Early work David's first professional assignment was covering the
World Science Fiction Convention held in Washington in 1974 for the
Philadelphia Bulletin. David eventually gravitated towards fiction after his attempts at journalism did not meet with success.
Comics career 1980s at a comic book signing for
X-Factor in the early 1990s David eventually gave up on a career in writing and came to work in book publishing. His first publishing job was for the
E.P. Dutton imprint Elsevier/Nelson, where he worked mainly as an assistant to the editor-in-chief. He later worked in sales and distribution for Playboy Paperbacks. He subsequently worked for five years in
Marvel Comics' Sales Department, first as Assistant Direct Sales Manager under
Carol Kalish, who hired him, and then succeeding Kalish as Sales Manager. During this time he made some cursory attempts to sell stories, including submission of some
Moon Knight plots to
Dennis O'Neil, but his efforts were unfruitful. Three years into David's tenure as Direct Sales Manager,
Jim Owsley became editor of the
Spider-Man titles. Although crossing over from sales into editorial was considered a conflict of interest in the Marvel offices, Owsley, whom David describes as a "maverick", was impressed with how David had not previously hesitated to work with him when Owsley was an assistant editor under
Larry Hama. When Owsley became an editor, he purchased a Spider-Man story from David, which appeared in
The Spectacular Spider-Man #103 (June 1985). Responding to charges of conflict of interest, David made a point of not discussing editorial matters with anyone during his 9-to-5 hours as Direct Sales Manager, and decided not to exploit his position as Sales Manager by promoting the title. Although David attributed the story's poor sales to this decision, he asserted that such crossing over from Sales to Editorial was now common. Nonetheless, David said he was fired from
Spectacular Spider-Man by Owsley due to editorial pressure by Marvel's editor-in-chief
Jim Shooter, and he commented that the resentment stirred by Owsley's purchase of his stories may have permanently damaged Owsley's career. During his 12-year run on
Hulk, David explored the recurring themes of the Hulk's
multiple personality disorder, his periodic changes between the raging, less intelligent Green Hulk and the more streetwise, cerebral
Grey Hulk, and of being a journeyman hero, which were inspired by
The Incredible Hulk #312 (October 1985), in which writer
Bill Mantlo (and possibly, according to David,
Barry Windsor-Smith) had first established that Bruce Banner had suffered childhood abuse at the hands of his father
Brian Banner. These aspects of the character were later used in the
2003 feature film adaptation by screenwriter
Michael France and director
Ang Lee.
Comic Book Resources credits David with making the formerly poor-selling book "a must-read mega-hit". David wrote the first appearance of the
Thunderbolts, a team created by
Kurt Busiek and
Mark Bagley, in
The Incredible Hulk #449 (January 1997). It was after he had been freelancing for a year, and into his run on
Hulk, that David felt that his writing career had cemented. David had a brief tenure writing
Green Lantern when the character was exclusive to the short-lived anthology series
Action Comics Weekly (issues #608–620) in 1988. David took over
Dreadstar during its
First Comics run, with issue #41 (March 1989) after
Jim Starlin left the title, and remained on it until issue #64 (March 1991), the final issue of that run. David's other Marvel Comics work in the late 1980s and 1990s includes runs on
Wolverine, the
New Universe series
Mark Hazzard: Merc and
Justice, a run on the original
X-Factor, and the futuristic series
Spider-Man 2099, about a man in the year 2099 who takes up the mantle of Spider-Man, the title character of which David co-created. David left
X-Factor after 19 issues, and he wrote the first 44 issues of
Spider-Man 2099 before quitting that book to protest the firing of editor
Joey Cavalieri. The book was cancelled two issues later, along with the entire 2099 line.
1990s In 1990, David wrote a seven-issue
Aquaman miniseries,
The Atlantis Chronicles, for
DC Comics, about the history of Aquaman's home of
Atlantis, which David referred to as among the written works of which he was most proud, and his first time writing in the
full script format. In 1994 he wrote an
Aquaman miniseries,
Aquaman: Time and Tide, which led to a relaunched monthly
Aquaman series, the first 46 issues of which he wrote from 1994 to 1998. His run on
Aquaman gained notoriety, for in the book's second issue, Aquaman lost a hand, which was then replaced with a
harpoon, a feature of the character that endured for the duration of David's run on the book. More broadly, his run recast the character as an aggressive man of action, one deserving of greater respect, in contrast to the "fish-talking punch line" into which the TV series
Super Friends had rendered him. David also had runs on
Supergirl and
Young Justice, the latter eventually being canceled so that DC could use that book's characters in a relaunched
Teen Titans monthly. David's work for
Dark Horse Comics included the teen spy adventure
SpyBoy, which appeared in a series and a number of miniseries between 1999 and 2004, and the 2007 miniseries
The Scream. Other 1990s work includes the 1997 miniseries
Heroes Reborn: The Return, for Marvel, and two creator-owned properties:
Soulsearchers and Company, published by
Claypool Comics, and the
Epic Comics title
Sachs and Violens, which he produced with co-creator/artist
George Pérez.
