- Squirrel Girl
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Squirrel Girl
Art by Paul PelletierPublication information Publisher Marvel Comics First appearance Marvel Super-Heroes Special vol. 2 #8 (Winter 1991) Created by Steve Ditko
Will MurrayIn-story information Alter ego Doreen Green Species Human Mutant Team affiliations Great Lakes Avengers
New AvengersPartnerships Tippy-Toe
Monkey JoeNotable aliases Rodent; The Anti-Life, The Destroyer of All That Breathes Abilities - Squirrel-like abilities
- Superhuman agility and strength
- Prehensile tail
- Enhanced smell, vision and reflexes
- Retractable knuckle spikes
- Ability to communicate with squirrels
Squirrel Girl, real name Doreen Green, is a fictional character and superhero in the Marvel Comics Universe. Her first appearance was in Marvel Super-Heroes (vol. 2) #8 (Jan. 1992), in a story plotted and drawn by Steve Ditko and scripted by Will Murray. Her ability to control squirrels is surprisingly powerful and has allowed her to defeat major supervillains. She was a member of the Great Lakes Avengers for much of the duration of that group, and is now the nanny to Danielle Cage, the daughter of Luke Cage and Jessica Jones of the New Avengers.
Squirrel Girl's creation and inspiration came from Will Murray wanting to cut loose from the serious drama of the X-Men titles and bring back the light-hearted anything-goes joy of comic books.[1]
Contents
Publication history
Creation and development
Squirrel Girl was created by Steve Ditko and Will Murray, making her debut appearance in "The Coming of Squirrel Girl" in Marvel Super-Heroes vol. 2, #8 (Jan. 1992). She ambushes the superhero Iron Man, teams up with him, and, after Iron Man is captured, defeats the villainous Doctor Doom. The story also introduces her squirrel sidekick, Monkey Joe. Murray originally created the character in script form without any artist input, afterwards artist Tom Morgan was supposed to create the design but dropped out. Murray subsequently requested Ditko to be on board in which he obliged. Murray was also impressed by the design Ditko had created and how she turned out.[2]
Murray stated that part Squirrel Girl's personality and inspiration was based on a previous girlfriend who read comics, especially ones created by Steve Ditko and was interested in wild animals/critters of all types. Despite never physically describing the character to Ditko, Murray thought that he was still able to capture the likeness of his old girlfriend. Another part of her inspiration came from Murray witnessing squirrels playfully running amok within his house by getting in through open windows. Overall this led to Murray wanting to create a character that differed from the current serious drama of comic books and bring back the light hearted joy of the medium.[1]
"I based Squirrel Girl ironically enough on a long–ago girlfriend who read comics and was into "critters"—wild animals of all types. Coincidentally, she was big Ditko fan. I think I got the idea because I had a bunch of squirrels running around my roof and sometimes coming in through my open bedroom window and inspiration struck.
By a strange coincidence, although I never described SG physically in my story, Ditko somehow managed to capture the likeness of my old girlfriend."
Co-creator Will Murray[2]Later appearances
Squirrel Girl next appeared in Marvel Year-In-Review '92, where she made a one-panel appearance in the self-satirizing book's Marvel 2099 section, where "Squirrel Girl: 2099" was listed as one of "the 2099 books we've pretty much ruled out" as actual future titles. Later, she was slated to join the New Warriors, but writer Fabian Nicieza left Marvel before going through with his plan.[3] In 1997 Fleer-Skybox released cards based on Marvel Superheroes, one of which was a much more mature version of Squirrel Girl.[4]
Following this, she did not appear again for nearly a decade, existing primarily as a matter of trivia. She was referenced only once in comics during that time: In Deadpool #7, Deadpool's friend/maid/mother-figure/prisoner Blind Al mentions accidentally putting "bleach in with [Deadpool's] Squirrel Girl underoos."
