• Spidey and the FF follow the trail to whoever tried to kill your Friendly Neighborhood Web-Slinger!
• They are not ready to face the culprits.
• And that's just the tip of the iceberg for this momentous issue!
Rated T
A splendid coda to what is probably Marvel Comics' most underrated title from the past year. Read Full Review
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #14 (Taylor, Sauvage, Lashley, Rosenberg, Lanham) closes out this series in the same way it livedfull of heart. Read Full Review
This issue perfectly depicts Tom Taylors run to date and only magnifies the need to give Taylor an ongoing Spider-Man series. This issue hits all the bells and whistles and reminds readers what were all going to be missing as this series ends. This weeks issue of FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD SPIDER-MAN was easy to follow, emotionally charged, well-paced, and will grab readers' attention from the opening page. Read Full Review
While not a groundbreaking issue by any stretch, this is still a solid issue for any Spider-Man fan. Read Full Review
Lovely and fitting conclusion. Need Tom Taylor on a new Marvel ongoing ASAP.
imo one of the best spider-man runs out there, and I'm saying this as a spider-man fan. This is why Tom Taylor is my favorite writer of all time.
Taylor is good at writing such wholesome stories as this
This was a pretty great ending to an overall fun series.
Heartwarming.
Heartwarming and awesome.
This was a great issue and a return-to-form for the series.
Apparently this is the last issue, oof. It's been great, I'll miss this.
I will miss this comic. It was so sweet!
" Good morning May. "
- PETER PARKER
This was a great finale. I really like that the other heroes are willing to help Spidey the way they do here. I really like the emotional connection Peter and May have. I do have a bit of a problem with the "villain" here. I just find myself sick of the trope that character inhabits. But it's not enough to sour my opinion. Overall, this was a really good series, and I'll miss Tom Taylor's take on the character.
A city-wide power outage threatens Peter's promise to stick to May's bedside as she goes through surgery. Spidey's friends pitch in to mind his neighborhood, but he STILL has to fix the power cut himself, because he's Spider-Man. The premise is simple, the heartful characterization is terrific. The art is functional. That's disappointing, but only in that it's screamingly obvious this script would fare even better with a different, more expressive visual style.
The art foibles in #13-14 and the abrupt way the last arc ended make me think this volume was canceled before its time.
A nice ending with a touching story about peter and aunt may and how his neighborhood sticks up for him.