Spider-Gwen #17 – REVIEW
If I haven’t already made it clear before now, I really enjoyed “Spider-Women” both on its own terms and as an example of how to do a proper inter-title crossover.
If I haven’t already made it clear before now, I really enjoyed “Spider-Women” both on its own terms and as an example of how to do a proper inter-title crossover.
Stop me if you’ve heard this one: Two Peters, two Gwens and an MJ walk into a food court… Spectacular Spider-Snark is an irreverent and irrelevant look at the world of your
I realize it’s easy for readers to make the assumption that Miles is getting consistently overshadowed by other characters in the various narrative arcs since his introduction into the “proper”
It was just last month when I was praising James Latour’s continued ability to make the “Spider-Women” crossover a relevant part of her mythos and not just a commercial crossover. Since then,
No one validates the phrase “You can’t judge a book by its cover” like Marvel does. Given the passionate image that graces the front of this issue of Spider-Man, you could
Blasted out of the sky in the previous issue, the young Champions team finds themselves in peril over the Atlantic Ocean in the opening pages of Champions #4. Written by
Spider-Man stories, by and large, tend to be at their best when they’re focused on characters first, and there is never any shortage of opportunities to find a particular character,
SPOILER WARNING: This review contains MAJOR spoilers for the Civil War II series. Sigh. At least Civil War II is over now. Unfortunately, Brian Michael Bendis could have ended this thing six months ago.
While the unabashed nonsense that is Marvel’s fetish for plodding, overarching, “universe- changing” events continues with Civil War II, many a title gets sucked in to service that narrative. These kinds
I’ve seen Spidey selling PS4s & floating down Broadway on Thanksgiving, and it’s only a matter of time before we get the first “Homecoming” teaser. So is it too much