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1988
1988 sees three major crossover events: Fall of the Mutants, Evolutionary War, and the beginning of Inferno. We're also back to the "regular" mini-series (after last year's experiment with the Vs. books) with Black Panther, Spellbound (which has a New Mutants appearance) and the prestige format Nick Fury vs. SHIELD.
Mark Gruenwald is Executive Editor filling the position vacated by DeFalco when he was promoted to EiC. Dwayne McDuffie is announced as an editor with the March Bullpen Bulletins (his first Damage Control series is also included in this year even though it was published in 89). In September, a major editorial shuffle is announced, with several Assistant Editors, including Bobbie Chase and Terry Kavanagh, getting promoted to full editor.
There are many categories of pricing at this point. Regular books that have both newsstand and direct market distribution remain at 75 cents throughout the year. But beginning with the May issues, there's this announcement in the Bullpen Bulletins: "This month, nine of Marvel's top titles [all the Spidey and X-books, (East Coast) Avengers, Punisher, and Silver Surfer] will cost you a quarter more than the rest of the Marvel line, with no change in format, contents, or page count." This is due to increasing printing costs, and the decision was to let the more popular titles take the brunt and basically subsidize everything else. That's the opposite of the modern approach, where the lower selling books have a higher cover price. In addition to that, Direct Market only books begin at a dollar but then increase in price and run between $1.25 and $1.50. Annuals are $1.75.
Additionally, we see signs of an empowered editorial. Both Avengers titles see editorially dictated changes that result in the writers (Roger Stern and Steve Englehart) getting fired from the books. The X-titles get consolidated under Bob Harras and the division between X-Men and X-Factor begins to break down as we move towards Inferno. And Chris Claremont was told that if he didn't write the Wolverine solo book, someone else would.
It's worth noting that DeFalco and Gruenwald, both executive editors, wrote regular titles during this period.
Peter David's Hulk, the Ann Nocenti/John Romita Jr. Daredevil, and the continued Michelinie/Layton Iron Man run (with M.D. Bright and then Butch Guice on pencils) are highlights. Mike Baron's Punisher run is also solid, and we still have Chris Claremont on X-Men. The joint Simonson's X-Factor is at a peak in the period between Fall of the Mutants and Inferno. Walt Simonson also has a run on Avengers, following Stern, but the results are mixed. Marshall Rogers continues to do nice work on Silver Surfer before being replaced by the also nice Ron Lim. The Michelinie/McFarlane Amazing Spider-Man run has its faults but is pretty good.
On the other end of the spectrum, Alpha Flight is just terrible, and Speedball should best be looked at as a patronage program for Steve Ditko.
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