Words for Pictures the Art and Business of Writing Comics and Graphic Novels Pdfepub

American comic book author and artist

Brian Michael Bendis
7.24.19BrianMichaelBendisByLuigiNovi1.jpg

Bendis at an appearance at
Midtown Comics in Manhattan

Built-in (1967-08-eighteen) August 18, 1967 (age 54)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Nationality American
Surface area(s) Writer, Artist

Notable works

Jinx
Torso
Powers
Ultimate Spider-Human
Alias
Daredevil
The New Avengers
House of M
Cloak-and-dagger Invasion
Siege
All-New Ten-Men
Age of Ultron
Civil War 2
Awards 5 Eisner Awards
including:
  • All-time New Series (2001)
  • Best Author (2002, 2003)
Inkpot Award[1]
Spouse(s) Alisa
Children four

Brian Michael Bendis (; born August eighteen, 1967)[3] is an American comic book author and artist. He has won five Eisner Awards for both his creator-endemic work and his work on diverse Marvel Comics books.[4]

Starting with criminal offence and noir comics, Bendis somewhen moved to mainstream superhero work. With Bill Jemas and Marking Millar, Bendis was the primary builder of the Ultimate Curiosity Universe, launching Ultimate Spider-Man in 2000. He relaunched the Avengers franchise with New Avengers in 2004, and has as well written the Marvel "event" storylines "Secret War" (2004–2005), "House of M" (2005), "Secret Invasion" (2008), "Siege" (2010) and "Age of Ultron" (2013).

Though Bendis has cited comic book writers such as Frank Miller and Alan Moore, his own writing influences are less rooted in comics, drawing on the work of David Mamet, Richard Price, and Aaron Sorkin, whose dialogue, Bendis said, was "the all-time in any medium."[2]

In addition to writing comics, Bendis has worked in television, video games and film. He has besides taught courses on Graphic Novels at University of Oregon and Portland State University. In 2014, Bendis wrote Words for Pictures: The Art and Business organisation of Writing Comics and Graphic Novels, a book well-nigh comics published past Random House.[5] [6]

Early life [edit]

Brian Michael Bendis was built-in on August 18, 1967 in Cleveland, Ohio to a Jewish-American family. Bendis grew up in University Heights where, despite rebelling against a religious upbringing, he attended the Hebrew University of Cleveland, a individual, modern Orthodox religious school for boys.[7] He decided he wanted to be a comic book industry professional when he was thirteen, working on his own comics, including a Punisher versus Captain America story that he revised several times. A fan of Marvel Comics in particular, he emulated idols such equally George Pérez, John Romita, Sr., John Romita, Jr., Jack Kirby, Klaus Janson and Frank Miller.[8] [9] [10] [11] He later discovered crime comics by Jim Steranko and José Munoz, which he traced back via Jim Thompson's piece of work to the source novels of both Thompson and Dashiell Hammett, which helped cement his love for crime stories.[ii] These in turn led him to discover the documentary Visions of Calorie-free, which taught him the visual "rules" of film noir, an of import influence on him creatively.[two] [10]

While in loftier school, he submitted for a "Creative Writing consignment" a novelization of Chris Claremont'southward X-Men and the Starjammers story, which gained him an A+ grade for imagination and inventiveness.[10] At xix, Bendis began attending the Cleveland Establish of Art, while working at a downtown comic book store where he eventually sold some of his early on work.[seven] Between the ages of 20 and 25, he sent in a large number of submissions to comics companies, although he ultimately abandoned this approach to breaking into the manufacture, because it too much of a "lottery."[9]

Comics career [edit]

Caliber Comics [edit]

All-time known as a author, Bendis started out as an artist, doing work for local magazines and newspapers, including caricature work. He worked at The Plain Dealer as an illustrator. Although he did not savour extravaganza work, information technology paid well and funded his interest in writing law-breaking fiction for graphic novels.[ii] He eventually moved into both writing and illustrating his work, earlier he began producing work for Caliber Comics, including Spunky Todd.[10]

Through Caliber, he met many of his longtime friends and collaborators inside the comics industry, including Mike Oeming, Dave Mack and Marc Andreyko,[12] and began the commencement in a series of independent noir fiction criminal offence comics when he published two issues of Fire in 1993 and five issues of A.Yard.A. Goldfish in 1994 with Quotient. In 1995 he illustrated Flaxen, from a script by James Hudnall, with David Mack providing inks to the story featuring one-time Playboy Playmate Susie Owens as mascot of the Golden Apple Comics chain [of comic shops] in Los Angeles.[13]