In 2005, comic writer Dan Slott wrote a four-issue miniseries for the superhero team the Great Lakes Avengers. Created in 1989, this team was made up of enthusiastic heroes with bizarre and almost-but-not-quite useless abilities. They had appeared only a handful of times over their 16-year history, serving as comic relief. In commemoration of the team's series, roster changes were made and the Squirrel Girl character was revived and included on the team. The miniseries satirized comic book deaths, and it was announced that a team member would die in every issue. After Squirrel Girl made a fuss to ensure that Monkey Joe would be an official member of the team, he was killed in the third issue.
During 2006's Civil War company-wide story arc, Squirrel Girl and the rest of the team fought Deadpool in Cable & Deadpool #30. In 2007, she and the newly renamed "Great Lakes Initiative" again appeared alongside Deadpool in the Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular one-shot.
In September 2010's release of I Am An Avenger, a 5 part Marvel Comics story line, Squirrel Girl appears in the first issue in a story entitled "Welcome Home Squirrel Girl". The premise of the story is that she is simply coming home to Manhattan.
Squirrel Girl is currently appearing in New Avengers. She is not a member of the team, but works as super-powered nanny caring for the daughter of Luke Cage and Jessica Jones,[5] while at the same time taking classes at New York University.
Fictional character biography
Squirrel Girl is originally from the Los Angeles, California, area. She is first seen ambushing Iron Man in a forest. She hopes to impress the veteran hero, wishing him to take her under his wing as his sidekick. The 14-year-old mutant introduces herself and her pet squirrel Monkey Joe, and displays her various abilities (all of which are squirrel-themed).
Unimpressed, Iron Man politely declines, when suddenly the duo is attacked by Doctor Doom in a large aircraft. Doom captures and subdues Iron Man, and flies over the ocean where he plans to dispose of Iron Man's body once he kills him. Underestimating her, Doom leaves Squirrel Girl to her own devices. She devises a plan and uses her ability to communicate with squirrels through an open air vent as the ship passes over a forest. Hundreds of squirrels answer her call and flood Doom's ship, chewing through the wires and swamping the evil dictator with their furry bodies, causing Doom to exclaim: "Confound these wretched rodents! For every one I fling away, a dozen more vex me!" Iron Man is subsequently freed and the duo emerges victorious, despite being impressed with taking down Doom, Stark admits that she is too young to fight crime but would put in a good word for the Avengers when she is older, Squirrel Girl, still disappointed bids farewell and the two heroes go their separate ways.[6]
Great Lakes Avengers
Squirrel Girl is next seen years later, having relocated to New York City for what is acknowledged as no clear reason. While fighting crime in Central Park, she encounters Flatman and Doorman, members of the Great Lakes Avengers, on a membership drive.[7] In addition to appearing in the G.L.A. miniseries starting with the second issue, Squirrel Girl introduces each issue, providing a disclaimer or opinion piece about the contents of the series. Her sidekick Monkey Joe is also added to the team (at Squirrel Girl's behest), and comments upon the series as well, appearing in a circle at certain moments to make comic and smart-alec remarks.
After Squirrel Girl ensures that Monkey Joe is made an official member of the G.L.A., he is killed by an assailant dressed as Dr. Doom.[8] His killer is a rejected member of the G.L.A. named Leather Boy (actually a non-powered leather fetishist), who had been dressed in a variation on Dr. Doom's costume. Enraged by the death of her friend, Squirrel Girl assembles a squirrel army and helps stop Maelstrom from destroying the world. Squirrel Girl finds a new squirrel companion during this battle—the only one of her squirrel army who survives Maelstrom's wrath, whom she names Tippy-Toe.[9]
Squirrel Girl and Tippy-Toe later defeat MODOK, Terrax, and Thanos all by themselves.[10] Uatu, the Earth's Watcher, is on hand to confirm that the Thanos she defeated was the real thing, and not a clone or copy of any kind (an explanation that has sometimes been used to excuse some of Thanos' more embarrassing performances over the years). After MODOK is defeated, Dum Dum Dugan offers her a position at S.H.I.E.L.D., explaining that the organization had been watching her for some time, impressed by her effectiveness in defeating powerful supervillains. Squirrel Girl declines the offer, saying she is happy with the G.L.A.[10] Later, while visiting Central Park she teams up with Ben Grimm (Thing) to take down Bi-Beast, after defeating the villian, he invites Squirrel Girl and the rest of her team to a poker game he had set up later that night.[11]
Civil War
Squirrel Girl and the rest of the newly-renamed Great Lakes Champions, who took the name after winning Ben Grimm's poker game,[11] register under the Superhero Registration Act the morning the law is enacted. However, mercenary-for-hire Deadpool, assuming the Champions are un-registered, attacks the team at their headquarters (Deadpool seeks to ingratiate himself with the government by capturing un-registered heroes).[12] Deadpool is bested in combat by Squirrel Girl; his distraction at her appearance and name contribute to his inability to mount an adequate defense to her attacks.
