Star Wars Darth Vader -comics Collection- | QUICK |

The definitive “origin of the suit” story. Soule masterfully shows Vader trying to kill his past (including hunting down surviving Jedi with his Inquisitors) while failing to bury Anakin Skywalker. One iconic sequence: Vader constructs his crimson lightsaber by bleeding a Jedi’s kyber crystal—a dark, painful ritual that forges his soul as much as his weapon.

This is the “political thriller” phase. Gillen introduces two brilliant new characters: Doctor Aphra (a rogue archaeologist who becomes Vader’s reluctant partner) and Triple-Zero & Beetee (murderous, sadistic droids who parody C-3PO and R2-D2). You see Vader rebuild himself—physically, mentally, and strategically—while secretly investigating the pilot who destroyed the Death Star. Star Wars Darth Vader -Comics Collection-

This run humanizes Vader without softening him. Pak introduces the Eye of Webbish Bog (a monstrous, prophetic creature on Mustafar) and explores Vader’s obsession with Padmé and the secret of Exegol. The climax, Return of the Handmaidens , forces Vader to confront the memory of Padmé’s handmaidens—and his own buried guilt. The definitive “origin of the suit” story

For over forty years, Darth Vader has loomed as cinema’s greatest villain. But the films only scratch the surface. In the comics, freed from the constraints of screen time and special effects budgets, Vader becomes something even more terrifying—and tragically human. This is your guide to the essential Darth Vader comic collections, from his shattered rebirth to his final, silent redemption. The Core Canon Collections (Marvel, 2015–Present) Since Marvel regained the Star Wars license in 2015, three landmark Darth Vader series have defined the character for a new generation. Each is available in trade paperback (collection) and hardcover omnibus formats. 1. Darth Vader by Kieron Gillen (Vol. 1, 2015–2016) The Setup: Picks up immediately after A New Hope . Vader has failed to stop the Death Star’s destruction. The Emperor blames him, demotes him, and assigns a ruthless military commander, Admiral Tagge, to shadow him. This is the “political thriller” phase