Bendis' best-known early piece of work, Jinx, starring the titular bounty hunter in a crime noir version of the Sergio Leone picture show The Adept, the Bad and the Ugly, began publication in 1996, and ran vii issues from Caliber.[13] Near of these early works share a common universe, with Goldfish, Burn, Jinx, Torso and (stories from) Total Sell Out sharing characters and settings likewise as tone.

He characterizes much of this menstruum of his professional person life in terms of working every bit "a graphic artist for almost twelve years"[2] undergoing a menstruation within that of "9 years" living as a stereotypical 'starving artist'.[9]

Image Comics and Oni Comics [edit]

In 1996–1997, Bendis moved from Caliber to Paradigm Comics,[9] where Jinx and his other previous offense comics were published by Image's Shadowline arm in trade paperback. At Image, he also produced v more than problems of Jinx.[13]

Impressed with A.Thousand.A. Goldfish, Epitome founder Todd McFarlane sought out Bendis, which led to his writing Sam and Twitch. Although set in the Spawn universe, Bendis approached Sam and Twitch primarily as a criminal offense comic.[nine] [12] He wrote Sam and Twitch for twenty issues, as well every bit most of the first ten issues of Hellspawn, another Spawn spin-off title. This non-creator-owned work immune him to, in the words of Rich Kriener in The Comics Journal, "[add] the responsibility of flagman to his resume, in that he would answer to a vested owner about developing a property as a tangible asset with the futurity in listen," rather than only working on his own characters under his ain terms.[thirteen]

In 1998, Bendis co-wrote and illustrated the Eliot Ness-starring Torso with Marc Andreyko, again for Image, and in 2000 he produced three bug of the autobiographical Fortune and Glory for Oni Comics.[13]

That same yr saw the debut of the superhero police/noir detective series Powers, co-created with and drawn by Michael Avon Oeming and published by Image. Powers won major comics industry awards, including Harvey, Eisner, and Eagle Awards.

Marvel Comics [edit]

Around the time Bendis began Sam and Twitch, his friend David Mack began working for Joe Quesada's Marvel Knights imprint, of which Bendis was a fan. Based on Bendis' work on Jinx, Quesada invited him to pitch ideas for Marvel Knights, which included a planned, merely ultimately unproduced, Nick Fury story.[9]

Curiosity Comics President Beak Jemas, on the recommendation of Quesada, hired Bendis to write Ultimate Spider-Homo, which debuted in 2000,[nine] and was targeted at the new generation of comic readers.[14] Bendis adapted the eleven-page origin story of Spider-Man from 1962'southward Astonishing Fantasy #15 into a seven issues story arc, with Peter Parker becoming the titular hero later on the fifth upshot, making the volume a bestseller, often surpassing in sales those of the mainstream Marvel universe championship The Amazing Spider-Man.[fifteen] The Bendis/Bagley partnership of 111 consecutive issues fabricated their partnership one of the longest in American comic book history, and the longest run by a Marvel artistic team, beating out Stan Lee and Jack Kirby on Fantastic 4.[16] Bendis subsequently wrote other books in the Ultimate line, including Ultimate Marvel Team-Up,[17] which Bendis pitched to Marvel as a follow-upwards to Ultimate Spider-Homo,[10] too as Ultimate Fantastic Four, Ultimate 10-Men, Ultimate Origins, Ultimate Six, the first three issues of Ultimate Power, and the Ultimate Comics: Doomsday metaseries. In 2011, Bendis and artist Sara Pichelli created the Miles Morales grapheme as the new version of the Ultimate Spider-Human being.[18] [19] Bendis wrote every result of Ultimate Spider-Homo, including its 2nd iteration, Ultimate Comics: Spider-Human being.

