Here we have the start of my favorite era of Spider-Man comics - The 80's. This is what I imagine when I think of Spider-Man: mid-20's, grad school, juggling his life as Peter with his life as Spidey, trying to be his own man without the safety and familiarity of his childhood or teenage years. Mature, but still fun and exciting. Adult, but still colorful and fantastical. This is also a Spider-Man who has already had many of seminal moments with his supporting cast and his villains. Gwen is dead, Green Goblin is dead, Harry Osborn is married and finally happy, he and MJ have dated, broken up, and are now platonic friends with just a bit of tension and baggage between them. Aunt May is in a new era of her life, defining what she'll be without her son to look after all the time. The baby bird has left the nest, and it turns out the world is dangerous- who knew?
Roger Stern's writing absolutely shines here. He tells episodic stories, while also weaving in long-running plots and subplots for both Peter and Spidey. Some of the best are of course "Nothing Can Stop The Juggernaut", "The Kid who Collects Spider-Man", and the ongoing mystery of the Hobgoblin and his identity. Stern also keeps Peter's life interesting as his grad school studies pile up on him, his income from the Daily Bugle always seems to be in jeopardy, and his love life stays complicated. Peter's evolution from wallflower nerd to confident lover is long complete, and here we see him able to navigate romance like a man, thinking clearly about who and what he wants, and even growing tired of games other people play. On that same note, he's also been on both sides of heartbreak, having lost Gwen, turned down women like Betty Brant, and has his proposal for marriage rejected by Mary Jane once. He feels like he's growing, and it's awesome to read that. I haven't read all of the Silver and Bronze Age comics that preceded this, but I will eventually, and I'm already feeling the joy of seeing Peter grow over time that I imagine fans must've felt reading this as it came out.
The Hobgoblin Saga is one of the most talked about additions Stern made to Spider-Man lore and it starts off really well. We have a mystery man who's face is always in shadow taking up Green Goblin's gear and enhancing it, becoming even stronger and deadlier. Hobgoblin often feels like a way bigger threat than Green Goblin ever was. He's not a madman, he's thinking and behaving exactly as he intends to. He always has a plan and always manages to one-up Spidey. He's also a competent schemer, setting up several people as his decoys and throwing off the police and Spidey when they come to close to revealing his identity. Unfortunately that very identity went from an intriguing mystery to a huge mess. That mess doesn't really hurt Stern's stories as much as the stories that came after it, but it's worth mentioning that Hobgoblin went from the best new Spidey villain in years to a cycle of teasing and identity-swapping and it harmed the character. All in all, Stern's time on both books is still great and worth reading, and it deserves its spot among the best Spidey runs.