Two spring to mind for me.
First, I would recommend Ms marvel. It is very well written and a fun book to read. It captures the fun a
Of a superhero fan now being able to meet her heroes and learn to become one in the process. Its also a great portal of zygote its like being the first generation of immigrant parents. The confusion nd conflicts that arise from that are put forth in a realistic and non-insulting manner. Its not written in the "old ways are bad and outdated, we must do things the new way.. the American way!" That so often creep into these kinds of characters. Trying to balance what she was gauht growing o, the crape she has for her parents and a more conservative culture alongside what her friends and teenage peers in high school do and trying to fit in, is something that comes across as realistic and not forced (first generation of Filipino immegrants myself. Something I find relatable.). And then the sheer fun she has being a hero really captures the spirit of the old Spider-man stories with a teenage having fun having super powers. And "embiggen!!" Is a great battle cry
And then the second one I'd recommend is The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl. Which is just a huge amount of fun. Which is something that has been sorely missing from comics for a long time. Or in h case of DC, actively killed off. I think it was Didio that went on record saying he wanted to get rid of all the "funny" books, Young Justice, Impulse, Superboy, etc. Squirrel Girl brings out all of the glorious goofiness that is inherent with superheroes and just has fun with it. From squirrel armor to stealing an Iron Man suit to battle Galactus on the moon, its super hero wackiness at its best. And if the idea of her squirrel friend, Tippie Toe, flying around in an Iron Man helmet strapped to a repulsor gauntlet isn't amusing to you well then... you obviously find different things amusing