Quesada offered Bendis the writing duties on Daredevil,[9] [twenty] which he took over in 2001, writing well-nigh of the subsequent 55 issues until 2006, collaborating generally with artist Alex Maleev. As a major Daredevil author, Bendis' name is one of the names used for boxers mentioned by a decadent boxing manager in the 2003 Daredevil motion picture. Too in 2001, Bendis helped launch Curiosity's not-Comics Code-approved, developed MAX imprint with Allonym, featuring former superhero Jessica Jones operating as a private investigator.[21] The series ran for 28 bug before many of the characters moved to Bendis' mainstream Marvel Universe series The Pulse. In 2004 Powers moved from Paradigm to Marvel'due south creator-owned imprint Icon, where it was relaunched as Powers Vol. 2 alongside some other ex-Epitome serial, David Mack's Kabuki.

Also in 2004, Bendis oversaw the closing problems of The Avengers every bit role of the crossover storyline "Avengers Disassembled".[22] This led direct to the Bendis-helmed relaunch of one version of the eponymous team in the pages of The New Avengers.[23] Bendis' work on this storyline included the death of Avenger Hawkeye, which proved controversial.[10] In 2005, with artist Olivier Coipel, Bendis wrote the New Avengers / 10-Men crossover, "House of Grand",[24] which would retroactively be considered the second human action of a 3-act super-event beginning with "Avengers Disassembled" and culminating in the Bendis-written 2008 storyline "Secret Invasion".[25] Bendis also wrote the storyline "Secret War", which was published between 2004 and 2005. The series, which was not connected to the 1984 miniseries Secret Wars, served as a prelude to Secret Invasion. Later on Marvel'due south 2006 "Ceremonious State of war" storyline, Bendis helmed another Avengers revival, launching Mighty Avengers with Frank Cho in 2007.[26]

Mail-"Secret Invasion", Bendis left Mighty Avengers with issue #20 and wrote Secret Invasion: Dark Reign, a 1-shot that preceded another ongoing Avengers series, Night Avengers.[27] [28] [29] In 2009, Bendis and old Daredevil collaborator Maleev launched the long-delayed Spider-Woman, post-obit upwards on her role in the "Secret Invasion" storyline. Spider-Woman was the first comic book to exist offered simultaneously on the Cyberspace as a "motion comic" and in comic stores in print form.[thirty]

Bendis re-teamed with Olivier Coipel for the 2009 crossover series "Siege", which brought the "Dark Reign" storyline to a shut, and with it Dark Avengers. Springboarding out of Siege, Bendis relaunched both Avengers and New Avengers equally part of the "Heroic Age".

As well in 2010, Bendis launched Scarlet through Icon Comics, his starting time new creator-owned comic book in over a decade, re-teaming once again with Maleev. In February 2011, Icon released the all-ages graphic novel Takio by Bendis and his Powers collaborator Mike Oeming[31] [32] and in mid-2011 a maxiseries called Brilliant with artist Bagley.[33] [34] Bendis' other 2011 projects included a new Moon Knight series with Maleev, which concluded with effect 12.[35] In 2012, in conjunction with Curiosity Studios' feature moving-picture show The Avengers, Bendis began writing a new Avengers comic, Avengers Assemble. Bendis wrote the first eight issues of Avengers Assemble, a series that premiered in March 2012 that featured a new incarnation of the Zodiac, as well as the return of the Guardians of the Milky way, which teamed with the Avengers against Thanos.

Bendis ended his stint on Avengers and New Avengers in 2012 with the "End Times" arc. His final issue of Avengers, released September 2012, was a "jam outcome", featuring splash pages by Marvel artists including Walt Simonson, Jim Cheung, and Leinil Yu.

Following Marvel'due south "Marvel NOW!" relaunch of its titles, Bendis took on writing duties on All New 10-Men, which saw the render of the original 1960's X-Men to the present, Uncanny Ten-Men,[36] whose focus shifts to Cyclops' team of X-Men going rogue after the events of "Avengers Vs. 10-Men", and Guardians of the Galaxy, picking upward where his Avengers Assemble run left off.

