Absolute Catwoman #1 — With every lock picked and every vault breached, Selina Kyle is about to meet a threat she can't steal away from






When a character commands enough attention in the Absolute Universe to warrant their own title, you know the creative team knows how to make her sing. Absolute Catwoman arrived as a response to readers falling for the woman who could outmaneuver Batman, and the debut issue proves the spotlight was well-placed.
Selina Kyle has carved out a pristine existence. With resources that rival governments and a gear list that makes her look like a sci-fi villain, there is no vault she can't crack. She operates on a level where the only risk is boredom. That changes the moment a familiar face shows up on her doorstep, shattering the peace she's curated. What follows is a mystery that drags Selina from secure location to secure location, forcing the master thief to become the prey. The clues span the globe, and every stop threatens the foundation of her new world.
The pull here is the creative stack and the visual execution. Scott Snyder and Che Grayson are crafting a narrative that respects the legend while giving Selina a fresh set of obstacles. They're not retreading old grooves; they're building a world where her skills are pushed to the absolute limit. Bengal's art is the real draw, bringing a kinetic, predatory energy to the action. You can feel the weight of the tech, the fluidity of the movement, and the constant tension of a woman who is always one step ahead until she isn't. This is a book that understands what makes Catwoman dangerous and leans into it.
The second printing is a solid indicator that this debut resonated with the crowd from day one. If you're on the fence, let the word-of-mouth decide; by the time this sells out, you'll wish you hadn't waited. Bengal's art carries the issue, and the world Snyder and Grayson have built here is going to set the pace for the entire Absolute line for the next few months. Don't sleep on this one.