Squirrel Girl and the again-renamed Great Lakes Initiative team up with Deadpool a few months later to take down AIM agents who have kidnapped a wayward Olympian god and fashioned an inebriation ray that makes every superhero on the planet (save Deadpool and the GLI) drunk. After the battle, Deadpool decides to hang around the GLI's new government-funded headquarters for a while as a "reserve member."[13]
Squirrel Girl is a huge fan of the New Warriors, especially Robbie "Speedball" Baldwin, on whom she has a crush. When visiting one of his tours promoting his New Warriors show, Squirrel Girl was able to defeat Speedball's arch-nemesis Bug-Eyed Voice before he could harm him, he later thanked her with a kiss. When the events of Civil War broke out, Squirrel Girl learns of Speedball's transformation into the darker hero codenamed Penance after Deadpool provided her with a copy of Civil War: Front Line #10. Squirrel Girl travels to Thunderbolts Mountain to convince Robbie to lighten up and stop being Penance. Frustrated by his current attitude and unwavering determination to remain as Penance, Squirrel Girl travels to Latveria to use one of Dr. Doom's time machines to travel to the past and prevent Speedball from ever becoming Penance. Wanting to avoid another defeat with her, Doom reluctantly shows her the way to the machine where upon using it, instead of transporting her to the past it instead takes her into the year 2099. There she encounters an alternate version of Speedball (whom she unsuccessfully tries to get to travel back to the past with her), and Mr. Immortal, who tells her she has an important task to perform in the past: to kick Deadpool out of the Great Lakes Initiative's headquarters.[13]
Heroic Age
During the Heroic Age following Norman Osborn's time as Director of SHIELD, Squirrel Girl fights and defeats Fin Fang Foom. Afterwards, wondering why the rest of her team had not helped her in the fight, she comes to the realization that the again-renamed Great Lakes Avengers had the potential to be a great team, but are instead simply relying on her to defeat any villain that comes along. As a result, she decides to leave the team and set out on her own, so that she would not continue to "hold them back".[14]
When Luke Cage and Jessica Jones are looking for a nanny for their daughter, they eventually settle on Squirrel Girl, after interviewing several less-than-promising candidates. When Wolverine notices her in the mansion, the two reveal that they have some sort of prior relationship. This relationship apparently ended with them promising never to see each other again. She states that she hopes they "can be professional" concerning her new job.[5] It is implied that this may have been a close relationship as a later event occurs in which Emma Frost delves into the mind of Wolverine. A part of his mind she comes across includes various women whom he had once lusted for, one of them being Squirrel Girl.[15]
Fear Itself
During the Fear Itself storyline, a flashback shows Squirrel Girl sparring with Wolverine and also reveals that she is attending New York University while balancing out babysitting Danielle. In the present, Squirrel Girl ends up having to protect Danielle from the attacking Thule Society soldiers.[16] After dodging the various attacks the enemies bestowed on her and the infant, Squirrel Girl is able to get herself and the baby to safety, soon after the mansion goes into lockdown mode sealing the entrances. When dozens of soldiers approach the mansion nearing the location of the two, Daredevil jumps in and defeats them all, before they could open fire. He subsequently leads Squirrel Girl and Dani to a panic room that was located within the mansion that he was able to sense.[17] She later appears in the Spider island story arc where Dani Cage, like most of the population of New York, attains powers like Spider-Man's and humorously wraps Doreen to the roof in web.[18]
Victories
Following her defeat of Dr. Doom, an ongoing joke depicts Squirrel Girl repeatedly attaining victory over various villains, some of whom are considerably more powerful than she is. Typically, these victories occur off-panel, though some, like her battles with Deadpool, MODOK and Wolverine, are fully shown. Deadpool, having been bested by her twice, considers Squirrel Girl to be one of the major powers of the Marvel Universe, comparing her to Iron Man and Thor.[19]
