Since the characters inception in the 1960s, Spider-Man has appeared in several forms of media, including novels and book series.
For one year, they must secretly agree to buy oil from Doctor Octopus instead and, at the end of that time, they can go back to business as usual.
[7][8] The plot concerns a TV anchorman whose daughter has been kidnapped by the Kingpin, who has forced the popular media frontsman to stand as Mayor.
The Kingpin has taken millions of dollars from the other ganglords in order to cut them into his plan, which is to push his candidate into becoming Mayor.
While this is all happening, Jameson has hired a private investigator named Cindy Sayers to pretend to be his niece in order to find out how Peter Parker can get so many pictures of Spider-Man.
11 of the Marvel Pocket Novels and a sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man: Crime Campaign, also written by Paul Kupperberg.
[10][11][12][13][14][15] The book begins with the Hulk fighting the U.S. military in a desert, but then cuts to Spider-Man intervening in a raid on a company doing research for NASA.
Meanwhile, Bruce Banner is reading a newspaper advertisement offering a potential treatment for his condition.
He follows up on the ad, but finds himself kidnapped by the villain and, as the Hulk, gets brainwashed into fighting Spider-Man.
[17][18][19] A man named Catrall is on the run from the FBI because he has a serum that will drive anyone who comes into contact with it into a killer rage.
Catrall shows up because he thinks that he can destroy the serum in the firewall that is holding Casady.
After the serum is stolen, Peter begins to have nightmares; he dreams that New York is covered with blood.
[56] Written by Neil Kleid, this is an adaptation of the well-known comic book storyline "Kraven's Last Hunt".
A young adult novel written by Judith O'Brien[57] that serves as the origin of Spider-Man through Mary Jane Watson's eyes.