Avengers assemble! Halifax man set to write flagship Marvel series - Action News
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Avengers assemble! Halifax man set to write flagship Marvel series

A Halifax comic book writer is gearing up for his highest profile job yet a stint writing one of Marvel Comics' flagship series,The Avengers.

From Doctor Strange and Moon Knight to The Avengers, 2023 is shaping up to be a great year for Jed MacKay

On the left is a cover for The Avengers Issue 1. On the right, is a photo of a man and his dog, perched on a rock next to to the ocean.
The first issue of The Avengers, written by Halifax's Jed MacKay, hits comic book stores in May. (Marvel Comics/Submitted by Jed MacKay)

A Halifax comic book writer is gearing up for his highest profile job yet a stint writing one of Marvel Comics' flagship series,The Avengers.

Jed MacKay, who grew up in StanleyBridge, P.E.I, has been tapped to write the series, starting with Issue #1, set to be released this May.

In the four years since earning his big break with Marvel'sMan Without Fear, a five-issue miniseriesabout superhero Daredevil, MacKay hasbeen keeping busy. This year alone, he's workedon series' includingDoctor Strange, Moon Knight, and Mary Jane and Black Cat.

And later this year, when the first issue of The Avengershits stands, it willmark the culmination of a longtime dream for MacKay.

"I grew up reading Avengers comics in the '70s that my dad had and there's something about that era of comics. There's a breathless grandiosity to it," he told CBC Radio's Information Morning Nova Scotia.

"Being able to take some of that and put it in my own work now [in] 2023 is a really interesting kind of unique position."

In The Avengers, blockbuster superheroes like Thor, Captain Marvel, Iron Manand Captain America will be present.

MacKay saidthat's a big part of the fun.

"This is our big-budget summer blockbuster every issue," he said. "These are characters that stride through their respective worlds like gods, so when you put seven of them together in a room, it's going to get interesting pretty quickly."

WATCH | Trailer for Doctor Strange #1,written by Jed MacKay

With such a popular comic, whichforms the backbone of the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe, there's undoubtedly some pressure that comes with the gig. But MacKay said he doesn't feel it.

He's keenly aware of the need to balance the expectations of movie fanswho come to the comics, with the reality that he's writing for a completely different medium, with its own set of rules.

"I think it's very useful to look at the trends that are made popular by these movies and see if we can [draw] on that popularity and hopefully attract new readers," he said.

"But I generally don't try to mold the comics in reaction to the movies because I don't know if that does anybody favours in the long run."

MacKayplans tokeep writing. The steady pace of comics and the need to get new stories to the artists so they can illustrate them means the work rarely lets up.

Back in 2019, when MacKay last spoke with CBC News, writing comics was a side-hustle, something he did alongside his full-time work as a teacher.

But now, with multiple ongoing series for Marvel, his workhas grown to become a full-time job.

In May, three of his ongoing series',The Avengers, Moon Knight, and Doctor Strange, will have new issues on stands at comic book stores all around the world.

With files from CBC Radio's Information Morning Nova Scotia

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