The following is a review of the graphic novel “Spider-Gwen:
Ghost-Spider: Edge of Spider-Verse” as presented in Marvel Modern Era Epic
Collection format.
We all know the story. Peter Parker was bitten by a
radioactive spider and gained spider powers and became Spider-Man. Well, on
Earth-65, Gwen Stacy was bitten by a radioactive spider and became Spider-Woman.
She has adhesive fingertips and toes, the proportional speed, strength and
agility of a spider, and a precognitive awareness of danger. She also created
web shooters. She uses her powers to fight crime.
Her best friend Peter Parker became obsessed with
Spider-Woman. He wanted to be “special” too, so he created a serum intended to
give him powers, and he became the Lizard. Spider-Woman battled the Lizard, not
knowing it was her best friend. At the end of the battle, Peter sustained a
fatal injury. He reverted back to his human form. Spider-Woman was seen then
and was blamed for the death of Peter Parker and became a wanted fugitive. Gwen’s
father, George Stacy, is the police captain and lead the hunt for Spider-Woman.
Gwen and her friends Mary Jane Watson, Glory Grant and
Betty Brant formed the band the Mary Janes, for which Gwen became the drummer.
On the night of the Mary Janes’ big gig, Captain Stacy was in attendance.
Captain Stacy was responsible for putting away the former Kingpin of Crime in
New York City, Wilson Fisk, but the new Kingpin, Fisk’s lawyer Matthew Murdock,
planned to take down both Spider-Woman and Captain Stacy, so he hired a thug
name Aleksei Sytsevich, also known as the Rhino, to attack the concert. Spider-Woman
defeated the Rhino, but was cornered by Captain Stacy. Out of desperation, Gwen
unmasked. Captain Stacy let Gwen go.
A new villain soon appeared, Adrian Toomes, the Vulture,
equipped with a flight suit. Captain Stacy found himself taken off the
Spider-Woman case and was replaced by Frank Castle, a cop with a more
aggressive approach at policing. Gwen found herself at odds with the Mary Janes
after disappearing during their big break. Gwen sought the Vulture down,
engaged him in battle and was defeated badly. The Kingpin made a deal with the
Vulture to try to do the job the Rhino failed to do and attacked Captain Stacy
in his own house. The Vulture struck just when Gwen and her father were attempting
to reconcile. During the climax of the confrontation, Frank Castle arrived and
fought Spider-Woman. Gwen won, but not before being unmasked by Castle, who was
surprised to see that Spider-Woman was “just a girl.” Following this, on a
guilt trip, Gwen paid a visit to May and Ben Parker, Peter’s Aunt and Uncle.
May was becoming convinced the Spider-Woman may not have been responsible for
Peter’s death, giving Gwen a confidence boost. She was then able to reconcile
with the Mary Janes and perform with them again. Detective Jean DeWolff was
then put on the Spider-Woman case. The Mary Janes got another big gig staged, opening
for Felicia Hardy and the Black Cats. Felicia was also a high profile burglar
on the Kingpin’s radar, and Murdock thought this was a perfect opportunity to
take Felicia out, so he sent a squad of Ninjas after her, prompting Spider-Woman’s
presence and a face-to-face between the Kingpin and Spider-Woman, revealing to
Gwen just who her true enemy was.
Gwen tried to be responsible and got a job at the Dollar
Dog, which was regularly held up by Gwen’s “nemesis” the Bodega Bandit, but the
Bodega Bandit got more than he bargained for when the store was attacked by
reptilian humans, similar to Peter Parker’s Lizard form. This led Gwen to an
investigation, where she encountered Samantha Wilson, the legendary superhero Captain
America. The encounter did not go well for Gwen as Captain America believed Spider-Woman
to be a murderer. The two battled both each other and more Lizard creatures, and
Gwen was able to escape. Gwen and the Mary Janes went on a retreat to a lake
house owned by Mary Jane’s Aunt Anna, where Gwen reunited with her old friend
Harry Osborn. Harry, Peter and Gwen had played role-playing games, and Harry
had earned the nickname “the Green Goblin,” for being rich, a name Peter loved
to use but Harry hated. Harry had been blaming himself for Peter’s death. Harry
had made a romantic advance on Gwen before prom when Peter used the serum to
become the Lizard. Still, Harry swore revenge against Spider-Woman and used his
father’s company’s technology to become the super villain the Green Goblin. During
the battle between Spider-Woman and the Green Goblin, Harry took the Lizard
serum. Captain America arrived on the scene, and the three battled, leading Cap
to realize that Spider-Woman just might not be so bad after all. And tired of
all the hypocrisy, George Stacy quit the police force.
Gwen travelled to Earth-616, where her fellow Spider-heroes
Jessica Drew, that reality’s Spider-Woman and Cindy Moon, also known as Silk,
lived. They just wanted to have a regular breakfast, so Gwen suggested a nice
place on Earth-65, Clowntown. Jessica was a brand-new mom. Cindy had been
locked away in a bunker for ten years to hide from a group of evil beings who
would have killed her if they had been able to locate her, and her parents had
passed away and her brother had gone missing. Despite trying to have a normal
girl’s breakfast, the Spider-Women were called into battle when a robot called
the Super-Adaptoid attacked. While suiting up, the evil organization known as
S.I.L.K. watched and stole Gwen’s dimensional transporter, trapping the three
Spider-Woman on Earth-65. Cindy’s curiosity got the better of her and she decided
to see if her family existed in this reality. In fact, they did, but it turned
out that in this reality, Cindy was the director of S.I.L.K. She was rich, she
was evil, but she didn’t have superpowers. Jessica went to search for the transporter
and found out it had been taken by Earth-65’s version of her, Jesse Drew, who
was a high ranking Agent of S.I.L.K. Cindy-65 used the transporter to go to
Earth-616 and steal technology from Stark Tower, Alchemax and Parker Industries
to try to gain powers of her own. Cindy-65 was able to use her technology to
rob Gwen of her spider powers, powers that she claimed she had responsibility for.
