Since BND seems to be a "jump the shark" moment for so many here, I was just curious as to when everyone's favorite period for Spider-Man was.
Or, to think of it another way, when were you happiest reading Spider-Man?
The early days-- Stan and Steve!
Stan and John Romita SR!
The 70's-- Spectacular and Team Up Arrive!
The 80's-- Web of Spider-Man is here!
1989-Mid-90's-- Arrival of Venom, McFarlane, Larsen, Bagley!
Late 90's-- Clone Saga, Peter's Parents Come Back, Aunt Man's Dead, Scarlet Spider...
Mackie and Byrne's Reboot-- Chapter One, New #1's...
The JMS Run-- Ezekial, Sins Past...
Brand New Day
Since BND seems to be a "jump the shark" moment for so many here, I was just curious as to when everyone's favorite period for Spider-Man was.
Or, to think of it another way, when were you happiest reading Spider-Man?
In no order.
When the Brand New Day stories started.(which made the Spidey stories funny again)
Reading Stan Lee stories in the Amazing Spider-Man title.
Reading Gerry Conway stories in the Amazing Spider-Man title.
And reading Spider-Man with a black costume after Secret Wars.
Pull List:Uncanny Avengers,Avengers,Superior Spider-Man,Daredevil,All New X-Men,Hawkeye,Captain America,Thor:God of Thunder,Swamp Thing,Morbius,Thunderbolts,Iron Man,Fatale.
In terms of my actual reading "career", it's right now, the Brand New Day stuff. In terms of overall quality I'd put the Lee/Ditko and Lee/Romita stuff above it, but those are both way before my time.
My actual start would be somewhere between the 80s and the 89/mid-90s option.
Matt, I just meant your favorite period of time to read.
I really enjoy that early stuff way more than anything after it. I feel "happiest" when reading the Lee/Romita SR years; the stories involve me more and are generally more exciting and fun.
However, I didn't start reading Spidey or any comics until the mid-80's.
Ranking time periods, I'd go
Lee/Romita
Lee/Ditko
Current
80s (mainly for Kraven's Last Hunt and the Death of Jean DeWolff)
early 90s (Michelinie/McFarlane/Larsen)
70s (Conway/Wein/Marvel Team-Up)
For me...
Lee/Romita
Lee/Ditko
Current
70s (Conway/Wein/Marvel Team-Up)
JMS/Romita JR (nothing after JR left)
early 90s (Michelinie/McFarlane/Larsen)
80s (mainly for Kraven's Last Hunt and the Death of Jean DeWolff)
Mackie/Byrne Reboot
I would say the quality of the titles was highest during the Stern era of the 1980's, roughly from #220 or so till the end of Stern's run. At this point the character and his supporting cast had developed enough to make them interesting, while not being as bogged down by continuity as they have often seemed in recent years. The fact that both books also had good creative teams during this time also helped.
Aside from that, a very underrated period in my opinion is the pre-reboot era that occurred directly after Ben Reilly's death. While four titles was perhaps overkill, each at least had a unique feel and direction, and had solid creative teams. Dematteis and Defalco are both Spider-Man legends, and Mackie was turning in some of the best work of his career. While Todd Dezago's run on Sensational is not generally very well thought of, I felt that he turned in some solid, fun stories that benefited from excellent art from the late Mike Wieringo.
Probably not one of the greatest Spider-Man era's, but certainly one of my favourites, and one that deserves a lot more praise than it seems to get.
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Latest Entry: Review: The Amazing Spider-Man
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Heh.....I assume by "Aunt Man's Dead" OP really meant "Aunt May" and not the Avenger......![]()
"What oldschool said"
The Shadow, 2008
It started right about here and went for 100 issues.
Perfect humility dispenses with modesty.
I agree 100% with your first paragraph. As for your second paragraph, well.....I think DeMatteis's run on Spectacular was the best of the four runs by far. DeFalco's return to ASM was very disappointing to me and Dezago had not much to work with on Sensational. Mackie is, to me, the worst writer to ever regularly work on a Spidey title.
"What oldschool said"
The Shadow, 2008
I agree that Mackie has turned in some horrible writing on occasion, but judged on its own merits his run on PPSM was very solid, helped of course by Jr Jr's art. Of course it had its problems, but I think Mackie succeeded at telling some good crime/noir type stories, the likes of which have rarely been seen in Spider-Man.
http://joshoncomics.blogspot.com/
Latest Entry: Review: The Amazing Spider-Man
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Jim Owsley= best Spider-Man editor ever...
80's era writers- rog. stern, tom defalco, ron frenz..
Spider-Man vs. Wolverine= best Spidey one-shot ever..
The 80s by far.
There was nothing better than the Hobgoblin era.
"DC editors in the sixties would have scoffed at the notion of a "brilliant" comic book. It was an oxymoron." - Jim Shooter
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