Death appeared in
Captain Atom #42-43 (June–July 1990), alongside the
Black Racer as one of several aspects of Death in the DC Universe. Gaiman reportedly took issue with this depiction, feeling that portraying her as merely an aspect of death diminished her importance. Other DC Universe comics that feature Death include the satirical
Ambush Bug Nothing Special one-shot (Sep. 1992), and a cameo in the equally satirical
Lobo comic book ''Lobo's Back
#3 (Oct. 1992), in which she slaps Lobo for getting fresh with her. She observes the destruction of the Earth in Legion of Super-Heroes'' vol. 4 #38 (Dec. 1992). Death's popularity saw her spun off into two solo
miniseries,
Death: The High Cost of Living (1993), and
Death: The Time of Your Life (1996). Both were written by Gaiman and illustrated by
Chris Bachalo, and dealt with Death's encounters with various mortals.
Death: The High Cost of Living became the first comic released under the newly instigated
Vertigo branding in 1993, at which point
The Sandman also moved from the DC to Vertigo imprint. A third miniseries,
The Girl who Would Be Death by
Caitlín R. Kiernan, was about a girl who purchased an ankh stolen from Death and tried to become her. Death is never actually seen in the series, but she speaks and acts in the third and fourth issues of the four-issue series. In 2003, the
manga-style
graphic novel ''
Death: At Death's Door'' portrayed Death's activities during the fourth Sandman story arc
Season of Mists. It was written and illustrated by
Jill Thompson, and the format proved popular enough for Thompson to produce the similarly manga-influenced follow-up
Dead Boy Detectives, featuring minor
Sandman characters, and "featuring a cameo by Death". A one-shot issue titled
Death Gallery (1994) was released as one of several art showcase comics from DC Comics spotlighting various Sandman characters released between 1994 and 1995. The
Death Gallery featured representations of Death by more than thirty comics artists, including a rough sketch by Gaiman himself. In
Endless Nights (2003) Gaiman shows Death several billion years ago, with a markedly different personality — forbidding and joyless. She also appears in
The Books of Magic (first volume, 1991, also written by Gaiman) at the very end of time, where her function is to set things in order and close the universe down. She meets
Timothy Hunter and
Mister E there after Mister E has taken Timothy all the way to the end of time, because only there can he kill Timothy without fear of interference. Death stops the murder on the grounds that "I took both of you billions of years ago". She sends Timothy back home, but forces Mister E to return the hard way.
John Ney Rieber included her in
The Books of Magic (vol. 2 #3-4), in which she lets Timothy Hunter hang out at her house and hold her teddy bear, Cavendish, while he is recovering from the venom of the
Manticore. Hunter later encounters Death walking in the rain in
The Books of Magic #25, and there was later an arc about her in
Hunter: The Age of Magic. In
Hellblazer #120, Death appears briefly in a pub filled with ghosts. She also appeared in Mike Carey's
Lucifer series when the eponymous main character was wounded and nearly died. Initially it appears that Death has actually arrived for Lucifer, but in fact she is there for
Elaine Belloc who dies (temporarily) saving Lucifer's life. Death admits she has arrived a little early and takes the opportunity to talk to Lucifer who is currently trapped between life and death. In
Madame Xanadu, the title character calls out to her while chained up and denied access to her youth potions during the
French Revolution. As she is a survivor from the days of
King Arthur, she grows very old very quickly without them. She summons Death and reads her own cards, interpreting her Death card as predictive of her future destiny on earth. Death is so amused by this interpretation that she grants Madame Xanadu immortality, revocable any time Xanadu wishes. Death appeared in
Action Comics #894, which was written by
Paul Cornell. Gaiman helped write Death's dialogue to ensure that her characterization remained consistent with
The Sandman. In the story, while searching for a
black power ring, Lex Luthor encounters her. She appears again in issue #900 and in
The Flash (vol. 3) #6, part of the
Brightest Day crossover.
Quasi-canonical appearances In the
AIDS-awareness eight-page comic
Death Talks About Life by Gaiman and McKean (which was first included in various Vertigo titles, and later released as a stand-alone giveaway pamphlet), Death demonstrates safe sex by placing a
condom on a
banana held by
John Constantine. Lightening the impact of the underlying message, she informs the reader that when one is through with the demonstration, "you can eat the banana". This was used in high school health classes and is also reprinted as an addendum to the
Death: The High Cost of Living trade paperback. This version of Death also made a cameo appearance in the crossover special
Avengers/JLA #2. She is represented in the
Grandmaster's home base, alongside
Deadman,
Hela and the purple-robed version of
Death native to the
Marvel Universe, which, as the plots of other crossover comics have hinged upon, exists in the same continuum of
fictional universes as DC's. Marvel's version of Death appears alternatively as a coldly beautiful woman in a purple robe or a walking skeleton (sometimes male and sometimes female in form, depending upon the context). She made an appearance in the Marvel Universe, at the wedding of
Rick Jones and
Marlo Chandler in
The Incredible Hulk #418. She gifts the couple a hair brush (a pun referring to the phrase 'a brush with death'), and when Marlo asks if they have met, she answers "Briefly.", since Marlo was dead from
The Incredible Hulk #398 until #400. She then leaves to evade
Thanos. This appearance formed the basis of major storylines involving Marlo becoming
Death/Death taking Marlo's form, in particular "
Chaos War" and
Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider. ==In other media==