Prowler #3 – REVIEW
Three issues in, Prowler reaches the midpoint of its opening arc. At this point, writer Sean Ryan and artist Jamal Campbell try to build some momentum through this story to carry this
Three issues in, Prowler reaches the midpoint of its opening arc. At this point, writer Sean Ryan and artist Jamal Campbell try to build some momentum through this story to carry this
With Spidey #12, writer Robbie Thompson and artist Nathan Stockman close out the all-ages-friendly series, giving readers a nice, shiny bow on top of the gift of the previous eleven issues.
This is how you end a comic book series. Not only do Mike Costa and David Baldeon tie up all of the loose ends in Web Warriors #11, but they left
If you scoffed at Peter Parker’s rather immediate adoption of the mysterious, villainous-looking, cloned organ-making company New U in the previous issue of Amazing Spider-Man, then writer Dan Slott and fill-in penciller R.B.
Spidey #8 brings Electro to the Spider-Man themed, new-reader-friendly party. Of course it’s the old, starfish-on-his-face Electro, but Max Dillon seeks to light up the wallcrawler’s life (and not in a
Swinging from the page to the screen, Spider-Man has been the focus of five feature films over the years. But what about the comics that inspired these movies? Join me
Picking up where Web Warriors #5 left off, Earth-803 greets readers into a plan set by Spider-UK and Lady Spider. The latter is the webslinger calling this Earth home, while the former
Ultimate Spider-Man: Spider-Verse has been a title with moderate highs and steep lows. The story arc lost steam as it marched toward the final confrontation between Spider-Man and the Goblin, but with the fourth
Earth-803, a world of steam, is where readers find the majority of our webslingers when Web Warriors #4 opens. Written by Mike Costa, drawn by David Baldeon, inked by Walden
I could make a joke and say that Web Warriors #2 is electric or that this comic, written by Mike Costa with art by David Baldeon and inkers Livesay and