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298 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 1, 2005


The first half of this volume--the Carnage story--is the best Ultimate Spider-man story yet. This is the pinnacle of the "power and responsibility" theme that motivates the whole series. Anyone who knows much about the Spider-man mythology knows what has to eventually happen to Gwen Stacy. But when that thing that has to happen actually does happen, it's so unexpected, quick, and shocking that it's truly heart-rending. (It's also nice that the Ultimate version has so altered things that I had no idea how this event was going to happen--or if it would in this version.) This event is the catalyst that sends Peter into his deepest and darkest sense of guilt, confronting yet again the idea that by doing good in a cruel world, he will bring harm to people around him, harm that he is given no chance to stop. There's a simplicity in this arc that makes it powerful, and I found myself thinking about the many times that I've felt in my role as a leader that I've made wrong choices, or seen bad things happen that I can trace back to decisions I've made. Bendis has hit on a universal feeling in this story. The ending, with Peter's "People suck and it's never going to change" being challenged by Mary Jane's beautiful optimism--"Yes, it will...Because of people like you. You don't know that?"--and an ending that leaves the big questions open, is fantastic. I don't know if Ultimate Spider-man will ever top this story, but nothing that came before comes close to this one.
I know that Bendis didn't want to do a Carnage story, and quite a few elements that he rejected for the Venom story show up here--which, sadly, shows the power of the publisher over the creative artists--but it does work well here. I especially liked the DNA connection between Carnage and the Parkers--an idea that has been taken up in The Amazing Spider-man 2 film.
The weighty Carnage story is followed by a comedy story in which Peter and Wolverine change bodies. It makes no sense (especially the resolution), but it's funny enough for two issues. The third story in this volume involves Johnny Storm from the Fantastic Four attending high school with Peter. I don't know what it has to do with anything; maybe it ties into the Fantastic Four story in some important way, but it doesn't have much to do with Spider-man. It brings up Liz's mutant-phobia again--a story element that has been playing in the background with no substantial payoff for a long time. The concluding story features Doctor Strange, and is as weird and trippy as any Doctor Strange story is likely to be. It doesn't play long enough to really make sense, and it's kind of ruined by Mary Jane dressing like a streetwalker for a "fancy date." (Will these teenage girls ever wear shirts that cover their stomachs??)
(I like that the dustjacket flap says "The fifth deluxe hardcover in the Ultimate Spider-Man series.")