So, I figured that I’d share with all’y’all my thoughts on a bunch of funybooks I’ve recently read. (Just so everyone understands, I’ve been reading comics since around ’61 or so, with much of my early reading done while sitting on the newsstand of my uncle’s grocery store. It was him that called them “Funnybooks” and that name stuck with me so much that when I launched my comicbook imprint, I called it Funnybook City.) But I digress.
To return to the topic at hand,
the comics I picked up most recently. First up, issues 1–5 of Your
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man (which tie into the eponymous Disney+ series—I’ll review the Disney+
series in a different post). While the comic and the animated series each
follow a slightly different path, they both focus in on a somewhat divergent
path. Each of them telling the tale of our favorite wallcrawler (According to
Google, the series (for both the comic and the TV show, independent of each
other) is set in an alternate MCU timeline, specifically one that closely
mirrors the main MCU but with key differences, making it a “What If?” scenario. It’s
not considered part of the main 616 universe but is still part of the larger
Marvel multiverse. The show is designed to explore a Spider-Man story
within an MCU-like setting without directly impacting the main
continuity.
To be sure, the core of both the
comic and the streaming series are that Peter is in high school, gets bitten by
an irradiated spider, and gains the proportionate strength of a spider, then
sets out to do good. The comic is written by Christos Gage and illustrated by
Eric Gapstur, and it retells the origin of Spider-Man, but in a simpler style
targeted towards a younger audience (ironically enough, presumably targeted to
an audience the same age I was when I first began reading comics in 1962.)
The origin is mostly the same
(young Peter, an irradiated spider) with the addition of some new twists and
friends; Nico Minoru, her foster mom, Susan O’Hara, a (much) younger Aunt May,
as well as existing in a modern timeframe. Some old characters are also
reintroduced, but in updated versions (Silvermane, Man Mountain Marko, The
Enforcers). Also, Peter’s first Spider-Costume is very retro different (a tank
on his back with web fluid and long tubes conveying the fluid to his
wrist-shooters).
Having recently watched (and reviewed)
Thunderbolts* I picked up
the first two issues of the newest comicbook incarnation of their comicbook. It
wasn’t until I got them home that I realized that the comic actually came out
in 2024. Still, upon reading it I discovered that (while I had read various
runs of the previous incarnations of this title, I was still a bit surprised by
the nature of this version of the team. Just in case you have only seen the
film, let me do a quick recap of the comic here.
A little bit of comicbook history
In this ’24 version of the team (by
Jackson Lanzing & Collin Kelly as writers, and Geraldo Borges as artist) we
are presented with a roster that was quite similar to the cinematic version of
the team. Here, the team consists of Bucky (as team leader), a Life Model Decoy
of Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, Sharon Carter as the Destroyer, and Red
Guardian, with Black Widow (in a new spidery costume) joining them in issue #2.
The White Widow, Chang-Chi, and The Captain (John Walker) also join the team during
the series four-issue run.
The two issues we read were so
good that we were honestly disappointed to learn that the series was over and
we were unable to find the other two issues or the trade paperback edition
either. Still, it was a really cool spy/assassin and anti-hero team, and we
really did enjoy the two issues we read (we may try to fine the other two
issues moving forward).
That will teach me to spend just
a little more time pursuing the book before actually buying it. Sigh.














