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K**S
Great finale to Spider-Man storie
I've spent many years reading thousands of various comicbooks, but never have I seen stories as good as these 60s classics. This is the best spider-man material you can get out there.Half of everything is superhero stuff you've come to expect - spider-man fighting baddies and investigating things. Other half - Peter Parker and his daily shenanigans. Surprisingly, Peter's part of stories is as, or even more interesting as Spidey's. They've managed to create a great ansable of characters, and their stories and developments are very enjoyable to follow. Peter's stuff has similar wibe to the show "Friends".They struck a perfect balance of things. It is light enough to entertain you, serious enough to have high stakes. It's not overly childlishly naive - as many of modern colorful comicbooks are. And it's not overly dark and depressive as modern "adult" books on spidey.First three volumes are all you need on Spidey, as this concludes Stan Lee's vision for the character. Sure, you might like it enough to buy volume 4, 5 etc, but expect quality to drop... So I'd advise against that.It is known that Stan Lee was primary writer and curator of majority of marvel titles from 1961 to 1972, until he was promoted. New role in the company left him no time to be involved in creative process. Luckily by then he lead most of his titles to satisfying soft stop - when character arcs are completed, but stories can be easily continued by someone else.This particular book is the same way - issues up to 99 were written by Stan Lee himself, they're coherent and well though-out. But the very next issue (100) is written by someone else, even though Stan Lee is credited as the writer. It is evident, as Peters actions contradict everything established previously and make no sense in context of a story.Get this - Green Goblin is alive and can appear any day now to hunt Peter down. He knows his secret identity, he knows his friends and relatives, and he is mad enough to hurt people around Peter to get to him. Why in the world would Peter decide to create "cure" and rid himself of his powers at a point like this? Is he trying to make sure he won't be able to save loved ones when this madman returns?So get my advice - read everything including issue 99, and consider the story to be complete. Anything past this point is written by considerably less talanted writers, who will do many bad things to beloved characters. You know, like, killing some girl who is very much based on Stan's wife, love of his life, light of his days, his muse, inspiration.In conclusion - the book is great, just make sure to skip questionable issues, and you'll have the best reading experience Spidey stuff can provide.
M**L
Cuidado com a lombada
A edição é espetacular. Para quem tem problemas com o padrão de lombada, essa edição vêm com um novo padrão, diferente do tradicional.
J**S
Sorprendente
Sorprendente y excelente
S**C
Amazing and Classic
This omnibus, along with the rest of the amazing Spider-Man series is fantastic. The art is fantastic, huge fan of John Romita Sr, and stans writing is great. I'm not a huge fan of old comic writing, its very in your face, not much subtext or nuance. If you're not a fan of old comic writing, this omnibus is still for you. The amazing Spider-Man is definitely the best written comics from the bronze/silver age. Absolutely worth the purchase, looks great and a fantastic read for years to come.
G**E
Excellentissime !
Pour tous les fans de Strange, la suite (non censurée) des aventures de celui qu'en Français on appelait l'(Homme-)Araignée. Du pur bonheur !.
Trustpilot
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