• The most action packed book in comics continues to singe your eyebrows with explosive action!
• Something horrible is happening to Peter Parker's fellow students at EMPIRE STATE UNIVERSITY and it's all coming down hard on Spider-Man.
• Some familiar faces introduce their fists to Spider-Man's face as the plot thickens like a brick of plastic explosives. Tick tick tick tick...
Rated T
The introduction of the Zapata Brothers is done brilliantly. I loved the giant monster truck that they arrived in as well as the subsequent banter that they share with Spider-Man while they are battling. Read Full Review
Nail-biter, cliff-hanger, anxiety-inducer, this comic is all of these things, but most of all it's enjoyable!!!! As my friend Eddie Ganz would say, this issue is "Killah"!!!! Read Full Review
Non-Stop Spider-Man #2 is a lot of fun. The art pops from the page. The story is interesting. It's a second issue that delivers as much excitement as its debut, not an easy thing to do. There's debates as to how many series are too many for characters but when they're as unique as this, bring more on! Read Full Review
Non-Stop Spider-Man #2 continues to throw new challenges and obstacles at the web-slinger, while maintaining the adrenaline rush of the previous issue. Whether this is a limited or ongoing series, one things for sure: theres never a dull moment. Read Full Review
Some dynamic artwork pulls you in to this action-packed comic, however the story leaves something to be desired. Read Full Review
Like the first issue this is one that die hard webheads will find interest in, but it's probably not a storytelling motif that will catch on with every other title. Read Full Review
Non-Stop Spider-Man promised a fast-paced mystery but instead felt like the book has ADHD. Joe Kelly hasn't set up anything correctly, which leaves the reader feeling disconnected and confused. Chris Bachalo does his best, but the “non-stop” nature of the book isn't doing him any favors either. There's still time to get better, but I don't have much faith after two subpar issues. Read Full Review
Still going strong, it's a very different read than the other recent Spidey's stories, both story and art-wise (and I must say, I'm loving Bachalo's art more and more here), and that makes the book feel fresh. Cannot wait for more.
This was better than issue one! I feel like this comic's gimmick of "Non-Stop Spider-Man" is hurting it. The pacing just feels off. Also, this took quite a turn with the introduction of white nationalists, but I guess Zemo's inclusion makes more sense now.
i just love Chris Bachalo. I don't care about Spider-man. The art is just amazing.
Spidey teams up with Norah Winters and deduces that the A-Plus drug has super-science brain-draining effects. And it's dealt disproportionately to minority students, adding a nasty racial edge to the mix. Per the premise of the series, there's plenty of explosive action, mainly thanks to the Zapata Brothers in this installment. The story is ticking along nicely, but this second issue lets the core conceit fade a little -- this is becoming "just another Spidey yarn" rather than the most action-packed thrill-ride ever. And that's not actually a bad thing; there's enough thought invested in the set-up to make it worth further reading.
Bachalo still draws feet like Rob Liefeld, but he is great at action scenes and there's plenty of them, as promissed. Peter and Norah are a nice team and I want to see more of them.
Surprisingly entertaining. Don't like Spidey's girlfriend here. The one on the deathbed should have been the one getting more shine.
The re-imagining of the Spider-Sense as buzzwords and the intrigue of the villains saved what would otherwise be another Spider-Man spin-off that looks like it's aimed at kids.
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I am going to die, and when I do please put “slain by comic book brain science” on my grave.