The first portrayed Spider-Girl,
Mayday Parker, first appeared in a one-shot story in the ongoing series
What If. Following positive fan response to the concept,
Spider-Girl and two other series (
A-Next and
J2) set in the same alternate future universe were launched under the
MC2 imprint. Although each of these titles were slated to be 12-issue limited series,
Spider-Girl's initial sales justified their continuation as ongoing titles. After initial interest,
Spider-Girl drew low sales. The book's active fan base convinced Marvel to revoke several cancellation announcements. Reprints of the series in
digest size trade paperbacks sold well. Marvel Associate Editor Nick Lowe revealed in a Nov. 2005 interview that "
Spider-Girl, for the first time, is completely safe from cancellation." Despite Lowe's statement, Marvel announced that No. 100 would be the title's final issue. It was the longest-running superhero book with a lead female character ever published by Marvel. The book was relaunched as
The Amazing Spider-Girl, with issue #0 appearing in Oct. 2006. In November 2010, a new
Spider-Girl series was launched that was unconnected to the MC2 universe. The MC2 Spider-Girl title was cancelled, having surpassed publisher expectations for longevity. The new series featured a new character,
Anya Corazon, whose adventures occurred on
Earth 616. This monthly
Spider-Girl comic debuted on November 17, 2010, as a tie-in to the "
Big Time" storyline in
The Amazing Spider-Man. The series was canceled after only eight issues. No official reason was given for the cancellation. ==Collected editions==