Board Thread:Questions and Answers/@comment-25570259-20141023000007/@comment-4651179-20141023023553

From Avengers, I would recommend you any of their titles. Avengers and New Avengers go practically side by side (as they are both written by Jonathan Hickman), they focus on an epic-scale story with a long build-up, so you might want to consult this Wikia or read previous issues before jumping in or you might be scratching your head. I would say Avengers #35 and New Avengers #24 are the perfect jumping points. Avengers is focused on the core Avengers team, and New Avengers on the Illuminati. New Avengers is my favorite of those two because of the thought-provoking stories and conflicts it offers.

Avengers World is like the step-sister of those two titles, it focuses on the core Avengers team, but not on their shared story. It's fairly recent, with only #14 issues out (and they are all from the same story arc). Most of these 14 issues focused on characters with usually less spotlight like Falcon, Shang-Chi or Star Brand, and some new international teams, like the Euroforce or China's Ascendants.

Secret Avengers delves into absurdity, and you'll love it because of that. You don't get in every comic a sentient bomb which was convinced not to blow up and destroy all of reality because it was offered gelato, or M.O.D.O.K. confessing his love for Maria Hill. It focuses on S.H.I.E.L.D.'s own Spec Ops team the Secret Avengers.

Captain America and the Mighty Avengers has a lot of heart (this name is its relaunch title, the previous volume with same characters and writer was Mighty Avengers. It fouces on the Mighty Avengers, a team of street-level heroes doing good because it's the right thing.

Uncanny Avengers will be relaunched after Marvel's current event AXIS, most of the previous volume was focused on a long story which was pretty interesting and featured an alternate universe in wich Earth was destroyed. But as a starting point, check out the second volume. It focuses on the Avengers Unity Division, a team composed by both Avengers and X-Men to unify humankind with mutantkind.

Other personal picks would be Loki: Agent of Asgard (witty humor, dialogue and characters), Moon Knight (simple yet refreshing and beautifully illustrated one-shot stories each issue), Hawkeye (different and funny, soon to be ending and then relaunched in March), Black Widow (beautifully illustrated with strong narrative), Magneto (interesting and personal, as it focuses on a villain's story) and Silver Surfer'' (very influenced by the Silver Age's crazyness).