotten a little more, and it could have seemed more believable that Harley would have stuck with him. On the other hand, one thing the author does that is very clever is to shorten the amount of time that Harley was actually in a relationship with the Joker. We never know exactly how long it was, but there are enough pop culture and current tech references so that it's easy to figure out that it couldn't have been too long. My guess is about a year, no more than two, and the way that he treated her really started to go downhill a few months before the end. Keeping her with him as long as they were together in the comics would have made Harley's character ridiculous. Overall, I guess I would say that with a few flaws, this is a really good book, probably much better than it had any right to be. You don't need to have read every single comic that ever existed and dissected them all on your own Youtube channel to appreciate this. (I guarantee that I haven't.) Pick it up for an engaging, fascinating, and thought-provoking read.
R**D
A Great, Updated Retelling of Harley Quinn's Origin!
Paul Dini and Pat Cadiganโs โMad Love: A Batman Novelโ retells Harley Quinnโs origin. Dini and Cadigan begin with Quinn as a child, seeing her happy world shatter when police arrest her father after a wonderful day on Coney Island, thereby giving Quinn an early distrust of authority. They follow her through her gymnastics training and college, before showing how Quinn was a rising star at Arkham Asylum until she grew fixated on the Joker. The story follows Diniโs original one fairly closely from there, but expands on it so that Quinnโs time at Arkham and her growing dependency on the Joker develop gradually. Dini and Cadigan also demonstrate how Quinnโs early distrust of authority led her to distrust Batman, viewing him as someone who harms the sick patients that end in Arkham. Here, too, they break from many portrayals of mental illness in Batman by avoiding the common tendency to equate mental illness with violence in the Batman mythos. The story also has a different ending than the original, with Harley undergoing treatment at Arkham after her arrest in order to accept that any relationship with the Joker is abusive and to develop strategies to overcome her dependency. The story itself has appeared several times. โMad Loveโ first appeared as a one-shot comic from Paul Dini and Bruce Timm in December 1993, tying into โBatman: The Animated Seriesโ and exploring Harley Quinnโs backstory. Dini later adapted the comic into a teleplay for Butch Lukicโs January 16, 1999 episode of โThe New Batman Adventures,โ also titled โMad Love.โ In October 1999, Dini again adapted parts of his โMad Loveโ story with Yvel Guichet for the โBatman: Harley Quinnโ one-shot comic that introduced Harley Quinn into the mainstream Batman comics continuity. Since then, elements of the story have appeared in Karl Kesel, Terry Dodson, and Rachel Dodsonโs โHarley Quinnโ comic series that ran from December 2000 โ January 2004, Dini and Guillem Marchโs โGotham City Sirensโ series that was published between August 2009 โ October 2011, and in Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiottiโs โHarley Quinnโ series that began in January 2014 and have been part of the New 52 and DC Rebirth. Finally, Diniโs story also played out in the 2016 Academy Award-winning โSuicide Squadโ film. In September 2019, Stjepan ล ejiฤ began his own take on Harleyโs origin in โHarleenโ for DC Black Label. Dini and Cadiganโs latest retelling includes all the story beats fans expect, but also offers the greater character development and sense of pacing of a prose novel. They update the story for 2019, with modern technology and a better understanding of domestic violence and mental illness. Fans of Harley Quinn looking for a serious, yet familiar, take on the character are sure to enjoy โMad Love: A Batman Novel.โ
G**Y
The manipulations and her past make Harleen Quinzel disappearand be replaced with Harley Quinn
This novel is entertaining but also very heartbreaking. One realizes that Harley never really had a chance. The manipulative ways of the Joker combined with her unconventional childhood makes the reader realize that Harleen disappearing and being replaced by Haley Quinn was completely expected. The reader feels her pain as she falls in love with the Joker and the sadness that he might like her but love the way she hopes is something that will never experience. The Joker may love her as only he know how but itโs not something that matters to a narcissistic person like him. The invisible triangle between Harley, The Joker and Batman makes the reader want to scream, โ he doesnโt love you, leave donโt fall for itโ but sadly we are also rooting for Joker to love Harley and let it be a happy ending.
R**R
A must have if you love Paul Dini
Nice to have a novelization of an iconic comic
J**A
Good Look Into Harleen Quinzel, Less So Harley Quinn
Just devoured this book, I'm a longtime classic BTAS Harley Quinn fan and I love the dynamic between her and the Joker as two psychopaths in love, both getting something from the relationship. Needless to say, I'm not a fan of new Harley (in the New 52) and this book was worth the get just to see some of the taste of the old Harley Quinn. Still, this book overall does a fantastic job of capturing Harleen Quinzel, but once Harley Quinn takes center stage the story and character both lose their steam. Now, this book had some amazing parts. I loved Harleen's constant, understandable aversion to Batman, and I love how per past and time as a psychiatrist made her fleshed-out and relatable, while including subtle hints into her mindset that would lead her to becoming Harley Quinn. I loved Harleen Quinzel portrayed as someone who was cunning, manipulative, quick-witted, and even from a young age having some understanding of the joke that is the chaos and darkness of the world. I also LOVED the Joker's perspective chapter, and wish there was more of it. Some minor things kept niggling in my mind, such as the Joker not being restrained in his cell during therapy sessions and the lack of focus on the scope of killing the Joker has done. Also, I know it's not realistic for murderous psychopaths, but I loved the common room where the Rogues gallery interacted in the Animated Series. Harley Quinn, especially in her honeymoon phase of the relationship, is delusional, yes, but having the book end as it did was a little bit of a letdown and following in the modern trend of "Harley can only be strong and independent when separated from the Joker." Yes he deserved to be put in his place for what he did, but she also needed a reality check for everything that comes with being so close to the hurricane that is the Joker. I would recommend this story simply for the great writing and character study that 3/4 of the book delivers. As for fans hoping for a story that more closely focuses on the RELATIONSHIP between Harley and the Joker, and how it evolves, there are definitely some great fanfictions I've read that have delivered more.
A**O
Overall enjoyable book, easy to read and fun
I purchased this book because I love the Harley Quinn character and read the new 52 series. The book is great, as I never read any Batman comics nor Harley Quinn comics prior to the new 52 series. The book tells how Harleen becomes "Harley" and paints the picture of her character formation really well. Its up beat, light hearted, and overall an entertaining and easy read. I enjoyed the book and recommend it for any Harley Quinn fans that might be new to her character, like I am. I will say that there is some violence in the book, and is probably more suitable for older teens.
S**N
Mad Love
I purchased this book from Amazon to read. All opinions are my own. ๐๐๐๐๐Harley Quinn: Mad Love by Paul Dini and Pat Cadigan. 5 stars because well, Harley Quinn. Yes I wanted to love this book and it was a fast paced read with adventure on every page, but truthfully I wanted a different story. Wonderfully written and everything a comic book should be. Harlene Quinn grew up in Brooklyn with a father for a criminal and a mother that pushed her to be something more. Harley studies gymnastics and prepares for a scholarship to go to college, attends medical school, and becomes a successful psychiatrist and this is where everything becomes complicated for Harley. Her revenge she's been seeking since childhood grows into a complicated love story with Puddin and a strange hatred for Batman. Until one day she realizes Puddin isn't what she really needs to get to her revenge.
A**H
Bought as a gift
I bought this for an ex, years ago (apparently Amazon wants me to review really old purchases again) whom shares the main character's name. she loved the book! RIP
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago