Michael Fleisher notched an indelible place   in comics history in 1974, writing a series of Spectre stories that were some   of the most graphically violent tales ever published at the time. During that   time, Fleisher also collaborated with Steve Ditko on Shade the Changing Man,   an offbeat hero bearing a reality-altering M-Vest.
Roger Stern enjoyed well-regarded runs on Amazing Spider-Man, in which he   introduced Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau) and the Hobgoblin; Avengers; and Captain America. He launched West Coast Avengers and wrote   numerous tie-in miniseries starring Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. At DC, he   relaunched Atom and co-created Starman (Will Payton) before participating in   one of comics’ most shocking events: the 1992 “Death of Superman.” He later   returned to Marvel to write Amazing Spider-Man and related titles.
A native New Yorker, writer J.M. DeMatteis has been one of comics’ most respected writers for nearly three decades. Ranging from   the introspective psychological drama of Moonshadow to the offbeat comedy of Justice   League to the autobiographical Brooklyn Dreams, he’s written from   nearly every perspective in graphic storytelling. His long list of credits   includes Captain America,   Defenders, Justice League International, the groundbreaking Spider-Man storyline “Kraven’s Last Hunt," Spectre and more. His recent work includes the acclaimed children's   novel Imaginalis and   the popular comics-prose hybrid Abadazad books.
Bob Budiansky began his comics career on Ghost Rider — first as a cover   artist, and later as both co-writer and artist. However, he is best known for   his work on the Transformers franchise, naming most of the original characters and writing   the Tech Specs blurbs for the toys’ packaging. Budiansky soon began writing   Marvel’s Transformers   comic, which he helmed for nearly 50 issues and several spin-offs. During the   1990s, Budiansky launched Sleepwalker. He also served as a Marvel editor, overseeing the Spider-Man   titles.
Luke McDonnell penciled a long stint on Iron Man, encompassing the   controversial storyline in which Tony Stark ceded the Iron Man armor to his   friend James Rhodes. McDonnell’s work also appeared in Daredevil, Spectacular   Spider-Man, What If? and elsewhere. At DC, he penciled most of John Ostrander’s Suicide Squad and its spinoff   miniseries Deadshot, as   well as a Justice League of America stint during its “Detroit JLA” phase. Eclipso, Green   Lantern: Mosaic and Secret   Origins are only a few of the other titles   benefiting from his work. 
The industry lost an icon with the passing of Tom Sutton (1937-2002), best   remembered as the original artist of the cult-classic icon Vampirella. Having begun his career   with the comic strip Johnny Craig and contributions to underground comics, Sutton worked in   multiple genres at Marvel — including Western (Kid Colt Outlaw, Rawhide Kid), humor (Arrgh, Crazy, Not Brand Ecch), super heroes (Doctor Strange, Ghost Rider), and the licensed Planet of the Apes titles. During a   run on Amazing Adventures,   he and writer Steve Englehart revamped the X-Men’s Beast into his   better-known furry form. Moving to DC Comics, he penciled nearly every issue   of the 1984-1988 series Star Trek and, with J.M. DeMatteis, co-created “I, Vampire” for House of Mystery before returning to   Marvel to pencil a Man-Thing serial in Marvel   Comics Presents. Sutton’s additional body of work   includes art for Charlton Comics, Eros Comics, First Comics and Skywald   Publications.