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Webspinners was created in 1999 after a consolidation of Marvel's Spider-Man comics line that saw cancellations and relaunches of the existing ongoing series. The title was conceived as a new anthology series that was divided into multi-issue story arcs, each of which featured a different creative team and told a story from a different part of Spider-Man's history.
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 ...
"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.
Spider-Man story arcs could be found in titles such as The Amazing Spider-Man, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Web of Spider-Man, Spider-Man Unlimited, and Peter Parker: Spider-Man. During the 21st century, the more popular Spider-Man story arcs would mostly be found in The Amazing Spider-Man, with some arcs taking as long as a year to complete.
"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.
No. 8 of the Marvel Pocket Novels. Written by Paul Kupperberg. [7] [8] The plot concerns a TV anchorman whose daughter has been kidnapped by the Kingpin, who has forced the popular media frontsman to stand as Mayor.
Viva Spider-Man is a student film and Spider-Man fan film created in 1980 [2] based on the animated series Spider-Man from 1967. [3] It is based on the episodes "King Pinned" [4] and "Criminals in the Clouds". [5] The film's creator, Jim Kreig would later go on to be a writer for Spider-Man: The Animated Series. [1] [6] [7]