2000s David's early 2000s work includes runs on two volumes of
Captain Marvel as well as the
Before the Fantastic Four: Reed Richards limited series. David and his second wife, Kathleen, wrote the final English-language text for the first four volumes of the
manga series
Negima for
Del Rey Manga. In 2003, David began writing another creator-owned comic,
Fallen Angel, for DC Comics, which he created in order to make use of plans he had devised for Supergirl after the "Many Happy Returns" storyline, but which were derailed by that series' cancellation. That same year, he wrote a
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series for
Dreamwave that tied into the
animated television series broadcast that year. In 2005, David briefly returned to
The Incredible Hulk, though he left after only 11 issues because of his workload. He started a new series,
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, beginning with a twelve-part
crossover storyline called "
The Other", which, along with
J. Michael Straczynski's run on
The Amazing Spider-Man, and
Reginald Hudlin's run on
Marvel Knights Spider-Man, depicted the webslinger as he discovered he was dying, lost an eye during a traumatic fight with
Morlun, underwent a metamorphosis, and emerged with new abilities and insights into his powers. The storyline caused some controversy among readers for its introduction of retractable stingers in Spider-Man's arms, and the establishment of his powers being derived from his status as a "Spider-Totem". David's final issue of that title was #23. David wrote a
MadroX miniseries that year, whose success led to a relaunch of a monthly
X-Factor volume 3 written by him. This was a revamped version of the title starring both Madrox and other members of the former
X-Factor title that David had written in the early 1990s, now working as investigators in a detective agency of that name. David's work on the title garnered praise from
Ain't it Cool News, and David stated that the opt in/opt out policy and greater planning with which Marvel now executes crossover storylines made his second stint on the title far easier. though Editor-in-Chief
Joe Quesada supported David's story. David eventually won a 2011
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Comic Book for his work on the title. On February 11, 2006, David announced at the
WonderCon convention in California in that he had signed an exclusive contract with Marvel Comics.
Fallen Angel,
Soulsearchers and Company and David's
Spike miniseries were "grandfathered" into the contract, so as to not be affected by it. The first new project undertaken by David after entering into the contract, which he announced on April 5, 2006, was writing the dialogue for
The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born, the comic book spin-off of
Stephen King's
The Dark Tower novels, which was to be illustrated by
Jae Lee, as well as scripting the
subsequent Dark Tower comics. David took over Marvel's
She-Hulk after writer
Dan Slott's departure, beginning with issue #22. His run, which won praise, ended with issue #38, when the series was canceled. He wrote a 2008–09
Sir Apropos of Nothing miniseries, based on the character from his novels, which was published by IDW Publishing. David's other 2000s comics based on licensed or adapted properties include
Halo: Helljumper, a 2009 miniseries based on the
Halo video game, a 2009
Ben 10: Alien Force manga book published by Del Rey,
Ben Folds Four, and a
John Carter of Mars prequel to the
2012 feature film. David wrote the script for
Avengers: Season One, an
original graphic novel published to promote the DVD release of
The Avengers.
