About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 89. Chapters: Fantastic Four, Priest, Avengers, Spider-Girl, Young Justice, Rebirth, Faeries' Landing, Inhumans, Fathom, Shaman King, Lenore, the Cute Little Dead Girl, Star Wars: Republic, DC One Million, Planetary, Wake, Quantum Mistake, Superman for All Seasons, Dungeon, JLA: The Nail, 300, Hardcore Station, Avengers Forever, Bleed, Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl & Batgirl, WildC.A.T.s/Aliens, Chasing Dogma, Tales of the Jedi: Redemption, Road to Perdition, Sheva's War, The Other Side of the Mirror, Volcana, Whiteout, Pantheon, Rocky, Spider-Man: Chapter One, The Dome: Ground Zero, Jack's Luck Runs Out, The Killer, Warhammer Monthly, Crimson, Jonny Double, Gear, Dead Corps, Torso, Rugrats, Age of Bronze, Nevada, Gen12, Batman/Aliens, Neil Gaiman's Only the End of the World Again, X-Men: The Manga. Excerpt: The Fantastic Four is a fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The group debuted in The Fantastic Four #1 (November 1961), which helped to usher in a new level of realism in the medium. The Fantastic Four was the first superhero team created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Jack Kirby, who developed a collaborative approach to creating comics with this title that they would use from then on. As the first superhero team title produced by Marvel Comics, it formed a cornerstone of the company's 1960s rise from a small division of a publishing company to a pop-culture conglomerate. The title would go on to showcase the talents of comics creators such as Roy Thomas, John Byrne, Steve Englehart, Walt Simonson, John Buscema, George Perez and Tom DeFalco, and is one of several Marvel titles originating in the Silver Age of Comic Books that is still in publication today. The four individuals traditionally associated with the Fantastic Four, who gained superpowers after exposure...