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  • DC has confirmed for Newsarama some of the highlights of its upcoming slate of collections and hard covers originally announced at the recent Las Vegas ComicsPro meeting.

    These include:

    A deluxe hardcover reprint of Camelot 3000 by Mike Barr and Brian Bolland. The new volume will be in the same format as the recently-released Killing Joke hardcover. The 12-issue series, which was originally released from 1982-1985, is an acclaimed retelling of the King Arthur myth, capitalizing on the prophecy that the legendary King would return in the hour of Britain’s greatest need. That hour happens in the year 3000, as the world is in the throes of an alien invasion. There is currently no word as to whether or not Bolland will retouch the color on the collection as he did for the Killing Joke collection.

    September will see an Absolute Edition of Frank Miller’s Ronin, which was originally published from 1983-1984. The timing places the six issue miniseries after Miller’s initial run on Daredevil (but before “Born Again”) and before The Dark Knight. The story spans centuries, starting in feudal Japan where a young ronin sought to avenge his former master who was slain by a demon. The ronin was successful, but was trapped in a curse the demon uttered with its dying breath that linked the two. Centuries later, in a New York overrun by the bio-engineered Aquarius Complex, a boy begins to have dreams about an ancient ronin warrior, and the complex is invaded by an unstoppable terror – the two enemies live again.

    The series was reported last year to be in development by Producer Gianni Nunnari.

    Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra’s recently completed Y: The Last Man will be collected as a series of hard covers, with each hardcover edition collecting the material from two of the soft covers.

    Finally, DC confirmed that it will collect the Golden Age “The Monster Society of Evil” storyline which originally ran in Captain Marvel Adventures #22-#46 between 1943-1945. The storyline, an undeniable classic of Golden Age superhero stories, has long been a favorite of Roy Thomas, who wrote in Alter Ego #64:

    “For the past decade, I've championed to DC Comics the notion of abandoning for once its chronological approach to reprints in its Archives series, and of printing all 232 pages of the serial in a single hardcover volume. Such a book could almost be considered the first graphic novel-composed of material originally published more than sixty years ago!”

    The collection is due for a 2009 publication.