Did you get Revelations already, Joker? What did you think? The full splash page of Norman
finally back in full Goblin attire still makes me smile after all these years.
1. Revelations. I love it. Love it. Love it. Love it. Norman comes to clean house and does it in short order. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #75 will always be my proof that the Green Goblin is Spider-Man's greatest enemy. Over the years, he hired the Jackal, the Hobgoblin, Scrier, Judas Traveler and Gaunt to torment the bug but
none of them managed to do the damage that Norman did in just a few hours time.
2. The Death of Gwen Stacy. Listen to the anguish in Parker's voice as he swears revenge on Osborn. How often do you ever see him in such a rage? No premature egloatalation (

) on Osborn's part as he slowly circled the bridges support tower. He was absolutely reveling in his enemy's agony. Take a victory lap, Gobby. You earned it.
3. The Death of Harry Osborn. I love every damn thing about this issue. The emotional torment that both Harry and Peter go through as they slide toward the inevitable showdown. Even Harry, at times, gives the sense that he really doesnt want to do this. The weight of the years weighs on him, both in terms of his friendship to Peter and his hatred of Spider-Man. Its all very satisfying as Spider-Man and the Green Goblin silently beat each other bloody. Yet, even then, there are sparks of the old friendship.
4. The Child Within. DeMatties was born to write Harry Osborn. If Harry's death is the big finale, then the Child Within is the suspenseful buildup. The death doesnt work if you arent invested in the character. You cant help but feel for Harry: a grown man, beautiful wife, young son and rich as you want. But. He is still haunted by his father's death. Maybe even more so by his father's life. He would trade all of it for the chance to end Norman's mocking voice.
5. Cycles and Circles. A little talked about story, but a powerful, human one from Spectacular Spider-Man Annual 14. After Harry "dies," Peter is angry and bitter. He checks on Liz and Normie, to see Liz has started drinking. He is sympathetic but wants nothing more to do with the Osborns. A chance encounter with an old Goblin hideout lets Peter see things from Harry's point of view and he learns the long, sad history of life in the Osborn home. His dilemma is: What is he going to do about it?
These are the stories I want Marvel to write. Human stories, with real life consequences.