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  1. David Vern Reed (born David Levine; 13 December 1914 – 11 August 1994), was an American writer, best known for his work on the Batman comic book during the 1950s in a run that included a revamp of the Batplane in Batman #61 and the introduction of Deadshot in Batman #59 (July 1950).

  2. Dec 13, 2023 · Reed—he wrote under several pseudonyms, the best known to comics fans being David Vern and Coram Nobis—was a science fiction pulp writer in the 1940s when he was hired by DC Comics editor and former science fiction pulp magazine literary agent Julius Schwartz to write Batman, beginning with “Ride, Bat-Hombre, Ride” in Batman #56 ...

  3. sf-encyclopedia.com › entry › reed_david_vSFE: Reed, David V

    Entry updated 3 March 2023. Tagged: Author, Editor. Pseudonym – in full, David Vern Reed – used for almost all his fiction by US editor, Comics writer and author David Vern, born David Levine (1914-1994) and also known as David Vern Levine. He wrote mostly for Ray Palmer 's magazines (for which he also worked in editorial capacities between ...

  4. DC. David Vern Reed (b. 1924 – d.1989) was a writer. David Reed was an American writer who worked in pulp magazines and later in comics. He is most notably known for creating the character Deadshot and upgrading the Batplane. He worked in various comics during the 50's, including Batman, World's...

  5. Dec 13, 2021 · David V. Reed (Dec. 13, 1914–Aug. 11, 1994) was a science fiction, television, magazine, and comic book writer best known for his stint scripting Batman for editor Julie Schwartz. In 1978, I was on staff at DC Comics as assistant to the public relations director.

  6. Oct 27, 2019 · So I’m guessing that Joe commissioned this tale (though it’s also possible that writer David Vern/David V. Reed came up with the idea of it, or that they hatched it together.) ADDITION: Reader Steven Thompson points out that the Aragones version of Cain appeared regularly in PLOP, so this story was probably intended for that magazine.

  7. Jan 26, 2021 · David Vern Reed, born David Levine, was one of the most curious Batman writers of all-time, because he wrote the Dark Knight at two VERY different periods in the history of the character, but because he wasn't credited back in the early days of his tenure and used a pseudonym for his latter run on the Bat-books, there was not a whole lot of ...

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