It all came down to a final battle between the heroic Spider-Women and the evil
Cindy Moon of Earth-65.
Okay, I haven’t done one of these in a long time, my
laptop died last year, and I moved and haven’t been able to settle down and
post on this website. I’m probably going to be doing these a little differently
than I used to because of that, so my regular readers will have to forgive my
changes, but I hope they’re welcome changes. So, let’s start with my opinion on
the book. First off, I remember reading “Edge of Spider-Verse” #2 in 2014 and I
was floored. What a unique concept! Taking a character who is ill-fated in just
about every other universe and making her the hero was just brilliant! We’re
all just so used to Peter Parker being Spider-Man that we never stopped the
think that, what if maybe it was Gwen Stacy who got bitten by the spider? I
will, however, say that the title of this book is a misnomer. If you’re looking
to get a “Spider-Verse” graphic novel, this is NOT one. “Spider-Gwen” was
introduced in “Edge of Spider-Verse” #2, and that issue is in this book, but
none of the other issues have anything to do with Spider-Verse, unless you want
to consider the “Spider-Women” storyline a “Spider-Verse” story, which I guess
you technically could, but it’s officially not. And the “Edge of Spider-Verse”
issue is also the first issue in the book. I think the title was chosen simply
as a marketing ploy as they thought that would sell, especially since this
graphic novel was released around the same time as “Spider-Man: Across the
Spider-Verse” was getting ready for its theatrical release. This book also
contains the original five issue limited series “Spider-Gwen” which was tested
and actually succeeded, as well as the first eight issues of the “Spider-Gwen”
ongoing series, and the crossover issues of the “Spider-Women” story arc. Okay,
getting back on track, having Peter Parker die as an origin story is pretty rare,
it’s only ever happened a few times, but in this way, for Gwen, having Peter
being her best friend, it means more. It did bother me, however, that “with
their great power comes an even greater responsibility” was said by J. Jonah
Jameson. Jameson is such a minor character in this book, he has such little
panel time, and his presence rarely means much, so for him to say such an
iconic line, it takes away from the meaning a bit, in my opinion. We all know
Uncle Ben said it originally, and Uncle Ben is alive on Earth-65, couldn’t he
have imparted it to Peter and have had Peter say it to her? That would have had
so much more meaning in my opinion. I say “in my opinion” all the time because
I respect that you may or may not agree with me, and I actually invite you to
disagree with me, that’s the beauty of the human mind, we can think what we
want, I’m just saying what I feel. I also liked how the writers made Earth-65’s
Captain America an African American female. Now THAT is unique. I also felt
like the villain choices for Gwen’s first outings were adequate. None of them
were too overpowered that it made it unbelievable that a novice could beat
them. I liked the Kingpin twist, too. Having Matt Murdock, who we all know as
Daredevil and we all know always battles the Kingpin, actually BE the Kingpin was
(again) unique. I know I’m using that word a lot in this review, but let’s face
it, this reality IS unique, unlike anything we’ve ever seen before, there’s
really no other word for it. Now, of course, we have to talk about the costume.
The costume design is interesting, not going to lie, but there’s just something
about it I don’t quite like, I just can’t quite say what it is. It doesn’t look
like any other Spider-hero costume, so it really stands out, but I don’t think
I will ever call it iconic. As for the stories themselves, I thought they were
well written, I highly enjoyed them, I would give this book a near perfect score…
except for the art. Hate to say it, but I’m just not a big fan of the artwork
in this book. I’m not saying I think the artwork is bad, I see that some of the
artists are going for a kind of stylization, and it just doesn’t appeal to me.
Now, I usually talk about accessibility, or how easy it
is to just pick up a book if you know nothing about the characters. Yes, this
is a first appearance book, and I do think it’s accessible to new readers. I know
Silk is a relatively obscure character, her story in “Spider-Women” might be a
little hard to pick up on if you don’t know anything about her, but I don’t
think it’s a true obstacle. There are details that are missing because Epic
Collections don’t actually contain events, because again, this is NOT a “Spider-Verse”
book, but it’s relatively self-contained. I think if you’ve never read a Marvel
comic book before and are looking for a place to start, this one is decent enough
to pick, as it’s the start of a new reality, but I’m not saying it’s the best
pick.
Okay, I know I’ve been going on for a while, so I’ll get
to the most important part: my numeric score. My regulars know how this works,
but for my new readers, I’ll explain. I score on a scale of one to ten. One means
it’s trash and don’t go within five feet of it, ten means run out and buy it the
second after you read the word “ten.” You’ve probably gathered by now, though,
that ten isn’t going to happen. I have to take EVERYTHING into account when I
score. So, put it all together, story and art, I give this book… drumroll
please… EIGHT! Like I said, the story would have been near perfect, but I had
to detract due to art.
Next, I’ll tell you if I recommend this book. Yes, I
recommend this book. If you’re a Marvel fan of any kind, comics or film, and want
a unique, fresh, new kind of read, this is your book. But again, this IS NOT “Spider-Verse,”
so don’t go expecting that.
Okay, I’ve totally droned on for way too long now, it’s
time to end this. If you’re still here reading this, you are THE BEST! But until
next time, which will be soon, I guarantee it, Tim Cubbin… out!
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