<P> For decades, no attempts were made to relaunch the title or to continue it with a #16 . However, in 1995, Marvel editor Danny Fingeroth decided a story gap existed between Amazing Fantasy #15 and The Amazing Spider - Man #1 . In an attempt to fill that gap, Marvel published three flashback Spider - Man stories in Amazing Fantasy #16--18 (Dec. 1995--March 1996), each written by Kurt Busiek and painted chiefly by Paul Lee . </P> <P> The second volume of the series ran 20 issues (cover - dated Aug. 2004--June 2006). </P> <P> The first arc ran through vol. 2, #1--6 and featured a new teenaged heroine, Araña . The second arc, in vol. 2, #7--12, published after a short hiatus, featured a revamped, female version of the supervillain the Scorpion . A back - up feature in vol. 2, #10--12 (Sept. - Nov. 2005) starred the character Nina Price, Vampire by Night . Vol. 2, #13--14 (both Dec. 2005) led with the modern - West feature "Vegas", backed up by "Captain Universe". In an attempt to replicate history, Marvel announced that the new issue #15 would introduce a new generation of heroes in a 48 - page standalone issue, in the hopes that they would become as popular as Spider - Man . These heroes included Mastermind Excello, Blackjack, the Great Video, Monstro, Heartbreak Kid, and Positron . The cover to #15 was a revamped version of the original Amazing Fantasy #15 cover, complete with Spider - Man swinging through a modern - day New York City, while the new heroes watch in awe in the background . </P> <P> The final arc, in vol. 2, #16--20 (Feb. - June 2006), introduced Death's Head 3.0, a revamp of the Marvel UK character, written by the original version's creator, Simon Furman . Issues #18--19 contain two "Tales of the New Universe" stories as backup features, while #20 featured a Western backup, "Steamrider". </P>

Who drew the cover of amazing fantasy 15