Bendis wrote the "Age of Ultron" crossover storyline, which included an eponymous 10-consequence miniseries, that was published betwixt March and June 2013.[37] Issue 10 saw the introduction of the Neil Gaiman character Angela into the Marvel Universe.[38]

On July 22, 2014,[39] Random House published Bendis' instruction book on comics, Words for Pictures: The Art and Business of Writing Comics and Graphic Novels. [v] [6] The day after that book'due south publication, CBR.com published an interview in which Bendis talked about the class on writing Graphic Novels he had taught for the past few years, initially at Portland State Academy, and outset with the Fall 2013 semester, at the University of Oregon. His decision to teach came at the urging of Nighttime Horse Comics editor Diana Schutz.[5] [six] Amid the works he employs as didactics guides are the works of Scott McCloud and Will Eisner.[viii]

DC Comics [edit]

In November 2017, Bendis announced via Twitter that he would be working exclusively with DC Comics.[xl] His DC debut was in Action Comics #grand (June 2018).[41] Ivan Reis drew the first issue of Bendis' The Man of Steel limited serial,[42] and collaborated with Bendis on the relaunched Superman ongoing series in 2018.[43] Bendis took over writing Action Comics following its i,000th issue.[44]

On December, 21, 2021, Bendis announced that he was developing an developed animated Legion of Super-Heroes serial for the streaming service HBO Max. The prove was based on his run of the comic book serial, and would non connect to the original animated series.[45]

Work in other media [edit]

In addition to his primary piece of work in comics, Bendis has produced written work in several other media, such as video games, Television and moving-picture show.

Bendis was the co-executive producer and series-pilot writer for Mainframe Entertainment's 2003 CGI animated Spider-Homo show, Spider-Human being: The New Animated Series that aired on MTV and YTV, which features a college-anile Peter Parker, and was written to tie-into the then-unreleased 2002 film Spider-Human being. The pilot episode Bendis wrote became the 3rd episode aired. His dismay at being credited for something written by someone else, and the multitude of corporate and legal departments involved in the animation procedure soured him on the testify.[ten] [46]

Bendis is one of the writers on the Ultimate Spider-Man animated series, which debuted in 2012.[47]

He was credited every bit a programmer and wrote several episodes for the Television receiver adaptation of his comic, Powers, which starred Sharlto Copley and ran on PlayStation Network for two seasons from 2015 to 2016.[48]

Bendis' video game work includes Activision'south Ultimate Spider-Homo video game, which Bendis wrote.[4] He also wrote an Avengers game,[ citation needed ] which was never released. He is also author of Marvel's MMO, Marvel Heroes.[49]

His film work includes the screenplay adaptation of A.K.A. Goldfish for Miramax,[50] and the screenplay accommodation of Jinx for Universal Pictures.[4] In 2014, he wrote the plot of the Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes video game.[51]

In 2013, he was named on IGN'southward list of "The All-time Tweeters in Comics", in office for his frequent Twitter posts highlighting the work of other creators.[52]

Writing style [edit]

When creating characters, Bendis says that he always begins with someone he knows and builds upon that inspiration, allowing the character to somewhen evolve naturally. His delineation of Aunt May in Ultimate Spider-Human being, for example, strongly resembles his mother.[53]

Personal life [edit]

Bendis met his wife Alisa in 1995 through the Cleveland chapter of the Hillel Foundation, where Alisa worked and Bendis was a staff illustrator. The two were married inside a year. Alisa Bendis manages JINXWORLD, the visitor through which Bendis produces his creator-endemic and licensed comics work.[10] They have four children,[54] of which iii are daughters. His oldest daughter, Olivia,[55] is his biological daughter. He and his married woman adopted their two younger daughters, ane of whom is African-American, and the other of whom is Ethiopian.[55] [56] [57] Their names are Tabatha[58] [59] (adopted in June 2011)[58] and Sabrina.[59] Bendis mentioned in a July 2013 post on his Tumblr business relationship that they had a newborn son,[lx] who is named London.[59] [61]

Awards [edit]

  • 1999 Eisner Award for Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition[62]
  • 2001 Eisner Laurels for Best New Series (for Powers with Michael Avon Oeming)[63]
  • 2002 Eisner Award for Best Author (for Powers, Alias, Daredevil and Ultimate Spider-Man) [64]
  • 2003 Eisner Award for All-time Writer (for Powers, Alias, Daredevil and Ultimate Spider-Human)[65]
  • 2003 Eisner Award for Best Continuing Serial (for Daredevil with Alex Maleev)[65]
  • 2000 Cleveland Printing "Excellence in Journalism" Award[4]
  • 2000 Wizard Mag All-time Author of the Year[66]
  • 2001 Wizard Magazine Best Writer of the Yr[67]
  • 2002 Wizard Magazine Best Writer of the Year[68]
  • 2003 Sorcerer Magazine Best Writer of the Year[69]
  • 2002 Comics Buyer'south Guide All-time Author of the Year[70]
  • 2003 Comics Buyer'south Guide All-time Writer of the Twelvemonth[71]
  • 2004 Comics Buyer'due south Guide Best Writer of the Year[72]
  • 2005 E3's People'due south Pick Award for Activision'southward Ultimate Spider-Human [73]
  • 2010 Inkpot Award[74]