2010s On November 24, 2011, David was one of the balloon handlers who pulled the Spider-Man balloon during the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. In October 2013,
X-Factor ended its run with issue #262, concluding the X-Factor Investigations incarnation of the series. The book was then relaunched as
All-New X-Factor, a new series with artist
Carmine Di Giandomenico, as a part of the
All-New Marvel NOW! initiative announced at the 2013
New York Comic Con. The opening storyline, which continues events from issue #260 of the previous series, establishes the new corporate-sponsored version of the team, and includes
Polaris,
Quicksilver, and
Gambit. In July 2014, David returned to Spider-Man 2099, writing the second volume of
Spider-Man 2099 with artist
Will Sliney. With this series, David was again writing two series,
X-Factor and
Spider-Man 2099, after having previously done so decades prior, a coincidence that prompted him to joke at the June 2014 Special Edition NYC convention, "I don't know whether to be proud of that or if I'm in a rut!" In 2014, David wrote a six-part story-arc for
The Phantom for publishing company
Hermes Press, a story that David, reportedly had wanted to write for many years. In 2015, Simon and Schuster published
Stan Lee's autobiographical graphic novel,
Amazing Fantastic Incredible, which David co-wrote, and which became a
New York Times bestseller in its first week of release. In April 2017, following the conclusion of the Spider-Man storyline "
Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy", which saw the return of
Ben Reilly, Marvel premiered the monthly series
Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider, with David as writer. David explained to
Syfy Wire that when Marvel offered him the job, he was initially ambivalent, as Ben Reilly had never been his favorite incarnation of Spider-Man, and given Reilly's recent emergence as the villainous
Jackal. However, David gave further consideration to the fact that a book whose main character had a skewed, villainous worldview was not something Marvel had historically done much of, and decided that the premise presented itself with opportunities that intrigued him enough to accept the job. His other Spider-Man work during this decade included a 2019 five-issue miniseries
Symbiote Spider-Man, which holds a 7.5 out of 10 rating at the review aggregator Comic Book Roundup, and the 2020 follow-up miniseries
Symbiote Spider-Man: Alien Reality, which holds a 7.6 rating at Comic Book Roundup.
Novels David's career as a novelist developed concurrently with his comic-book writing career. David had been working at a publisher that went out of business, and a former coworker from that publisher became his agent, through whom he sold his first novel,
Knight Life, to
Ace Books. David updated
Knight Life years later when
Penguin Putnam brought it back into print in 2003, and made it a trilogy with the sequels
One Knight Only and
Fall of Knight, which were published in 2004 and 2007, respectively. His
Star Trek novels are among those for which he is best known, including
Q-in-Law;
I, Q;
Vendetta;
Q-Squared. His most popular novel was 1993's
Imzadi, which told the backstory first romance of the characters
William Riker and
Deanna Troi. He created the ongoing novel series,
Star Trek: New Frontier, a spin-off from
Star Trek: The Next Generation, with
John J. Ordover in 1997. David wrote 21 books in that series, a number of which were
New York Times best sellers. That line ended in September 2015 with the publication of the third part of the digital novel,
The Returned. David's other science fiction tie-in novels include writing five
Babylon 5 novels, three of which were originals, and two of which were adaptations of the TV movies
Thirdspace and
In the Beginning. His other novel adaptations include those of the films
The Return of Swamp Thing,
The Rocketeer,
Batman Forever,
Spider-Man,
Spider-Man 2,
Spider-Man 3,
Hulk,
The Incredible Hulk,
Fantastic Four, and
Iron Man. He wrote an original Hulk novel,
The Incredible Hulk: What Savage Beast, and an adaptation of an unused
Alien Nation television script, "Body and Soul". David's 2009 novel
Tigerheart is a re-imagining of
Peter Pan with a mix of new and old characters, told as a Victorian bedtime story, much like the classic tale. It was praised by
Ain't It Cool News, and honored by the
School Library Journal as one of 2008's Best Adult Books for High School Students. His
Sir Apropos of Nothing fantasy trilogy,
Sir Apropos of Nothing,
The Woad to Wuin and
Tong Lashing, features characters and settings completely of David's own creation, as does his 2007 fantasy novel,
Darkness of the Light, which is the first in a new trilogy of novels titled
The Hidden Earth. The second installment,
The Highness of the Low, was scheduled to be published in September 2009, and a
Fable original novel
The Balverine Order, set between the events of
Fable II and
Fable III. In September 2013, David acknowledged that books published through Crazy Eight were not as lucrative for him as those for publishers that pay him advances, and announced that his then-impending novel,
ARTFUL: Being the Heretofore Secret History of that Unique Individual, The Artful Dodger, Hunter of Vampyres (Amongst Other Things.), would be published by
Amazon.com.
Writing habits and approach . Beside him (left to right) are
Jim McCann,
Dan Slott and
Fred Van Lente. David stated that he tried to block out different days and different times to work on different projects.
Todd McFarlane's original art for the cover of
The Incredible Hulk #340, featuring
Wolverine, which McFarlane gave to David as a gift, hung in David's office. David previously wrote his comic book scripts using the
Marvel Method, but due to his tendency to overplot, as during his collaboration with McFarlane on
The Incredible Hulk, he switched to the
full script method, which he continued to use . David stated that his favorite female character of his own creation was Lee, the protagonist of
Fallen Angel, which he said is derived from the positive female fan reaction to that character. Characters that David did not write but which he expressed an interest in writing for the comics medium included
Batman,
Tarzan,
Doc Savage, the
Dragonriders of Pern, the
Steed/
Peel Avengers, and
Dracula. He specifically mentioned interest in writing a
Tarzan vs. the Phantom story.
