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Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #28-#30 , Martian Manhunter: American Secrets , James Bond 007: Serpent's Tooth (Dark Horse Comics), Spawn (Image Comics) [ 2 ] Lovern Kindzierski / Digital Chameleon
However, in 1995, Marvel editor Danny Fingeroth decided a story gap existed between Amazing Fantasy #15 and The Amazing Spider-Man #1. In an attempt to fill that gap, Marvel published three Spider-Man flashback stories in Amazing Fantasy #16–18 (Dec. 1995 – March 1996), each written by Kurt Busiek and painted chiefly by Paul Lee. [11]
Spider-Man Comic Book Library: Amazing Fantasy #15, The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 1 #1–9: TOPICS Entertainment/Graphic Imaging Technology: CD-ROM: Spider-Man – Unmasked: The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 1 #430–441; The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 2 #1–58, The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 3 #500–539; Annual 1998–2001: Allegro Music exclusive ...
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).
This saw the application of the art and logo to the likes of lunchboxes, 3-D puffy stickers, party supplies, paintable figurines, Underoos, coloring and activity books (Secret of the Frozen City, Superman, Lex Luthor, The Joker, Batman, The Penguin, Wonder Woman, Villains, Superman and Batman, and Superman and the Super Powers), The Super ...
This line featured Batman, Robin, and The Huntress, but also included other DC Comics characters including Superman, Green Lantern, The Flash and others. This was the first line of DC Comics character figures released by Kenner since the Super Powers Collection line of figures ended 10 years earlier.
Batman is an ongoing American comic book series featuring the DC Comics superhero Batman as its protagonist. The character, created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, [2] first appeared in Detective Comics #27 (cover dated May 1939).
Brisson has been making comics for over twenty years. He began writing, drawing, coloring, and lettering his own work and selling them through records shops [4] before focusing on writing and self-publishing Murder Book, a series of crime comics, in 2010, with the first two stories illustrated by Simon Roy. [5]