With a   writing resume stretching across the romance, sword-and-sorcery, and Western   genres, Denny O’Neil wrote   four years of Iron Man   — including some of the title’s most sweeping changes. His additional Marvel   work includes runs on Amazing Spider-Man, Daredevil   and Power Man and Iron Fist, as well as the one-shot X-Men:   Heroes for Hope. At DC, his groundbreaking Green Lantern/Green Arrow run earned   him four Shazam Awards. He also wrote and often revamped such mainstays as Batman (where he co-created Ra’s al   Ghul), Flash, Superman and Wonder Woman, as well as adaptations   of classic pulp heroes Doc Savage, Justice, Inc. and The Shadow. During the 1980s, he oversaw the groundbreaking death of   Robin (Jason Todd). He has written multiple Batman graphic novels and   novelizations, as well as The DC Comics Guide to   Writing Comics.
Bill   Mantlo began his Marvel career on Deadly Hands of Kung Fu, in which he   introduced White Tiger, one of the industry’s earliest Hispanic super heroes.   Eventually writing stories for almost every Marvel title, he did some of his   most fondly remembered work on Incredible Hulk and Spectacular Spider-Man. He also launched Cloak and Dagger in a pair of miniseries and guided Alpha   Flight through some of its most harrowing ordeals.   Mantlo excelled at integrating licensed properties into the Marvel Universe,   as demonstrated by Micronauts and Rom: Spaceknight, both of which he wrote from start to finish. At DC, he wrote   the Invasion miniseries   for one of the company’s biggest crossover events.
Bob   Harras edited several titles as Ralph Macchio’s   assistant, mostly tie-ins such as Micronauts, Rom, Saga of Crystar and U.S. 1. He subsequently became chief   editor of the X-Men titles and wrote for multiple series, including a   three-year run on Avengers. Graduating to editor in chief, he oversaw well-received runs   of Captain America, Daredevil, Deadpool   and other titles, as well as the controversial   second Clone Saga in the 1990s’ Spider-Man titles. Harras has since worked as   contributing editor at WildStorm and collected editions editor for DC Comics.   He began a decade-long stint as DC’s editor in chief in 2010.
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. 
From   his start on Canadian hero Captain Canuck, George Freeman moved to U.S. art on Avengers at Marvel and Green Lantern at DC, among others. He was one of four artists on John   Ostrander’s Wasteland   horror anthology. In 1991, he returned to Canada to co-found Winnipeg-based   coloring and inking studio Digital Chameleon.
A   creative stalwart that put his all into his work on long-running series like Ghost Rider and Defenders, Don   Perlin plied his talents in virtually every   discipline in the comic-book field — penciling, inking, creating new   characters and sometimes editing and writing. A student of Burne Hogarth’s,   Perlin launched his career in 1951, drawing horror comics for various publishers   and also penciling Will Eisner’s The Spirit. After serving in the Army, Perlin returned to comics with   Harvey in the late ’50s as well as Charlton in the ’60s. In 1973, he began   his long association with Marvel, finishing John Buscema’s art on Thor and inking several titles. He   took over Werewolf by Night from Mike Ploog, penciling and inking the book for much of the   next two years. He also penciled and inked the supernatural adventures of   Johnny Blaze in Ghost Rider, his name becoming very closely identified with Marvel’s   monster biker. In the ’80s, he drew Defenders for a long run before turning his attention to Marvel’s   adaptation of Hasbro’s Transformers. His early ’90s work on Valiant’s Solar,   Man of the Atom and Bloodshot   was extremely popular, after which Perlin went   into semiretirement.