Other published work • Before David became a professional writer, he wrote
fan fiction, examples of which include
The TARDIS at Pooh Corner. • David began writing his weekly opinion column, "But I Digress...", in ''
Comics Buyer's Guide, which first appeared in the July 27, 1990 edition, agreeing to do the column on the suggestion of an anonymous fan to Comics Buyer's Guide
editors Don and Maggie Thompson, David credited the existence of the column to Harlan Ellison, whom he attempted to emulate with the column, and who wrote the introduction to the 1994 But I Digress
collection. David donated his earnings from the column to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. A second collection, More Digressions
, was published by Mad Norwegian Press in June 2009. A second edition, Writing for Comics and Graphic Novels with Peter David
, was published in August 2009. which was inspired by the announcement of Russet Noon'', an unauthorized fan fiction novel based on
Stephenie Meyer's
Twilight series. Authors including Hugh Casey,
Keith R.A. DeCandido, and Kevin Killiany participated in the story, with characters such as
Michael Dukakis,
Dan Quayle, and
Ernest Hemingway appearing alongside satirical versions of Meyer's characters. David conceived the satire as a not-for-profit venture, and while he had no plans to publish the completed "Potato Moon", he allowed for the possibility of a future charity release to benefit the
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. • In 2022, David curated an anthology titled
The Fans are Buried Tales, which, in his own words, combined
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales with an event at a Farpoint convention in which everyone was snowed in "and created the concept of a large, general SF convention in which the attendees are snowed in and wind up exchanging stories of their characters/genres in the hotel bar." When he discovered that organizers of the 2022 Farpoint convention would not be requiring attendees to show proof of vaccination or negative test results, he resorted to using a
Kickstarter to pay those involved. Many of the stories were from fellow Crazy 8 authors, while others were submitted by other professional writers and even fans.
Other media at the November 30, 2010, Times Square
Disney Store launch party for
Epic Mickey, which Spector designed, and for which David wrote two tie-in products David wrote for several television series and video games. He wrote two scripts for
Babylon 5 (the second-season episodes "
Soul Mates" and "
There All the Honor Lies"), and the episode "
Ruling from the Tomb" for its sequel series,
Crusade. With actor/writer
Bill Mumy, he was co-creator of the television series
Space Cases, which ran for two seasons on
Nickelodeon, and which proved to be his most lucrative work. David himself appeared as Ben, the father of series regular Bova, in the second-season episode "Long Distance Calls". David's oldest daughter, Shana, later appeared as Pezu, the emotionally disturbed sentient computer in the series finale "A Friend in Need". David wrote and co-produced several films for
Full Moon Entertainment including
Trancers 4,
Trancers 5,
Oblivion, and
Oblivion 2: Backlash. He made
cameo appearances in some of the films as well and was briefly signed to their unrealized Silver Moon Comics line. David wrote an unproduced script for the fifth season of
Babylon 5 called "Gut Reactions", which he wrote with Bill Mumy. David wrote "In Charm's Way", an episode of
Ben 10: Alien Force. The script was recorded in early 2009, and the episode premiered November 13, 2009. He later wrote three episodes of the sequel series
Ben 10: Ultimate Alien, the first of which, "Reflected Glory", premiered October 15, 2010. David wrote the script for the
Xbox 360 video game
Shadow Complex, which debuted in August 2009. David wrote several episodes of the
Young Justice animated TV series, which premiered in 2010, and is based on the comic book series he wrote from 1998 to 2003. The first episode he wrote was "
Secrets". In 2011 David wrote the video game
Spider-Man: Edge of Time. At the 2012
San Diego Comic-Con,
Stan Lee announced his new YouTube channel, ''
Stan Lee's World of Heroes, which airs several programs created by Lee and other creators. One of them, Head Cases
, is a superhero sitcom created by David and his wife Kathleen and produced by David M. Uslan. The series centers on Thunderhead, a would-be hero whose inability to utilize his ability to produce loud thunderblasts without injury to himself leads him to become a source of comedic derision in the superhero community. The series, which explores events that occur in between the battles typically seen in comic books, was based on a concept originated by Uslan, and partly inspired by It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. David described Head Cases
as a 75-minute film divided into 5-minute webisodes. The series featured guest appearances by other industry personalities, including Stan Lee, who appears as himself, functioning in a similar manner to Norm Peterson from Cheers''. ==Awards and nominations==