Nominations [edit]

  • 2001 Eisner Award for All-time Limited Series (for Fortune & Glory)[63]
  • 2001 Eisner Award for Best Humor Publication (for Fortune & Glory)[63]
  • 2001 Eisner Award for Best Writer (for Powers, Fortune & Glory and Ultimate Spider-Homo)[63]
  • 2003 Eisner Award for Best Serialized Story (with Alex Maleev for "Out"; Daredevil #32–37)[65]

Bibliography [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Inkpot Laurels
  2. ^ a b c d e f thousand h i j Bendis, Brian Michael and Oeming, Michael Avon, Powers TPB Vol. 5 – Anarchy (Image, 2003), ISBN 1-58240-331-7
  3. ^ Miller, John Jackson (June 10, 2005). "Comics Manufacture Birthdays". Comics Buyer's Guide. Iola, Wisconsin. Archived from the original on February 18, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d Bendis, Brian Michael and Oeming, Michael Avon, Powers TPB Vol. 9 – Psychotic (Icon, 2006), ISBN 0-7851-1743-i
  5. ^ a b c Ching, Albert (July 23, 2014). "Brian Michael Bendis Helps Aspiring Comics Pros Write Words for Pictures". CBR.com. Archived from the original on May ane, 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Bendis, Brian (June 17, 2013). "Enquire me aaaaanything". Tumblr. Archived from the original on April ii, 2015. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  7. ^ a b Renner, James. Cleveland Free Times, "Ulitimate Bendis: How A Jewish Kid From Cleveland Became the Hottest Proper noun In Comics" (Jan 26, 2006).
  8. ^ a b "The Bendis-Fraction Conversation" Comic-Con Magazine (Winter 2010). Pages 24–28
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Bendis, Brian Michael and Oeming, Michael Avon, Powers TPB Vol. three – Footling Deaths (Paradigm, 2002), ISBN 1-58240-670-7
  10. ^ a b c d e f 1000 h Dean, Michael. "Brian Michael Bendis interview]". The Comics Journal. No. #266. Archived from the original on May 5, 2006. Retrieved June 21, 2008.
  11. ^ Diaz, Michael (Nov 8, 2002). "Brian Michael Bendis: Comics' Funk Soul Master". Silver Bullet Comics. Archived from the original on Dec 7, 2002.
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  14. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2012). "2000s". Spider-Man Relate Jubilant 50 Years of Web-Slinging. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 259. ISBN978-0756692360. Written by Brian Michael Bendis and illustrated past Mark Bagley, the series congenital on the original Spidey stories but soon spun off into bold new directions.
  15. ^ "ICv2's Top 300 Comics & Top 100 GN'due south Index". ICv2 News. Retrieved June 27, 2008.
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  17. ^ Cowsill "2000s" in Gilbert (2012), p. 262: "The Ultimate Marvel Team-Upwardly series also brought on board large-proper name creators...with Matt Wagner drawing Brian Michael Bendis' story in the debut upshot."
  18. ^ Cowsill "2010s" in Gilbert (2012), p. 339: "The Ultimate Universe got a new Spidey – Miles Morales. The teenage hero's half African-American and half Latino indigenous origin gained Marvel publicity beyond the world, merely the new series written by Brain Michael Bendis and illustrated by Sara Pichelli was gripping enough to exist a hitting with fans in its ain right."
  19. ^ Truitt, Brian (Baronial 2, 2011). "Half-black, half-Hispanic Spider-Man revealed". U.s. Today. Archived from the original on Baronial three, 2011.
  20. ^ Manning, Matthew K.; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "2000s". Curiosity Relate A Year past Year History. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 305. ISBN978-0756641238. Writer Brian Michael Bendis began his impressive run on the Daredevil title with a small character-driven four-role story, teaming with his old friend David Mack.
  21. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 307: "The herald to the get-go of Marvel's adult imprint, MAX, Allonym was the first of a new comic serial that was targeted specifically for a mature audience. Written by Brian Michael Bendis and featuring the art of Michael Gaydos and covers past David Mack, Alias explored the life of cynical private investigator Jessica Jones."
  22. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 323: "Writer Brian Michael Bendis would plough the Avengers' world on its terminate with this shocking new crossover event drawn past creative person David Finch."
  23. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 324: Superstar author Brian Michael Bendis and creative person David Finch relaunched the championship under the name The New Avengers. The comic focused more on Marvel's arguably most popular super heroes."
  24. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 326: "Teaming with artist Olivier Coipel, Bendis created The Business firm of M, a major Marvel crossover event centered around an eight-upshot limited series."
  25. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 341: "With plot elements planted years before in the pages of author Brian Michael Bendis' many comics, the clandestine infiltration of the Globe by the alien race of shape-shifters known every bit the Skrull first surfaced in the pages of New Avengers #31 when a dying Elektra transformed to reveal herself as a Skrull."
  26. ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 335: "With the help of artist Frank Cho, Bendis created the Mighty Avengers, a government-sponsored squad that would serve as the antithesis to the notwithstanding-underground New Avengers."
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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Jinxworld, Bendis' now-defunct message lath
  • Brian Michael Bendis at the Thousand Comics Database
  • Brian Michael Bendis at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Brian Michael Bendis at IMDb
Preceded by

