•
Issues #1-3: "The Coming of the Thousand" by
Garth Ennis (
w),
John McCrea (
p),
James Hodgkins (
i) :Peter Parker is targeted by former high-school bully Carl King, who knows that his old punching-bag became Spider-Man. However, King's attempt to replicate the accident that gave Peter his powers by ingesting the irradiated spider have instead turned him into the Thousand, a swarm of spiders carrying his consciousness and capable of taking over the skins of his victims. •
Issue #4: "Severance Package" by
Greg Rucka (
w),
Eduardo Risso (
a) :Tom Cochrane is a trusted and experienced lieutenant of the
Kingpin. However, after an operation under his watch is foiled by Spider-Man he must prepare for the consequences of failing the crime lord. •
Issues #5-6: "Flowers for Rhino" by
Peter Milligan (
w),
Duncan Fegredo (
a) :A laughing-stock after repeated defeats at the hands of Spider-Man,
Rhino undergoes intelligence enhancement to impress the daughter of a
Russian mobster. However, he soon finds himself missing his simpler, stupider previous life. • '''Issues #7-9: "Gentlemen's Agreement"''' by
Bruce Jones (
w),
Lee Weeks (
p),
Joe Rubinstein (
i) :Cab driver Charlie Clemmens discovers Spider-Man's secret identity, and must weigh up exposing the secret to pay his medical bills against the hero's safety. •
Issue #10: "Ray of Light" by
Kaare Andrews (
w), (
a) :Two brothers watching the cartoon
Insect-Man find themselves in the middle of a battle between Spider-Man and
Electro. :*Andrews used an experimental
digital painting process for the art in the story. •
Issue #11: "Open All Night" by
Darwyn Cooke (
w), (
p),
Jay Bone (
i) :The staff of the
Daily Bugle finish work on
Valentine's Day, with reporters Jill and Kay both thinking they are going on a date with Peter Parker. Meanwhile, Spider-Man himself is recovering in a dumpster after a fight with the
Vulture. •
Issue #12: "I was a Teenage Frogman" by
Zeb Wells (
w),
Duncan Fegredo (
a) :Eugene has to deal with being the son of loser super-villain
Leap-Frog; his efforts to carve a more positive legacy as the hero
Frog-Man are no more successful. •
Issue #13: "Double Shots" by
Ron Zimmerman (
w),
Sean Phillips (
a) :
Alyosha Kravinoff, the Vulture and
Norman Osborn trade stories about their encounters with Spider-Man at
The Bar with No Name. •
Issue #15: "The Collaborators" by
Paul Pope (
w), (
a) :A teenage girl focuses on her admiration of Spider-Man to cope with her dysfunctional home life. •
Issues #16-17: "Heartbreaker" by
Daniel Way (
w),
Leandro Fernandez (
a) :After suffering a
heart attack during a bank job,
Tombstone is imprisoned along with several minor-league villains, including
Kangaroo. :*The story has been criticised for its stereotypical representation of
black people and
homosexuals. •
Issue #18: "Alphabet City" by
Ted McKeever (
w), (
a) :Minor league villain
Typeface discovers even he has a nemesis - Spellcheck. •
Issue #19: "Call of the Wild" by
Robbie Morrison (
w),
Jim Mahfood (
a) :
Grizzly finds himself tormented by the Rhino. •
Issue #20: "Behind the Mustache" by Zeb Wells (
w),
Dean Haspiel (
a) :
J. Jonah Jameson gets help with his anger management issues. • '''Issue #21: "'Twas the Fight Before Christmas"''' by
Darwyn Cooke (
w), (
p),
Jay Bone (
i) :Peter Parker and the
Fantastic Four try to find
Christmas gifts. •
Issue #22: "The System" by
Brian Patrick Walsh (
w),
Alberto Dose (
a) :Spider-Man's unorthodox crime-fighting creates difficulties for the police. ==Collected editions==