Nick Spencer

Nick Spencer is a comic book writer and former politician best known for his Image series Morning Glories, his collaborations with artist Steve Lieber on the comedic series Superior Foes of Spider-Man and The Fix, a three-year run on Marvel's The Amazing Spider-Man, as well as his controversial Captain America storyline that began with Captain America: Sam Wilson, continued with Captain America: Steve Rogers, and culminated in the 2017 company-wide crossover Secret Empire.

Nick Spencer
Nick Spencer
Spencer at a signing at
Midtown Comics in Manhattan
Area(s)Writer
Notable works
Morning Glories
Secret Avengers
Superior Foes of Spider-Man
The Astonishing Ant-Man
Captain America: Steve Rogers
Secret Empire
The Amazing Spider-Man

Career

While in college, Spencer wrote three pitches to Marvel soon after the launch of the Marvel Knights imprint in 1998. According to Spencer, "Joe [Quesada] didn’t like the first two but the third one was a Black Cat pitch that was a Jackie Brown kind of Tarantino-esque thing. He said he liked that one but they weren’t going to do anything with anybody new at the time." After another pitch was rejected, this time by Oni Press, Spencer went on to work in politics, running twice for the Cincinnati City Council as a candidate of the progressive Charter Party and working for a Democratic politician.

After Spencer moved to New York City, he successfully pitched a series to Jim Valentino at Image Comics. The first issue of Existence 2.0 was released in July 2009 under Valentino's Shadowline imprint, while its follow-up, titled Existence 3.0, launched in November. In January 2010, Newsarama named Spencer one of ten creators to watch for the coming year. Two months later, Paramount Pictures acquired the rights to Existence 2.0, to be developed through Platinum Dunes with Miles Millar and Alfred Gough as executive producers. Meanwhile, Spencer followed up on the Existence duology with three new titles launched in 2010: Forgetless, Shuddertown and his first ongoing series Morning Glories.

In September 2010, Spencer made his Big Two debut with a Jimmy Olsen serial that ran in Action Comics and featured the comic book debut of the character Chloe Sullivan from the TV series Smallville. In 2011, he wrote the modern revamp of T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents and was announced as the new writer of the Supergirl ongoing series, although he was taken off the title shortly thereafter. At the 2011 Emerald City Comic Con, it was announced that Spencer had signed an exclusive contract with Marvel, one that would allow him to continue writing his existing titles at both DC and Image.

Spencer's first work for Marvel was the Iron Man 2.0 ongoing series which debuted in February 2011. That same year, he wrote a short arc tying the Secret Avengers series into the company-wide crossover storyline "Fear Itself" and was one of three writers that worked on the relaunch of the Ultimate Marvel line, along with Jonathan Hickman and Brian Michael Bendis, writing Ultimate Comics: X-Men. In 2016, Spencer became the writer of the Captain America: Steve Rogers ongoing series, in which Captain America was replaced by a version of himself loyal to the villainous organization Hydra. The storyline culminated in the company-wide crossover "Secret Empire", with Spencer writing the eponymous mini-series that acted as the centerpiece.

In March 2018, it was announced that Spencer would be writing a relaunch of The Amazing Spider-Man series set to debut that year, replacing long-time writer Dan Slott, as part of the Fresh Start relaunch that July. Spencer's run concluded in 2021, with issue #74.

In June 2021, it was announced that Spencer was working in an undisclosed leading capacity for Substack's new comics publishing initiative. The following month, it was reported that Spencer led a group of creators, which included Scott Snyder, Jonathan Hickman, Saladin Ahmed, Molly Ostertag, James Tynion IV, that formed a deal with Substack to publish creator-owned comics stories, essays, and instructional guides on that platform.

Bibliography

Image Comics

  • Shadowline:
    • Existence 2.0 #1–3 and Existence 3.0 #1–4 (with Ron Salas, 2009–2010) collected as Existence 2.0/3.0 (tpb, 144 pages, 2010, ISBN 1-6070-6299-2)
    • Forgetless #1–5 (with W. Scott Forbes, Jorge Coelho and Marley Zarcone, 2009–2010) collected as Forgetless (tpb, 128 pages, 2010, ISBN 1-6070-6361-1)
    • Fractured Fables: "Cinderella" (with Rodin Esquejo, anthology graphic novel, hc, 160 pages, 2010, ISBN 1-6070-6269-0; sc, 2012, ISBN 1-6070-6496-0)
    • Shuddertown #1–4 (with Adam Geen, 2010) collected as Shuddertown (hc, 128 pages, 2010, ISBN 1-6070-6943-1)
      • Issue #5 was solicited for October 2010 but never released.
    • Morning Glories (with Joe Eisma, 2010–2016) collected as:
    • The Infinite Vacation #1–5 (with Christian Ward and Kendall Bruns, 2011–2013) collected as The Infinite Vacation (hc, 192 pages, 2013, ISBN 1-6070-6721-8)
  • Thief of Thieves #1–7 (co-written by Spencer and Robert Kirkman, art by Shawn Martinbrough, Skybound, 2012) collected as Thief of Thieves: I Quit (tpb, 152 pages, 2012, ISBN 1-6070-6592-4)
  • Bedlam (with Riley Rossmo and Ryan Browne, 2012–2014) collected as:
  • Paradigms (with Butch Guice, unreleased ongoing series, announced for 2014)
  • Cerulean (with Frazer Irving, unreleased ongoing series, announced for 2014)
  • The Great Beyond (with Morgan Jeske, unreleased limited series, announced for 2014)
  • The Fix (with Steve Lieber, 2016–2018) collected as:

