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Joe Kelly (comics writer)

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Cover to #8 of Kelly and Chris Bachalo's creator owned Steampunk series (2001)

Joseph "Joe" Kelly is an American comic book writer.

He was a student of New York University (NYU) who was recruited into Marvel Comics' editor James Felder's Stan-hattan Project, a program which sought out and trained potential comic book writers at the university.

His first work for Marvel came in late 1996 on two low selling Marvel titles - 2099: World of Tomorrow #1-8 and Marvel Fanfare Vol.2 #2-3.

By the beginning of 1997 he had begun his first monthly assignment, a Deadpool ongoing series, which was initially pencilled by Ed McGuinness. The title was immediately well received by fans and critics. At one point it was due to be cancelled with #25, though a write-in and internet campaign by fans led Marvel to reverse their decision. Kelly left the title with #33 in 1999.

Kelly's initial success with Deadpool led to his gaining the Daredevil assignment at Marvel in mid-1997, where he was soon joined by legendary Daredevil artist Gene Colan. At around the same time he produced a Daredevil/Deadpool '97 Annual with artist Bernard Chang which pitted the two characters against each other and was generally well received. Kelly left Daredevil with #375 in 1998.

Kelly's next major Marvel assignment was in late 1997, at the company's then bestselling title, X-Men, where he worked with penciller Carlos Pacheco. However, Kelly's stint on the title, and his friend Steven T. Seagle's run on sister title Uncanny X-Men, was cut short when the creators quit blaming constant editorial interference. Kelly's last issue was #85 in 1999.

Kelly then began to work for Marvel's competitor DC Comics, specfically their Action Comics title starring Superman with #760 in October 1999. He stayed on the title for almost five years (up until #813, May 2004), working mainly with penciler Pasqual Ferry.

During this run he authored Action Comics #775, which introduced the Authority-like Elite and their leader Manchester Black. That issue was called "the single best issue of a comic book written in the year 2001" by Wizard Magazine.

In December 2000, Kelly had a short stint as writer on the Superboy comic (#83-93), again mostly working with his Action Comics collaborator Ferry.

In 2002 he began a long run on DC's JLA (#66-93) comic book with penciller Doug Mahnke. After their run on that title finished the same creative team launched a 12 issue limited series Justice League Elite featuring some of the characters from Action Comics #775.

Also in 2002, DC published Green Lantern: Legacy - The Last Will & Testament of Hal Jordan a hardcover graphic novel by Kelly and artists Brent Anderson and Bill Sienkiewicz, which looked back at the life and career of Hal Jordan, who at that point was the Spectre.

Kelly has three creator-owned works: Steampunk, pencilled by Chris Bachalo and published by DC through Wildstorm's Cliffhanger imprint in 2000 (it ended on a cliffhanger in 2001 and is on indefinite hiatus); M. REX with penciller Duncan Rouleau, which was published by the now-defunct Avalon Studios (it was cancelled after two issues); and Ballast, with penciller Ilya, a one-shot published by Active Images.

More recently, in 2004 he collaborated with artist Ariel Olivetti on a Space Ghost series, published by DC, which depicted the character with a serious space opera tone and, for the first time, revealed his origins. Next up is a similar mini, this time starring Johnny Quest.

Sources