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Amazing Spider-Man, Vol. 1 (Marvel Masterworks)

Amazing Spider-Man, Vol. 1 (Marvel Masterworks)Author: Stan Lee
Creator: Steve Ditko
Publisher: Marvel
Category: Book

List Price: $24.99
Buy Used: $4.50
as of 9/4/2010 19:17 MDT details
You Save: $20.49 (82%)



New (10) Used (24) from $4.50

Seller: upatel10
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 37202

Media: Paperback
Pages: 272
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 7.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 0785136924
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785136927
ASIN: 0785136924

Publication Date: February 18, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Product Description
Celebrate Marvel's 70th anniversary by experiencing the tales of the world's most-famous super heroes from the very beginning! The Marvel Masterworks have brought readers deluxe hardcover collections of Marvel's classics from the Golden Age, Atlas Era, and the mighty Marvel Age, and now you can join in the Masterworks excitement with Marvel's new, monthly Marvel Masterworks trade paperbacks. And where better to start than where comics' most robust line of archival comic collections began - the Amazing Spider-Man! In 1962 in the pages of a comic book slated for cancellation, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko gave birth to one of the most-enduring icons in American popular culture - the one and only Amazing Spider-Man! Turning the concept of a super hero on its head, they imbued the young, guilt-ridden Peter Parker with the fantastic powers of an arachnid and the fantastic pressures of an everyday teenager. The combination was pure magic. So join us in the following pages as we present stories of spectacular web-slinging adventure from Spidey's very beginning, including the tragic origin that started it all, the first appearances of the Daily Bugle, J. Jonah Jameson, Doctor Octopus, the Sandman, the Vulture, Electro, and guest-star nods by the Fantastic Four and Human Torch. And to top it off, we've packed this volume full of bonuses galore, including the complete original artwork to Spider-Man's Amazing Fantasy #15 origin from the Library of Congress archives! Collects Amazing Fantasy #15 and The Amazing Spider-Man #1-10.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars The 20th Century's best comic book hero   August 9, 2010
B. E. Beechler (Indianapolis, IN United States)
By the early 60s, Stan Lee was pretty much sick of comic books. He had been working in the industry since he was a teen and the monster and romance books held little meaning to a man entering middle age. Then, in 1961, he wrote the comic he wanted to write figuring that if it didn't work, he was leaving comics anyway. Well, Fantastic Four was a hit and Stan and Jack Kirby began to create their own universe to play in. I think Stan stayed in, mainly, because for the first time ever he was getting feedback. And these weren't just letters from kids, students from places like Yale were stopping in the Marvel offices, wanting to talk to Stan...readers of Rolling Stone were talking about Marvel...Stan was feeling like what he was writing actually mattered to thinking people. While FF is the darling of the comics intelligentsia, especially big time Kirby fans, its family of characters still trail behind Peter Parker, the amazing Spider-Man, in the hearts of most folks. I think the genius of the character, from the minds of Stan and Steve Ditko, was that many of the known tropes of superhero comics were used, but were tilted in a way never fully explored before. Clark Kent lost his parents and was raised by an older, loving couple - check. Bruce Wayne's parents were killed by a street thug - check. An accident with radiation gave a person incredible powers (FF, Hulk) - check. Peter Parker had all of these...so what made him special? He didn't start out with goodness in his heart or a sense of justice...he had to learn it the hard way. That pushed Spidey closer to all of us. Because of the fantastic origin story of Spider-Man, Peter could never completely put himself above the petty crime, the greed, or the selfishness he fights against. Batman looks at a criminal and sees the person who took his parents. Superman can't understand man's inhumanity to man. But Pete knows, in his heart of hearts, that, while he didn't kill his beloved uncle, he certainly played an important part in the events that led to his murder. Peter Parker had to live with his aunt after those events...had to watch her mourn...and it had to twist his stomach. But...and this is important...Peter didn't let this make him sullen. He made a life-change and it launched him into action. To start out so tragically, but become so upbeat, a force for hope and goodness...that's what we love about the character and his adventures. And it certainly helped that 1) Stan, Steve, and John surrounded Peter with a fantastic cast of supporting characters (the best in mainstream comics) and 2) Stan wrote some great, laugh-out loud dialog accompanied by Ditko's strangely beautiful art and Romita's window into the New York of the 60s and 70s.

While Superman and Batman may still be the most iconic superheroes in the world, Peter Parker, the amazing Spider-Man, is the most human and, ultimately, the greatest creation of 20th century comic books.



5 out of 5 stars Marvel Fans, Read This.   May 5, 2010
Linda L. Getman
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

First off, this Marvel Masterwork (in paperback) is a spectacular restoration of the original comics of The Amazing Spider-Man from 1962-63. The artwork is incredible thanks to Steve Ditko and the storylines are also equally amazing, courtesy of Stan Lee. With 10 issues of fantastic adventures, this comic has proven itself not to dissapoint. Also, the price is so much lower than a bookstore close to me. It is a great deal and it is also something good to read if you wanna slip out of reality for an hour. This Marvel Masterwork is the start of a tremendous age, and it is still 1 of the best ones you'll ever read today. I just ordered Fantastic Four, by the way. I'm expecting them to come in soon (I think on May 10th, can't wait!) Look for my reviews on other Marvel Masterworks for some helpful shopping advice. (Only Paperbacks)


5 out of 5 stars The foundation   April 7, 2009
Andre M. (Mt. Pleasant, SC United States)
8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Spidey fans, this is the foundation-in affordable form.

These are the original stories from 1962-63 that brought the Spider Man legend to the world.

This is where we meet Peter Parker, see how the whole story started with our man being bitten by a radioactive Spider, how PP hooked up with J. Jonah Jamison and his rival Flash Thompson, and what happened to his Unle ben, who was never seen again after his initial appearance.

In 1962-63, this was avant-garde stuff because it presented Peter Parker in a manner that the mostly geeky teenage boys who read such books could truly relate more than they cared to admit. PP is the target of bullies, girls avoid him, adults don't understand him, and the world just isn't ready for him. Even as superhero Spidey, he's still the same mistake-prone geek. This was revoutionary at the time and accounted for much of his early appeal.

So read and see how the legend began in an economical format. Enjoy.



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