Squirrel Girl's victories often result from her opponent's overconfidence (Doom, MODOK), weakness from an earlier fight (Deadpool), or creative use of her powers (Doom, Bi-Beast). For the most part, she defeats her opponents through the use of her wits. Her defeat of Bi-Beast was the result of "one of those super-hero team-ups" with The Thing. While visiting squirrel friends in Central Park, Squirrel Girl came across Thing fighting with Bi-Beast. She told the squirrels to retrieve the smelliest garbage they could find and place it around the combatants, resulting in everyone having to hold their noses. Bi-Beast had to use both hands to hold his noses, leaving himself defenseless, allowing Thing to knock him out.
Squirrel Girl's defeat of Thanos is an ambiguous one. Although Uatu was present at the battle and claimed that the Thanos that Squirrel Girl defeated was indeed genuine and not a clone or copy.[10] Thanos has since revealed that he has perfected a means of creating clones of himself that could fool even "the most cosmic of beings." Adding to the ambiguity is the fact the reveal comes from the mind of a clone whose memory had been altered.[20]
Thus far, Squirrel Girl has beaten:
- Doctor Doom[6]
- Mandarin[10]
- Giganto[10]
- MODOK[10]
- Thanos[10]
- Terrax[10]
- Bug-Eyed Voice[3]
- Bi-Beast[11]
- Deadpool[12]
- Pluto[13]
- Fin Fang Foom[14]
- Baron Mordo[14]
- Korvac[14]
- Ego the Living Planet[14]
- Wolverine[16]
Powers, abilities, and equipment
Squirrel Girl is a mutant, and evinces a variety of mutations which align with the squirrel theme. During her first encounter with Iron Man, she provided a detailed demonstration of her powers and abilities: a furry, prehensile tail roughly 3–4 feet in length; sizable buck teeth, which are strong enough to chew through wood; and enhanced agility and strength, enabling her to jump between trees with ease. Her fingers have sharp claws on them, assisting her with climbing, and she possesses retractable "knuckle spikes" roughly 2-3 inches in length on each hand. Most importantly, she is capable of communicating with and understanding squirrels. Squirrel Girl does not communicate with squirrels telepathically, instead she has an understanding of their language, and the ability to speak it. Squirrels have also been depicted as understanding her when she speaks in English.
Later appearances have revealed additional abilities possessed by Squirrel Girl including heightened reflexes (which she dubs as 'squirrel agility') and vision (her eyes have been seen to glow red in low-light situations) and she has also at times displayed an enhanced sense of smell. Squirrel Girl has also revealed that her lips taste like hazelnuts.[3]
Squirrel Girl carries a utility belt comprising multiple pouches that contain nuts to give as snacks to her squirrel friends. These are known, to much comedic effect, as her "nut sacks". It was originally unknown whether the black markings around her eyes are the result of her mutation, or cosmetically applied to enhance her squirrel-themed appearance (though they did not appear to smear when she's crying).[9] In New Avengers Annual #1, she is shown in casual clothes lacking these markings.[21]
Squirrel Girl is also shown carrying a full set of 'Iron Man Vs. Series battle cards', which she uses to show Dum Dum Dugan how she knows him (she mentions Dugan has a 'defense stat of 8'; her own is 6, although the rating system is left unclear). After MODOK is pointed out to her, she consults the supervillain's own card to confirm his abilities. The printing on the two cards shown (Dugan's and MODOK's) is actually gibberish.[10]
In GLX-Mas Special, she is shown flying a small gyrocopter called a 'Squirrel-A-Gig' and mentions it was a gift from GLI teammate Big Bertha. This reappears in Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular, used as a way of infiltrating Doctor Doom's castle. The first version was a standard gyrocopter, while the latter is shown as a more stylized superhero helicopter (including squirrel-styled bodywork). Squirrel Girl is shown as being able to fly the craft expertly, including through the anti-aircraft defenses surrounding Castle Doom, crediting her ability to her 'squirrel-agility'.
