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The "Duane trilogy" is a trilogy of Spider-Man books by Diane Duane, Spider-Man Super Thriller is a young adult novel series by several writers, the Doom's Day trilogy is a series of books by several authors, X-Men and Spider-Man: Time's Arrow is another trilogy by Tom DeFalco with a co-writer on each book and the latest Spider-Man book series ...
Consists of the books Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk: Doom's Day Book One: Rampage (1996), Spider-Man and Iron Man: Doom's Day Book Two: Sabotage (1997) and Spider-Man and Fantastic Four: Doom's Day Book Three: Wreckage (1997).
"The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man" is a Spider-Man story written by Roger Stern, originally published in The Amazing Spider-Man #248 in 1984. In the story, a young fan of Spider-Man meets his hero. [1] This comic was selected as one of the "Top 10 Spider-Man stories of all time" by Wizard [2] and is regarded as among the most-loved Spider-Man ...
The Amazing Spider-Man 2: The Movie Storybook. Illustrated by Andy Smith. Marvel Press. ISBN 9781423197577. Curtis, Grant (2007). The Spider-Man Chronicles: The Art and Making of Spider-Man 3. Chronicle Books. ISBN 9780811857772. Gross, Edward (2002). Spider-Man Confidential: From Comic Icon to Hollywood Hero. Hyperion. ISBN 9780786887224.
Skeleton of a Spider-Man clone - Found in a smokestack [4] Doppelganger - A mystical duplicate created by Magus. Elliot Tolliver - A proto-clone with mind of Doctor Octopus in a clone body of Peter Parker and of Otto Octavius. [5] Spider-Man (Isotope Genome Accelerator version) - A duplicate separated from Peter Parker by the Isotope Genome ...
Spider-Man fights Morbius, and Morbius later decides to leave to avoid the daylight. Dr. McKay does her own exposition, then Lizard turns up again. Spider-Man loses the fight with him, and Lizard gets to drag the chemist off to the sewers. Spidey gets knocked out and while unconscious is returned to his apartment. Mary Jane helps patch him up a ...
Some fans write fan fiction ("fanfic"), stories based on the universe and characters of their chosen fandom. This fiction can take the form of video-making as well as writing. [25] Fan fiction may or may not tie in with the story's canon; sometimes fans use the story's characters in different situations that do not relate to the plot line at all.
"Flowers for Rhino" is a Spider-Man story by Peter Milligan and Duncan Fegredo. Published in 2001, it is a pastiche of the science fiction story Flowers for Algernon . "Flowers for Rhino" appeared in Spider-Man's Tangled Web #5–6.