I'm new to the Sentry so forgive me if I raise old questions. I did survey past posts about Sentry (but not the archives).Antonio Gaviño wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 2:44 am AMAZING SPIDER-MAN # 7
FEATURE CHARACTER: Spider-Man (next in FNSM # 5, '06 (The Vulture is in prison from ASM # 2 to ASM # 7 and Peter is in Senior high and wearing glasses in FNSM # 5 (Flash also appears) so they must appear there before ASM # 8. Since we don't see the Vulture taken back to prison at the end of ASM # 7 he probably manages to get free from Spidey's webbing and then fight him again in FNSM # 5), IM: IA # 2, '98 …)
SUPPORTING CHARACTERS: J. Jonah Jameson, May Parker (both chr next in UTOS # 3, '95, next in ASM # 9, '64), Betty Brant (all three chr next in UTOS # 3, '95, next in ASM # 9, '64), Flash Thompson (chr next in S/SM # 1, '01 fb) (Flash is given an appearance in this fb and Peter isn't even though he is in the same scene, not that it matters in this case. I'm guessing the reasoning to place this fb here was that Peter's glasses break in ASM # 8 and they look intact in this fb, although he is not wearing them. Well, the placement is wrong: The Sentry tells Spider-Man that the Void has been working with the Kingpin and Spidey knows the Kingpin better than most; by the time of ASM # 7-8 Spider-Man hasn't even met the Kingpin yet. The flashbacks in S/SM # 1 happen at two or three different instances in time; the first with Doc Ock fighting Spidey while being followed by the Sentry and probably the following day, where Flash appears; the second instance "months" later with the Sentry showing up at Peter's house, we see the unbroken glasses here, to recruit Spidey's help against the Void and the Kingpin and the following dawn with Peter being the first to photograph the Sentry; and probably a third segment the following days or weeks with Robert Reynolds revealed as the Sentry with Peter's picture and Peter attending the Pulitzer's. So, with that in mind we'll leave placement of these flashbacks for when we get to later issues and find more appropriate places for them given the clues at hand) ...
Jenkins seems to have a confused sense of Spidey's chronology. Parker is seen with his vest from the Ditko days and is the butt of Flash's remarks. On page 14, he knows Gwen but not MJ, which would place the flashback between ASM 27 and 41, except it says Spider-Man has already fought the Kingpin (ASM 50). By then Flash has left for the army (ASM 47). Peter is living with his aunt rather than with Harry (since ASM 46).
Here is my attempt to analyse it:
Pages 1-3, 8:1-3, 16, 22 present
pages 4-7 Spidey first meets Sentry, who calls him, "Peter." The foreboding rooftop imagery and the dark omens page 14 seem to point at ASM 89-90, so this could possibly happen on page 6 of ASM 89. The narration reads as if it's the point when darkness enters Spidey's life (death of Capt. Stacy, Harry on drugs, death of Gwen). But see notes for pages 9:3 - 15.
pages 8:4 - 9:2 "when you were just a kid... you used to idolize him" Given the wording, this could occur before pages 4-7. Between ASM 7 & 8 if you want but note he has already stopped wearing glasses in those pages...
pages 9:3 - 15 recruited by Sentry vs Void + Kingpin, Kingpin necessitating a break from previous panels, the break could be between 9:4 and 9:5 if you disconnect the caption in 9:3 from the picture. Problem: Peter is living at his aunt's home where "for months he'd flinch every time the doorbell rang." The 4-7 flashback would need to be much earlier, before Peter shares an apartment in ASM 46, maybe between ASM 18 & 29.
pages 17-20 (Sentry#200) goes public
21:2 attending the Pulitzers
21:3 - 21:5 Hulk, Void. Spidey thinks, "trying to get back to your other job... juggling all the attention you were getting with the business of bringing in the bad guys" What's odd is that there is no mention of his studies, plus when was Parker getting so much attention as a photographer that he had to juggle with his superhero life? Did Jenkins mean this part to take place after he dropped his studies? This reads like an alternate history.