Squirrels
Squirrel Girl is always accompanied by one or more squirrels. Two of these, Monkey Joe and later his successor Tippy-Toe, have been her constant companion. At her insistence, they have each been accepted as a full member of the Great Lakes Avengers.
In addition to Monkey Joe and Tippy-Toe, Squirrel Girl named several other squirrels in Great Lakes Avengers #4. Slippy Pete, Mr. Freckle, and Nutso are presumed dead; they were sucked into the singularity created by Maelstrom.
Monkey Joe
Monkey Joe appeared in Squirrel Girl's original appearance in Marvel Super-Heroes Special vol. 2 #8, and all four issues of the Great Lakes Avengers miniseries.
The trade paperback of the Great Lakes Avengers miniseries contains a dedication to the memory of Monkey Joe: "Monkey Joe 1992-2005. He loved nuts. He will be missed."
Alongside Squirrel Girl, Monkey Joe helped her to defeat Doctor Doom. Following this notable achievement, the duo disappeared for some time. In 2005, Squirrel Girl and Monkey Joe emerged from obscurity and joined the Great Lakes Avengers during the miniseries written by Dan Slott. Shortly after they joined, Monkey Joe met his demise, apparently at the hands of Doctor Doom. However, it was revealed that Leather Boy, an ex-G.L.A. member who had been rejected by the team due to his lack of powers, dispatched the squirrel while dressed in a variation of Doctor Doom's costume. Monkey Joe's death was part of the series' promise that a member of the G.L.A. would die in each issue of the miniseries, in a parody of comic book deaths.
Monkey Joe was smarter than an average squirrel; he even proved adept in the use of computers. Monkey Joe served as the sardonic commentator on the Great Lakes Avengers miniseries, appearing alongside the story titles holding signs with humorous, (often sarcastic), remarks on the events. After his death,[8] the narrator circle showed a deceased Monkey Joe, complete with flies circling the corpse. Re-appearing in the narrator circle,[9] he possessed a halo.
When Doorman visited the after-life, he met Monkey Joe, who was playing cards with the rest of the fallen G.L.A. members.
Tippy-Toe
After the death of Monkey Joe, Squirrel Girl found a new companion, a female squirrel whom she named Tippy-Toe and provided with a pink bow.[9] Tippy-Toe replicates Monkey Joe's role as Squirrel Girl's sidekick almost exactly. Though apparently less intelligent than Monkey Joe, Tippy-Toe may in fact be smarter than she lets on and has proved her worth in short order.
A member of the squirrel army summoned by Squirrel Girl to join the fight against Maelstrom and Batroc's Brigade, Tippy-Toe was the only squirrel Doreen was able to save from Maelstrom's Cosmic Crunch device. Squirrel Girl also briefly considered the name Monkey Joe 2 for her.
Tippy-Toe accompanied and assisted Squirrel Girl in defeating MODOK and Thanos (she scratched MODOK's face, then entered his exo-chair and disabled it). Squirrel Girl left Tippy-Toe behind when she went to fight Terrax, and the squirrel was targeted by Deathurge, who sought vengeance for being stranded on Earth and trapped in squirrel form. However, Tippy-Toe managed to trick Deathurge and defeat him. During the Civil War story arc Tippy-Toe joined the Great Lakes Champions in siding with Iron Man's pro-Superhuman Registration group.
