While Steve Ditko & Stan Lee may have created Spider-Man it was John Romita Sr who defined him Romita came to the book as a replacement for Steve Ditko bringing his clean romantic style of illustration to the book Romita once expected Ditko to return to the book within a few months & when he didn't history was truly made A history that is now fully explored by writer Tom Spurgeon & this presentation of the definitive book
- lavishly illustrated with classic & unseen art -- starring Jazzy John Romita! From his days before Marvel through the Sliver Age & his days designing & creating the characters we know & love still today (including Wolverine the Punisher & many many more) Romita Generations covers it all Spurgeon's exhaustive interview
Includes:: not only Romita Sr but the second beloved artist in the family John Romita Jr! About Tom Spurgeon Tom Spurgeon is one of North America's best-known experts on the comic strip & comic book art forms & the industries that service them The son of a newspaperman in East Central Indiana Tom & his brothers helped their father select new strips for the paper's comic-book page making the Muncie Star-Press one of the first publications to carry " Calvin & Hobbes" & " The Far Side" as well as sone of the few to carry " Rudy" After receiving a broad education at Washington & Lee University & a focused one at Garrett seminary on the campus of Northwestern University Tom worked briefly for QVC Inc Drawing on experience in his nepotism-fueled career as a beat writer editor & entertainment reporter Tom in 1994 took the position of managing editor at The Comics Journal in Seattle Washington Tom edited the Journal for five years first as managing editor & then as executive editor During that time the magazine won multiple industry awards increased its focus on world comics & encouraged the comics community to see small press & mini-comics as legitimate artistic outlets rather than a training ground for traditionally published works In forcing the magazine to build on the breadth & depth of its coverage Tom helped improve the magazine's general mainstream profile as one of American Arts' most unique & valuable publications When literary comics began to make a major impact in the late 1990s the Journal was the gateway publication for many editors & writers to understand the phenomenon Tom also edited the magazine's infamous " Stan Lee issue" (October 1995) & helped launch its popular companion Web site In 1999 Tom left the magazine to become a freelancer He remains a columnist reviewer & occasional newsman for the publication he previously edited He has written about comics & a variety of arts-related subjects for Suckcom Feed The Stranger & more than a dozen newspapers & regional magazines From 1999 to 2002 he wrote the critically lauded newspaper comic strip " Wildwood" which enjoyed a daily presence in more than 18 million homes He currently lives in Silver City New Mexico