INTERVIEW: Dan Slott’s Spider-Boy Swings into Solo Adventures & Big Team-Ups

Longtime Marvel fans are more than familiar with how tumultuous an adolescent life of Spider-powered heroics and responsibility can be thanks to the original adventures of Peter Parker and the current exploits of Miles Morales. Those are Spider-Men, though. In the current Spider-Boy series, writer Dan Slott and artists Paco Medina and Ty Templeton are chronicling all the excitement, pathos, and silliness that is the life of their pre-teen, titular protagonist, Bailey Briggs, who was introduced in Slott’s recent Spider-Man series.The Spider-Man arc established the fact that Bailey led a life as a superpowered sidekick before he was severed from the Web of Life and Destiny. As a result, the world forgot him. Now, having been woven back in, Spider-Boy is trying to find his way in a world full of strange villains and familiar heroes he knows, but who don’t recognize him. CBR spoke with Slott about some of those heroes and villains, his plans for the series and the appeal of writing a younger and distinctly different Spider-Hero. Marvel also provided CBR with an exclusive preview of artist Paco Medina and colorist Erick Arciniega’s pages for Spider-Boy #5 and the solicits for and artist Humberto Ramos’ cover for June’s Spider-Boy #8.Dan Slott: For the most part, we’re creating all-new villains for Spider-Boy, but Marvel wanted an established, big-name villain in Issue #2. I get that. This book is set in the Marvel U.

Longtime Marvel fans are more than familiar with how tumultuous an adolescent life of Spider-powered heroics and responsibility can be thanks to the original adventures of Peter Parker and the current exploits of Miles Morales. Those are Spider-Men, though. In the current Spider-Boy series, writer Dan Slott and artists Paco Medina and Ty Templeton are chronicling all the excitement, pathos, and silliness that is the life of their pre-teen, titular protagonist, Bailey Briggs, who was introduced in Slott’s recent Spider-Man series.

The Spider-Man arc established the fact that Bailey led a life as a superpowered sidekick before he was severed from the Web of Life and Destiny. As a result, the world forgot him. Now, having been woven back in, Spider-Boy is trying to find his way in a world full of strange villains and familiar heroes he knows, but who don’t recognize him. CBR spoke with Slott about some of those heroes and villains, his plans for the series and the appeal of writing a younger and distinctly different Spider-Hero. Marvel also provided CBR with an exclusive preview of artist Paco Medina and colorist Erick Arciniega’s pages for Spider-Boy #5 and the solicits for and artist Humberto Ramos’ cover for June’s Spider-Boy #8.

Dan Slott: For the most part, we’re creating all-new villains for Spider-Boy, but Marvel wanted an established, big-name villain in Issue #2. I get that. This book is set in the Marvel U.

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