Which Creators Wrote Lucifer Morningstar Dc Comics Best Issues?

2025-08-27 03:34:26 322

3 Answers

Elijah
Elijah
2025-08-30 16:42:37
I still have the spine creases from my first Vertigo trades, so I’ll be blunt: Neil Gaiman planted the seed and Mike Carey grew the tree. Gaiman introduced Lucifer as this elegant, irreverent figure in 'The Sandman', which is where you see the character’s Shakespearean and biblical playfulness. That short appearance matters because it’s written with that mythic cadence only Gaiman really leans into, and it’s why the character translated so well to a solo series.

After that, Mike Carey’s run on 'Lucifer' is widely considered the definitive comic-book treatment. Carey took over and delivered a long-form narrative across multiple arcs that mixes detective beats, cosmic scheming, and philosophical conversation. He also had talented artists and letterers alongside him, so the look and flow of those issues stay with you. If you want specific issues to hunt down, start with the early volumes of Carey's run — the set-up issues and the first collected trades — because they establish recurring themes and villains that pay off later. Beyond those, there are later cameo appearances spread across DC/Vertigo titles, but none match the coherence and ambition of Carey’s runs. For reading order, I recommend 'The Sandman' introduction, then the collected 'Lucifer' volumes by Mike Carey; they’ll give you the clearest sense of why fans rave about these comics.
Hudson
Hudson
2025-08-31 09:39:22
I got hooked on this character the way a lot of people did — through 'The Sandman' — and my take on who wrote the best Lucifer Morningstar comics starts there and then moves quickly into the Vertigo solo series. Neil Gaiman created Lucifer in 'The Sandman' (his cameo in issue #4 is iconic), and that introduction is pure Gaiman: mythic, sly, and full of poetic hooks. If you want the origin of the comic-book Lucifer’s personality and voice, Gaiman’s pages are essential reading because they set the tone for everything that followed.

But hands down the most celebrated, consistent, and narratively rich run is the 'Lucifer' series written by Mike Carey. He steered the character across 75 issues, turning a fascinating cameo into an expansive, philosophical, and often thrilling epic. Carey builds huge, slow-burn plots, mixes noir and metaphysical politics, and keeps Lucifer complicated and charismatic. The series also benefits from strong collaborators — artists like Peter Gross helped shape the mood and atmosphere. If someone asks for the “best issues,” I usually point them to the early volumes of Mike Carey’s run to see the transformation from mythic exile to a fully formed protagonist, and then recommend reading through the major trades because the arc rewards patience.

If you’re the type who likes adaptations, the Netflix show starring Tom Ellis borrows flavors but not specifics; the comics are denser and stranger in the best ways. For jumping in: read 'The Sandman' #4, then pick up the first trade of Mike Carey’s 'Lucifer'. That combo gave me hours of rereads and debates at my local coffee shop — and it’s a great starting point if you want to go deeper into the Vertigo-era corner of the DC library.
Zane
Zane
2025-09-01 13:02:34
When I tell friends which creators wrote the best Lucifer Morningstar comics I keep it simple and practical: Neil Gaiman created the character in 'The Sandman' and that short, brilliant appearance is the origin you shouldn’t skip. The bulk of what fans call the best Lucifer comics, though, were written by Mike Carey — his Vertigo series (issues collected across many trade paperbacks) fleshed Lucifer out into a complex lead and told big, satisfying stories.

From a reader’s perspective, start with Gaiman’s 'The Sandman' issue that introduces Lucifer, then move into Mike Carey’s 'Lucifer' trades. Carey’s scripts give you the complete arc and a variety of tones — sometimes noir, sometimes cosmic fantasy — and the art teams he worked with help sell the mood. If you’re collecting, go for the trade collections of Carey’s run; if you prefer single issues, the early ones in his series are where the character’s personality and long-game plotting begin to shine. That approach hooked me, and it still makes for one of my favorite comic read-throughs.
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