The Marvel Preview series “The Sword and   The Star” was not only Rocket Raccoon’s first appearance, but Keith Giffen’s first published work.   He moved into more mainstream titles with Defenders, penciling the adventures of the infamous non-team during some   of its most nontraditional storylines. It was at DC, however, that he   achieved his greatest recognition with creations Ambush Bug, an irreverent   wannabe hero who tackled the comics industry itself, and alien mercenary   Lobo, who was meant as an indictment of the violent vigilante genre, but   became its most extreme success story. In addition to famed stints on Legion of Super-Heroes and Justice League, he also wrote X-O Manowar and Magnus, Robot Fighter for Valiant   Comics, and adapted mangas Battle Royale and Ikki Tousen into English. He has played a vital role in cosmic crossovers   at both Marvel and DC, writing Annihilation tie-ins for the former, and penciling 52 and Countdown   to Final Crisis for the latter.
Award-winning   British author Dan Abnett has   been a New York Times   best-seller seven times and won the Best Comic Writer award in 2003. He has   written more than fifty books — including best-selling Warhammer 40,000 novels and tie-in   fiction for Doctor Who,   Torchwood and Primeval. He co-created Death’s Head   and Knights of Pendragon for Marvel UK in the 1980s, and contributed   extensively to the UK’s illustrious 2000AD. He has also written Iron Man, New Mutants, Doctor Strange and Punisher for Marvel, and worked on some of Marvel’s epic cosmic comics   including the Annihilation and War of Kings events, and the Nova and Guardians of the Galaxy series. Abnett is also known for his work on major games such   as Alien: Isolation and   Shadow of Mordor. He   has returned to Marvel’s cosmos on Guardians 3000 and Guardians of Infinity.
Andy   Lanning is probably best known for his work co-writing   Marvel's cosmic characters in Nova, various Annihilation series and Guardians of the Galaxy. During a career spanning decades, his writing credits also   include Heroes for Hire,   New Mutants and Punisher at Marvel; Resurrection Man, Legion of Superheroes and Superman/Batman at DC Comics; The Authority at WildStorm; and the   creator-owned Hypernaturals at BOOM! Along with co-writer Alan Cowsill, he revived Marvel   UK’s super heroes in Revolutionary War. Lanning is also a celebrated inker, best known for his work   with Phil Jimenez on New X-Men and Amazing Spider-Man. He has worked with a dazzling array of talented artists   including Mike McKone (Fantastic Four, Amazing Spider-Man), Dave Gibbons (Secret Service), Mark Bagley (Fearless, Ultimate   Spider-Man) and Ivan Reis (Justice League, Aquaman).
Mitch   Breitweiser’s Marvel credits include Agent X, Drax   the Destroyer, Ultimate   Fantastic Four, Young   Avengers Presents, Hulk:   Raging Thunder and Uncanny   X-Men Annual #2. He collaborated with First Blood novelist and Rambo   creator David Morrell on Captain America: The   Chosen. Breitweiser has returned to the Sentinel   of Liberty in the pages of both the Captain   America series and the Captain   America: Patriot limited series.
After   working consistently throughout the 1990s, artist Scott   Kolins made his mark with a critically acclaimed   two-year tenure on DC’s Flash with writer Geoff Johns. Kolins reteamed with Johns at Marvel,   on Avengers and the   limited series Thing: Freakshow. He also partnered with writer Robert Kirkman to revive the   classic series Marvel Team-Up. Kolins’ unique skill at portraying larger-than-life   super-heroic action with a high level of detail earned him a number of choice   assignments, including Beyond!, a sequel of sorts to the classic Marvel   Super Heroes Secret Wars. Often inking his own   work, Kolins’ other Marvel projects include Thor:   Blood Oath, Ultimate   Fantastic Four, Omega   Flight, Annihilation Prologue and Stan Lee Meets The Thing.
Argentine   artist Ariel Olivetti debuted   on American shores with the dystopian Last   Avengers Story, and went on to pencil a wide   variety of projects including a well-received Daredevil run. However, it was his work on DC’s revamped Space Ghost that established him as   a true star, treating the campy character with surprising sophistication.   Olivetti teamed with writer Matt Fraction to revive Punisher   War Journal, earning rave reviews, and repeated   his success soon after with the relaunched Cable.