Tippy-Toe is able to understand her teammate's comments, complaining when Doorman discounts her as a viable teammate for a mission. She has also been seen using tools that a squirrel wouldn't normally be able to use such as being able to wield a screwdriver[13] and operate a blender which Mr. Immortal complains to Squirrel Girl about due Tippy-Toe whipping up acorn smoothies that keeps compromising the machine.[10]
Other versions
Marvel Zombies
A zombified Squirrel Girl along with her 'Squirrel-A-Gig' make an appearance in Marvel Zombies: Evil Evolution. The decapitated zombified head of Mr. Fantastic humorously comments, "There's a zombie Squirrel Girl? Now that's scary!"[22]
In other media
Television
- Squirrel Girl made a brief appearance (in a modified costume) in the 2006 Fantastic Four cartoon series episode titled "The Cure." In the episode, the Thing had been "cured" of his condition, and the team was holding auditions for potential replacements (including Flatman, Texas Twister, Captain Ultra, and eventual winner She-Hulk). Squirrel Girl's audition consisted of her sliding into the center of the audition area and shouting, "Ta-da!", with her squirrels both accompanying her and swarming the table at which the Fantastic Four were sitting. She was immediately rejected.[23]
- Squirrel Girl is also mentioned in The Super Hero Squad Show where it is said she is dating War Machine in secrecy.[24]
Toys
- Squirrel Girl is one of the collectible miniatures in the Captain America Heroclix set which was released in July 2011.
Trading cards
- An official Squirrel Girl trading card, showing a much more mature version of the character and drawn by Joe Quesada, was released by Fleer-Skybox in 1997.[4]
- The official "Marvel Universe Trading Card Game" also included a Squirrel Girl card.[25]
Video games
- Squirrel Girl is set to star as a playable character in the soon to be released game Marvel Super Hero Squad: Comic Combat.[26]
- She is also going to be playable in the upcoming online game Marvel Universe MMO.[27]
Reception
Writer Brian Michael Bendis has mentioned the popularity she has between other writers and the unanimous decision to have her as the role of the Nanny in "New Avengers". After announcing the character's role at the 2010 Comic-con panel, Bendis described the audience's reaction citing "...[it] was so loud, the applause went on for so long... the place went nuts for a while". He went on to say that it was like Stan Lee walking into the room.[28]
Co-creator Will Murray has shown interest in returning to the character citing "...I’ve been thinking of pitching Marvel a Squirrel Girl project. She’s defeated most of the major Marvel super villains. It’s time she met her match in The Ultimate Pistachio".[2] Marvel's previous editor in chief Joe Quesada has also shown the same interest jokingly saying "I've always wanted to do a Squirrel Girl miniseries or a Squirrel Girl event – "Squirrel Girl Destroys Your Nuts!" [laughs] I haven't been able to sell it in yet, but I keep on trying".[29]
UGO Networks listed Squirrel Girl as one their "Woman We're Ashamed to Be Attracted To"[30] and put Squirrel Girl as one the more questionable D-list superheroes that they still loved anyway.[31] GameZone's Ben PerLee has cited that Squirrel Girl was one of the characters he'd want to see in Marvel Vs. Capcom 3 as downloadable content.[32]
IGN has shown a positive reaction to her appearance in the more mainstream "New Avengers" comic citing "...issue [15] goes a long way towards painting her as a more fleshed out human being with real desires. Bendis hasn't quite found a truly unique voice for her yet, but regardless, it's nice to see her offering something more than comic relief."[33]
References
- ^ a b Ditkomania #79
- ^ a b c "Will Murray Interview". Jazma Online. 2009-05-02. http://www.jazmaonline.com/interviews/interviews2009.asp?intID=355. Retrieved 2011-09-20.