David Mack

Daredevil writer
2001
Succeeded past

Bob Gale

Preceded past

Larry Hama

Elektra writer
2001–2002
Succeeded by

Greg Rucka

Preceded by

Bob Gale

Daredevil writer
2001–2006
Succeeded past

Ed Brubaker

Preceded by

Mark Millar

Ultimate X-Men writer
2003–2004
Succeeded past

Brian K. Vaughan

Preceded past

n/a

Ultimate Fantastic Four writer
2004
(with Mark Millar)
Succeeded by

Warren Ellis

Preceded by

Chuck Austen

The Avengers writer
2004–2005, 2010–2012
Succeeded by

Jonathan Hickman

Preceded by

n/a

The New Avengers writer
2005–2012
Succeeded by

Jonathan Hickman

Preceded by

n/a

The Mighty Avengers writer
2007–2009
Succeeded by

Dan Slott

Preceded past

north/a

Nighttime Avengers writer
2009–2010
Succeeded by

Jeff Parker

Preceded past

John Byrne

Spider-Adult female author
2009–2010
Succeeded by

Dennis Hopeless

Preceded by

Gregg Hurwitz
(Vengeance of Moon Knight)

Moon Knight writer
2011–2012
Succeeded past

Warren Ellis

Preceded by

n/a

Avengers Gather writer
2012
Succeeded by

Kelly Sue DeConnick

Preceded by

n/a

All-New X-Men writer
2013–2015
Succeeded by

Dennis Hopeless

Preceded by

Kieron Gillen

Uncanny X-Men writer
2013–2015
Succeeded by

Cullen Bunn

Preceded by

Dan Abnett
Andy Lanning

Guardians of the Milky way author
2013–2017
Succeeded past

Gerry Duggan

Preceded by

Tom Taylor
(Superior Iron Man)

Fe Man writer
2015–2018
Succeeded by

Dan Slott
(Tony Stark: Iron Man)

Preceded by

Cullen Bunn
(Fearless Defenders)

The Defenders writer
2017–2018
Succeeded by

Al Ewing

Preceded by

Peter J. Tomasi
Patrick Gleason

Superman author
2018–2021
Succeeded by

Phillip Kennedy Johnson

Preceded by

Dan Jurgens

Action Comics writer
2018–2021
Succeeded by

Phillip Kennedy Johnson

Preceded past

Peter David

Young Justice writer
2019–2021
(with David F. Walker in 2020–2021)
Succeeded by

n/a

Preceded past

Paul Levitz

Legion of Super-Heroes writer
2019–2021
Succeeded past

n/a

Preceded past

Joshua Williamson

Justice League author
2021–nowadays
Succeeded by

current

Preceded past

Bruce Jones

Checkmate author
2021–2022
Succeeded by

due north/a

langleyevia1988.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Michael_Bendis

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