Marvel Comics

Other publishers

  • DC Comics:
    • Action Comics #893–896: "Jimmy Olsen's Big Week" (with R. B. Silva, co-feature, 2010–2011)
      • Only four out of seven planned installments were published as a result of DC's decision to discontinue back-up features in their ongoing titles.
      • The last three installments (with art by R. B. Silva and Amilcar Pinna), along with the first four, were published as Jimmy Olsen (one-shot, 2011)
    • Supergirl vol. 4 #60: "Good-Looking Corpse" (co-written by Spencer and James Peaty, art by Bernard Chang, 2011)
      • Despite being announced as the regular series writer, Spencer ended up writing only two thirds of his inaugural issue.
      • In 2013, Spencer revealed the reasons behind his departure from the series as well as some of his plans for story direction.
    • T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents:
      • T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents vol. 3 #1–10 (with CAFU and Mike Grell (#7–10), 2011) collected as T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents Volume 1 (tpb, 240 pages, 2011, ISBN 1-4012-3254-X)
      • T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents vol. 4 #1–6 (with Wes Craig, 2012)
        • As with the previous volume, most of the issues featured segments created by guest artists: Jerry Ordway (#2), Walt Simonson (#3), Sam Kieth (#4), Mike Choi (#5) and CAFU (#6).
        • A collected edition was solicited for a 2012 release but subsequently cancelled: T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents Volume 2 (tpb, 160 pages, ISBN 1-401-23492-5)
    • Superman: Red and Blue #3: "Something to Hold On to" (with Christian Ward, anthology, 2021) collected in Superman: Red and Blue (hc, 272 pages, 2021, ISBN 1-7795-1280-5; tpb, 2022, ISBN 1-779-51747-5)
  • Archie (with Marguerite Sauvage (#700–702), Sandy Jarell (#702–705, 708–709), Jenn St-Onge (#706–707), Archie Comics, 2019–2020) collected as:
    • Archie by Nick Spencer Volume 1 (collects #700–704, tpb, 144 pages, 2019, ISBN 1-68255-783-9)
    • Archie by Nick Spencer Volume 2: Archie and Sabrina (collects #705–709, tpb, 144 pages, 2020, ISBN 1-645-76979-8)

References

Preceded by Secret Avengers writer
2011
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ultimate Comics: X-Men writer
2011–2012
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secret Avengers writer
2013–2014
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Rick Remender
Captain America writer
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by The Amazing Spider-Man writer
2018–2021
Succeeded by

Tags:

Nick Spencer CareerNick Spencer BibliographyNick SpencerCaptain AmericaCaptain America (comic book)Comic book writerFalcon (comics)Image ComicsMarvel ComicsMorning Glories (comics)PoliticianSecret Empire (2017 comic)Steve LieberSuperior Foes of Spider-ManThe Amazing Spider-ManThe Fix (comics)

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Elizabeth IFranceJake GyllenhaalAriana GrandeHarry StylesAngelina JolieTed LassoYara ShahidiChristian GonzalezStanley TucciRichard Sharp (BBC chairman)Kundavai PirāttiyārArnold SchwarzeneggerFreddie MercuryMurder of Marina SabatierFirst Republic BankClive DavisSuccession (TV series)Nick HerbigIndi HartwellTwisted MetalU-Turn (2023 film)Bernard ArnaultMoonbinWorld Chess ChampionshipJanis JoplinList of The Hunger Games characters2023 Azerbaijan Grand PrixJennifer SymeBarry HumphriesGeorge ForemanDarvin HamChelsea F.C.Kevin CostnerJoan BaezThe Pirate BayE. Jean CarrollBrazilAaron RodgersElizabeth OlsenEvil Dead (2013 film)Wrexham A.F.C.Lee Harvey OswaldVed (film)MaliBen AffleckLukas Van NessBrett GoldsteinRay LiottaSacramento KingsMel GibsonJerry Springer (talk show)Ever AndersonLonnie FrisbeeLove & Death (miniseries)Ana de ArmasSteven CrowderPrince Harry, Duke of SussexJury Duty (2023 TV series)2023 Asia CupJohn MulaneyPathaan (film)Scream (1996 film)Ari AsterEnglish football league systemBeau Is AfraidJudy BlumeFormula OneGoogle LLCPriyanka ChopraBhagyashreeList of WWE personnelFC BarcelonaMel Kiper Jr.Karim BenzemaPeter PanBella Ramsey🡆 More