Celebrate the career of a true Marvel Visionary! Best known as the co-creator of the amazing Spider-Man, Steve Ditko illustrated Spidey's adventures for four years and introduced dozens of classic villains. But even as he infused Spider-Man's world with grounded realism, Ditko took readers on mind-bending romps through twisted and mystical realms with another massively popular co-creation, Doctor Strange! Plus, Ditko's unmatched creative vision is on full display with the debuts of Squirrel Girl and Speedball - and scores of rarely seen fantasy and sci-fi work from Marvel's Atlas Era!
Stephen J. "Steve" Ditko was an American comic book artist and writer best known as the co-creator of the Marvel Comics heroes Spider-Man and Doctor Strange.
He was inducted into the comics industry's Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1990, and into the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 1994.
This was, overall, a Good Read. Ditko is a creator that either people love or hate. I've always liked his style. It's different and completely his...no one else can do "Ditko" when they try it looks bad.... Not only to I like his art style, I'm also a fan of him, personally. He's live his life to his standard, and he's tried not to comprised too much. The book has lots of stories that I've never read before...never was a big fan of Doc Strange, so reading those was something new for me...glad to see it included the intro of Clea and the Dreaded Dormammu! The highlight of this book was the Spider-man story, from issue #31-33. This is one of the greatest Spider-Man stories, ever. Heck, it's one of the greatest comic books stories ever...people have been giving Stan Lee some flack lately....this story, based on a plot by Ditko, but the dialogue is all Stan, shows how he worked with different talent...Stan brought to the story what was needed, and step away to let the artist do there thing... Anyways. This is a book that any serious collector should have, unless they own the original books...
The Amazing Spider-Man and Doctor Strange stories are the best of the stories included, and the early sci-fi stuff he and Stan Lee did was new to me. Book is a nice showcase of Ditko's talent.
I've never held Ditko in the same regard as some of the other great "founding father" comic artists, but hoped this collection would change that or give me something new to appreciate. No such luck. Don't get me wrong, the three issue Spider-Man arc here (culminating with the classic "lifting tons of machinery" scene) might be the definitive Spidey story and his trippy take on Dr. Strange has been the bedrock of anything mystic in the Marvel Universe ever since. But the guy also created Speedball and Squirrel Girl.
The early sci-fi stories are a rarely seen bit of history, but not particularly entertaining and the hodgepodge of superhero stuff seems like filler, lacking any real standout qualities. Ditko's philosophy and the way it shaped his storytelling is the most interesting thing about the man and it is never addressed here, the most glaring omission in a collection in need of substance.
I don't adore Ditko's art style, but he drew a LOT of classic Marvel stores, so this is quite a trip down memory lane. It's also fun to see how often Stan Lee used to inject himself and Ditko into their own stories in the early days.
Some great stuff here, particularly the Spider-Man issues #31-33 and all of the Doctor Strange stories. The rest of it varies wildly, including some okay stuff and some real dreck (most of which is the fault of the writer, not Ditko).