"House of Hush" comes to its closing chapter. Hush
has duped his associates, Dr. Death and Judson Pierce, but Hush may have been
duped himself. As his scheme to finally destroy Bruce Wayne runs afoul of a
femme fatale, Batman may become his only hope for survival.
Unfortunately, time is up for Paul Dini and Dustin Nguyen's
incredible Batman: Streets of Gotham.
I've been championing the series for some time now, but I suppose the Batman
market is a bit oversaturated, and this book sort of fell through the cracks
for too long. I can imagine it's pretty difficult competing with titles like Batman & Robin and of course the two
mainstay Batman comics. BSOG always
had the makings of a classic comic, though. It was always searching for a new
angle, constantly illuminating forgotten or minor characters, planting new
seeds from which revised Gotham mythology sprouted and blossomed. The artwork
was incredible. Dustin Nguyen has been one of the greatest Batman artists in
recent memory. The only bit of sunshine I see coming out of all of this is that
Nguyen will have more time to dedicate to his Batgirl duties.
Streets of Gotham underwent a tragic time crunch here
towards the end of its run, and it shows through in its last issues. If you'd
been following the beginnings of "House of Hush," you would see it
too. Dini was slowly letting this story come to a boil, and it seemed like when
the plug was imminently to be pulled, he of course had to speed up his plot
development. He handled it like a pro, but we still lose a lot of great
suspense and depth in that expeditious sprint to the climax. Speaking
of the climax, that also suffers from having to be crammed into an issue that
sums up a lengthy arc in a matter of pages, tying loose ends and even discarding
some of the plot trimmings (i.e. Bedbug) for a more concise finale. Truthfully,
I'm certain this won't be Dini's final time writing a Batman comic, excluding Arkham City of course, so the seeds he's
sewn that never seemed to grow into much here will most likely be revisited at some
point down the line.

Nguyen's Streets of Gotham #20 cover artwork
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Even with this issue being noticeably impacted by the series'
cancellation, Paul Dini does fit a few great scenes into issue 21, and he even
ends up going in some pretty dark and unsettling directions along the way. It's
a good issue, but it's not the way this book should have gone out. This is a
bit of a whimper, not a bang.
I'm also actually quite upset that we didn't get to see the
conclusion of Fabian Nicieza and Szymon Kudranski's Ragman back-up feature.
"Ashes to Ashes" was one of the only second feature stories that was
really quite gripping. Nicieza is one of the most underrated writers out there.
His stuff is fantastic.