Tom   DeFalco’s earliest comic-book scripts were for Archie and   DC; he soon moved to Marvel, where he wrote Avengers, Machine Man and other titles, also launching Dazzler, a hit series of the early ’80s. In addition to writing long   and well-received runs on Amazing Spider-Man and Thor,   DeFalco edited many titles, eventually becoming editor in chief. During the   1980s, he headed the creative team that provided fictional biographies for   G.I. Joe members, originally included with Hasbro’s toys and later used as   the basis for multiple storylines on the animated series. Perhaps his   best-known work is multi-title character Spider-Girl, whom he introduced in 1998. DeFalco has authored multiple   books, including Ultimate Guides for Avengers, Fantastic Four, Hulk and Spider-Man.
Currently   a publisher, critic and literary agent, David Anthony   Kraft wrote for some of Marvel’s earlier steps   into the horror field, e.g. anthologies Creatures   on the Loose and Haunt   of Horror. His quirky and well-remembered Defenders run included both dramatic   and whimsical storylines, such as “Who Remembers Scorpio?” and “Defender for   a Day.” He wrote most of the Savage She-Hulk series and worked on licensed properties 2001: A Space Odyssey with Jack   Kirby and Logan’s Run   with George Pérez. His work further appeared in Captain   America; Thor; Marvel Two-in-One; Marvel Premiere; and two of Marvel’s black-and-white magazines, Deadly Hands of Kung Fu and Rampaging Hulk. He also edited   Marvel’s in-house fan magazine FOOM. Elsewhere in publishing, he has written children’s books   featuring Spider-Man, the Hulk and the Fantastic Four. 
Jan   Strnad is best known for writing the “Mutant World”   feature for Warren Publishing’s 1984, DC’s Sword of the Atom miniseries and related one-shots, “New Tales of the Arabian   Nights” in Heavy Metal Magazine, Fantagraphics’ Dalgoda, and several Dark Horse Star Wars titles. He has written for animated TV series from both Marvel   (Iron Man, Spider-Man, X-Men) and Disney (Aladdin, Darkwing   Duck, Hercules), plus the feature-length Aladdin:   The Return of Jafar.
Ron   Wilson began penciling the Thing’s Two-in-One adventures in 1975 and   remained for most of the title’s run. He subsequently illustrated follow-up   series Thing until its   end in 1986. Wilson also contributed art for Avengers, Captain Britain, Power Man   and other titles, including the entire run of Marvel’s licensed Masters of the Universe series. At   DC, he provided character designs for the Milestone imprint.
From   his early work as letterer at Seaboard-Atlas, Alan   Kupperberg went on to contribute to Marvel’s   black-and-white magazines — including Crazy, for which he wrote and illustrated the sardonic shenanigans   of Obnoxio the Clown. The regular artist on Roy Thomas’ Invaders, Kupperberg contributed as   both writer and artist to Avengers, Captain America, Iron Man,   Thor, What If? and multiple Spider-Man titles. He also   illustrated the Howard the Duck and Incredible Hulk comic strips; and wrote, penciled, inked, colored and lettered   Obnoxio the Clown vs. the X-Men. At DC, he penciled Blue Devil, Fury of Firestorm, Justice League of America and more. He has also worked on animation projects for Don   Bluth Studios and Nickelodeon.