- ^ a b c I (Heart) Marvel: Masked Intentions
- ^ a b "Fleer-Skybox Squirrel Girl Trading card". Comic Collector Live. http://www.comiccollectorlive.com/LiveData/Issue.aspx?id=44316926-2727-4199-bcb6-b4da0e5a0fdc. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ a b New Avengers vol. 2 #7
- ^ a b Marvel Super-Heroes vol. 3 #8
- ^ Great Lakes Avengers #2
- ^ a b Great Lakes Avengers #3
- ^ a b c d Great Lakes Avengers #4
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j GLX-Mas Special (December 2005)
- ^ a b c Thing vol. 2 #8
- ^ a b Cable and Deadpool #30
- ^ a b c d Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular
- ^ a b c d e Age of Heroes #3
- ^ Wolverine #8 (2011)
- ^ a b New Avengers Vol. 2 #15
- ^ New Avengers Vol. 2 #16
- ^ Spider Island: Avengers #1
- ^ Cable & Deadpool #30
- ^ She-Hulk vol. 2, #12-13
- ^ The New Avengers Annual #1
- ^ Marvel Zombies: Evil Evolution #1
- ^ "The Cure". Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes. 2007-06-09. No. 18, season 1.
- ^ "Tales of Suspense". The Super Hero Squad Show. 2009-05-12. No. 17, season 1.
- ^ "Marvel Universe Official Squirrel Girl Trading card". TCG Player. http://vs.tcgplayer.com/db/card.asp?id=4754. Retrieved 2011-09-20.
- ^ "Super Hero Squad Comic Combat details". THQ. 2011-07-15. http://www.thq.com/us/game/detail/7248. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
- ^ "Marvel Universe MMO Details". Gamerant. 2011-06-12. http://www.gamerant.com/marvel-universe-mmo-details-robk-81746/. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
- ^ "Interview with Brian Michael Bendis". Newsarama. 2011-10-15. http://www.newsarama.com/common/media/video/player.php?aid=39006. Retrieved 2011-09-04.
- ^ "Joe Quesada Interview". Comic book Resource. http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=21788. Retrieved 2011-09-20.
- ^ Aubrey Sitterson (2011-02-01). "Women We're Ashamed to Be Attracted To". UGO Networks. http://www.ugo.com/girls/squirrel-girl. Retrieved 2011-02-14.
- ^ Matt Patches (2011-02-09). "The D-List: Superheroes We Love, That Still Kind of Suck". UGO Networks. http://www.ugo.com/comics/squirrel-girl-d-list-superheroes. Retrieved 2011-02-14.
- ^ Ben ParLee (2011-01-31). "10 Characters We’d Like to See For Marvel vs Capcom 3 DLC". GameZone. http://www.gamezone.com/editorials/item/ten_chracters_wed_like_to_see_for_marvel_vs_capcom_3_dlc/. Retrieved 2011-02-14.
- ^ "Avengers #15 review". IGN. 2011-08-10. http://au.comics.ign.com/articles/118/1187342p1.html. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
External links
- Article at Marvel Universe: the Official Marvel Wiki
- Squirrel Girl at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
New Avengers Creators Initial members Luke Cage · Captain America · Echo · Iron Man · Sentry · Spider-Man · Spider-Woman (Veranke) · WolverineEnemies A.I.M. · Yelena Belova · The Collective · Dark Avengers · H.A.M.M.E.R. · The Hand · The Hood · HYDRA · Madame Masque · Norman Osborn · Sauron · SkullsHeadquarters Storylines Avengers Disassembled · House of M · Civil War · Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America · World War Hulk · Avengers/Invaders · Secret Invasion · Dark Reign · Siege · Heroic Age · Fear ItselfRelated series Avengers · Mighty Avengers · Dark Avengers · Avengers: The Initiative · New Avengers: Illuminati · New Avengers/Transformers · Secret Avengers · Secret War · Young AvengersRelated articles Brother Voodoo · Nick Fury · H.A.M.M.E.R. · Victoria Hand · Maria Hill · The Raft · Scarlet Witch · S.H.I.E.L.D. · Squirrel Girl · Superhuman Registration ActCategories:- Comics characters introduced in 1991
- Characters created by Steve Ditko
- Fictional aviators
- Fictional characters from California
- Fictional squirrels
- Marvel Comics mutants
- Marvel Comics superheroes
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