FAST TIMES AT MIDTOWN HIGH CONTINUES!
• Peter and Mary Jane Parker have grown suspicious of their daughter's recent activities...
• Apparently sneaking around training two newly super-powered angry kids doesn't qualify as "Normal Teenage Behavior."
• Especially when these angry teens have a not-so-innocent agenda.
• And their target is...teenage Normie Osborn?!
Rated T+
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: RENEW YOUR VOWS #18 plays with a bothersome cliche, but ultimately, it succeeds in concluding what has been an enjoyable arc. Read Full Review
The "Fast Times at Midtown High" story arc was a lot of fun to read. It was also great to see Annie's continual growth as a more mature superhero. In fact,writer Jody Houser introduced Reece and Lacey for that purpose. The art is light as well and matches the story. I'm looking forward to seeing what's next for our teenaged heroine! Read Full Review
It seems like many of the same beats that were hit in the original Spider-Girl comic are hit here again in this issue, but there's no other choice Marvel has given to fans of the Peter-MJ dynamic and there are also few family-oriented books out in the market today like this one. Read Full Review
Amazing Spider-Man: Renew Your Vows wraps up its latest arc by showing that not every superhuman arc needs to be solved with violence. Read Full Review
To me, THIS IS the marvel universe. No pointless death, no heroes being dicks and no retcons. Just a story of a teenager coming into her own.
A very intelligent & fun reading moment. I really like how annie react and try to protect her friend of herself.
And their is some Mr.Sinister moment once more ... I'm eager to see him try to screw the parker life.
Cover - Not related but nice. 1/2
Writing - I really liked this part. 3/3
Arts - The art is good & do the job. Even if it's not perfect. 2.5/3
Feeling - Finally the story is more & more interesting. 2/2
Annie's parents have their say but then let Spiderling resolve her classmates' mess on her own. It's a simple story with journeyman art. The final product is elevated significantly by a well-organized script that hits good emotional notes. It does leave two loose plot threads; one is definitely intentional foreshadowing but the other feels more like an oversight. The latter - who started Lacey down the path to vengeance? - would have been a perfect opportunity to involve Spidey and MJ in the story as more than "Leave it to Beaver" parents if this went on longer. Here's hoping that future stories can do better at integrating the whole family into the action.
Very enjoyable. If only Marvel could produce more comics like this one.
Decent, but nothing exciting and definitely nothing new. It was still a fun read, though I wish the series would focus a bit more on the whole spider family, not just one character.