This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Solo Avengers" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR(April 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Solo Avengers
Cover of Solo Avengers #1 (December 1987). Art by Mark Bright and Joe Rubinstein.
Publication information
Publisher
Marvel Comics
Schedule
Monthly
Format
Ongoing series
Publication date
December 1987 – July 1989 (as Solo Avengers) August 1989 – January 1991 (as Avengers Spotlight)
No. of issues
40 (#1–20 as Solo Avengers, #21–40 as Avengers Spotlight)
Main character(s)
Hawkeye various Avengers
Creative team
Written by
List
Mike W. Barr, John Byrne, D. G. Chichester, Chris Claremont, Margaret Clark, Tom DeFalco, J. M. DeMatteis, Danny Fingeroth, Steve Gerber, Peter B. Gillis, Glenn Herdling, Len Kaminski, Bob Layton, Ralph Macchio, Howard Mackie, Dennis Mallonee, Dwayne McDuffie, Dan Mishkin, Lou Mougin, Fabian Nicieza, Sandy Plunkett, Roger Stern, Dann Thomas, Roy Thomas, Gregory Wright, Dwight Jon Zimmerman
Penciller(s)
List
Larry Alexander, Tom Artis, M. D. Bright, June Brigman, James Brock, Greg Capullo, Dave Cockrum, Amanda Conner, Gavin Curtis, Alan Davis, Kieron Dwyer, Tom Grindberg, Jackson Guice, Bob Hall, Don Heck, Dan Lawlis, Bob Layton, Jim Lee, Ron Lim, Al Milgrom, Tom Morgan, Don Perlin, Rodney Ramos, Sandy Plunkett, John Ridgway, Paul Ryan, Dwayne Turner, Jim Valentino, Lee Weeks, Ron Wilson
Inker(s)
List
Jack Abel, Jeff Albrecht, Steve Buccellato, Kim DeMulder, Stan Drake, Tim Dzon, Jackson Guice, Scott Hampton, Doug Hazlewood, Don Heck, Donald Hudson, Chris Ivy, Karl Kesel, Bob Layton, José Marzan Jr., Mark McKenna, Bob McLeod, Tom Morgan, Win Mortimer, Dan Panosian, Roy Richardson, John Ridgway, Josef Rubinstein, Lee Weeks, Keith Williams, Al Williamson
Editor(s)
Mark Gruenwald
Solo Avengers was an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics, and was a spin-off from the company's superhero team title The Avengers. It was published for 20 issues (December 1987–July 1989)[1] until it was renamed Avengers Spotlight with issue #21 (August 1989). The series was cancelled as of issue #40 (January 1991).[2]
The format of the title was usually two stories, one featuring the character Hawkeye and the other a back-up strip showcasing a current or former member of the Avengers.[3] With issue #35, the format changed to exclusively focus on one full-length story.
Artist Amanda Conner's first published work in the comics industry was the 11–page Yellowjacket back-up story in Solo Avengers #12 (November 1988).[4][5]
^Solo Avengers at the Grand Comics Database
^Avengers Spotlight at the Grand Comics Database
^DeFalco, Tom; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "1980s". Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 233. ISBN 978-0756641238. Harkening back to the split books of the 1960s, Solo Avengers #1 was launched to fulfill two goals: it would give Hawkeye a regular eleven-page feature and it would also provide Marvel with a second eleven-page slot that could be used to try out new talent or tell stories with the Avengers characters who did not have their own series.{{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Creator-Owned Heroes #5 Image Comics. October 2012.
SoloAvengers was an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics, and was a spin-off from the company's superhero team title The Avengers. It...
successor to previous Avengers weekly story-arc, Avengers: No Surrender. In December 2022, Marvel Comics released Monica Rambeau's first solo comic book series...
appeared in The West Coast Avengers vol. 2 #36 as an agent of A.I.M., created by Steve Englehart and Al Milgrom, in SoloAvengers #16 as SODAM, created by...
Avenger Hawkeye. He then officially joins the West Coast Avengers and enters a brief romantic relationship with Tigra. Moon Knight and the Avengers are...
the Avengers superhero team and ever since has often been depicted as a regular member of that or related teams (such as the West Coast Avengers and Force...
Massachusetts rappers Esoteric and DC The Midi Alien to create the East Coast Avengers. Their group debut album Prison Planet was released in late 2008. The group...
the base of the Avengers. The enormous, city block-sized building is located at 890 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York City. Avengers Mansion's address...
consultant to Bill Mantlo) (1981) The Savage Sword of Conan #74 (1982) SoloAvengers #14 (1989) Spider-Woman #34-46 (1981-1982) Star Wars #17 (with Archie...