Based   in Brooklyn, New York, Charles Soule has written novels, comics, screenplays and stories of all   types. He is the author of Strange Attractors, 27, Strongman and Letter 44, as well as runs on Swamp Thing, Red Lanterns and Superman/Wonder Woman for DC Comics.   Also a musician and an attorney, Soule somehow finds time to be one of the   busiest writers in comics: Among his Marvel credits are Thunderbolts, She-Hulk and Inhuman — as well as the landmark Death of Wolverine, its immediate   follow-up (Wolverines)   and its eventual sequel (Return of Wolverine). Soule charted the adventures of a much-loved Star Wars characters in Lando and Poe   Dameron. He continued the story of Black Bolt,   Medusa and the rest in Uncanny Inhumans and All-New Inhumans; brought his legal expertise to the pages of Daredevil; and assembled a   blockbuster squad in Astonishing X-Men. Following a stint on the dark side with Darth Vader, Soule turned his   attention to the rebel crew in a new volume of Star   Wars.
Ethan Sacks is a writer and journalist from New York, who is currently writing the ongoing series Star Wars: Bounty Hunters for Marvel as well as other various Star Wars titles. He is also know for his Marvel works that take place in the iconic Old Man Logan wasteland, Old Man Hawkeye and Old Man Quill.
Film   director and screenwriter Greg Pak’s first feature, the sci-fi anthology Robot Stories, won 35 awards; he   broke into the comics industry when his agent sent Marvel the screenplay.   After writing a Warlock   reboot, Pak made a splash with the X-Men: Phoenix   — Endsong limited series and a lengthy run on Incredible Hulk, highlighted by the   “Planet Hulk” storyline and the World War Hulk crossover. In addition to the acclaimed Magneto: Testament and Red Skull: Incarnate limited series,   a War Machine revival   and the retitled Incredible Hulks, Pak has written Dynamite’s Battlestar   Galactica and contributed to Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology. His efforts with co-writer Fred Van Lente include Incredible Hercules, Herc, Heroic   Age: Prince of Power, an Alpha   Flight relaunch and the Chaos   War crossover. Pak introduced Amadeus Cho as a new   Green Goliath in The Totally Awesome Hulk and delivered mutant mayhem in Weapon   X.
Spanish   artist Ramon Rosanas made his   Marvel debut on The Age of the Sentry, a limited series chronicling “classic” Silver Age tales of   the Golden Guardian of Good at the birth of the Marvel Age. Other projects   include Spider-Man 1602   and the giant-sized World War Hulks, featuring key players of one of the biggest Hulk sagas ever   told. Rosanas drew Atlas, and dipped his toe into the Marvel   Cinematic Universe with an adaptation of Iron Man   2 and a prelude to Iron   Man 3. Continuing his Marvel work, he helped make The Astonishing   Ant-Man a big hit and drew a bold, new take on   Carol Danvers in Mighty Captain Marvel.
After   cutting his teeth at Dark Horse drawing Joker/Mask and several Star Wars comics, Spanish artist Ramon Bachs illustrated runs on Wildstorm’s Gen13 and DC’s Detective Comics. He soon brought his gritty style to Marvel, teaming with   writer Paul Jenkins on the Decimation limited series Generation M. The pair reunited for   the smash hit Civil War: Front Line and teamed again for its sequel World   War Hulk: Front Line. Bachs illustrated the   send-up Marvel Apes   limited series and returned to DC to pencil Red   Robin and Azrael.
Raffaele   “Raff” Ienco was the writer and artist on Image Comics’ Epic Kill and the original graphic novel Devoid of Life, as well as Top Cow’s   Manifestations. For   Marvel, he has illustrated Fantastic Four and What If? Age of Ultron.