"Wow. You made Spider-Man sad, congratulations. I stabbed The Hulk last week"
Wolverine, Venom Annual # 1 (2018)
Nobody does it better by Jeff Loveness
"I am Thou, Thou Art I"
Persona
It's often gone to people who wrote the character before on a satellite book.
Gerry Conway had written Spider-Man in Marvel Team-Up before taking over from Stan Lee.
Len Wein had written Spider-Man in Marvel Team Up before taking over from Gerry Conway.
Roger Stern has written Spider-Man in Peter Parker the Spectacular Spider-Man before taking over from Denny O'Neil.
David Michelinie had written Spider-Man in Web of Spider-Man before taking over from Tom DeFalco.
JM DeMatteis had written Spider-Man in Marvel Team Up and Spectacular Spider-Man before taking over from David Michelinie.
Tom DeFalco came on-board for a second run.
Howard Mackie had written Spider-Man/ Peter Parker Spider-Man before they brought him to Amazing Spider-Man for the 1998 relaunch.
Dan Slott had a Spider-Man/Human Torch mini-series before he was one of the web-heads during the Brand New Day era, at which point he stuck around as the main writer.
Aspiring Spider-Man writers can have different attitudes about how they approach the character. Dan Slott took every chance he could to write guest-star appearances. Nick Spencer avoided telling stories with Spider-Man, so that his take on the character would be a bigger deal.
Sincerely,
Thomas Mets
Well that depends on how you define a Satellite book. Your approach is a little too big tent. To me a satellite Spider-Man is a title that like ASM focuses on Spider-Man and his supporting cast but tells a story parallel to and in a different form in comparison to ASM.
Marvel Team-Up doesn't count. Miniseries and so on also don't count.
For me satellite titles are Spectacular, Web of Spider-Man, Friendly Neighborhood, Sensational, and so on. A satellite title is ongoing.
By that light only Stern, Michelinie qualify as writers who went from satellites to main and did lengthy runs. JMD is another example but he wrote as part of the Clone Saga writing team and his run didn't feature stories that he completely directed as Michelinie did before him.
What I'm trying to say is that I've read basically everything He's written for Marvel:I enjoyed Thanos quite a bit (there are some problems with it, though), his Venom was great for a long time, but Has greatly dropped in quality, his Death of Inhumans was mediocre, his GotG was mediocre too (lots of promises, but it did go nowhere fast, and He realized he doesn't know how to write team books, which is, by itself, a severe limitation in writing skills), SS:Black was really good, and his Thor started well (nothing more than that) .
Comparing Thor and Venom, he rehashes themes (something that has been criticized in quite a few reviews) with "dark gods" and all that. Also, another critic is that he always shoves his pet creations, like Cosmic Ghost Rider and Knull, basically in everything He writes.
The final critic is that He's not exactly great with continuity and it's extremely awful in some aspects, like power levels, for example.
So I could say, imo of course, his current/recent work has been good, at best, but mostly mediocre. I realized that it has to do with his limitations as a writer and his lack of range. See, I've read most of his more than once work to be fair in my analysis, so that's my conclusion.
Again, just my opinion.
Last edited by Revolutionary_Jack; 09-28-2020 at 06:47 PM.
Chip Zdarksy or Christopher Yost. Yost is criminally underrated. I also like Tom Taylor.
I’d actually prefer if Cates was the writer in this case. He might actually write good supernatural stories for Spider-Man.
I would love more concrete lore on Spider-Totems than leaving everything open-ended.
Cates for a few years would be nice. Have no issues with his writing of more “street books” his Venom is great. It’s where he has bigger power levels where he wavers abit.
how about a robot duplicate of nick spencer, a robo spencer, if you will. other potential names include but are not limited to: whirr-click! spencer, nick spencgear, it's 7am and i havent slept what is my life, and beep bop boop bip spencer
I don't blind date I make the direct market vibrate
I am someone who is Spider-Man exclusive, so I am far from knowledgeable about other comics. What I do like ( so far), is Spencer ( especially when compared to the two previous writers). I want someone who can keep Spencer’s continuity while putting his ( or her) own stamp on the comic. My question is who fits those criteria?