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The line of mostly black-and-white anthology magazines predominantly featured horror, sword and sorcery, and science fiction. The magazines did not carry the Marvel name, but were produced by Marvel staffers and freelancers, and featured characters regularly found in Marvel comic books, as well as some creator-owned material.
Skywald Publications was an American publisher of black-and-white comics magazines, primarily the horror anthologies Nightmare, Psycho, and Scream.It also published a small line of comic books and other genre magazines.
Horror comics are comic books, graphic novels, black-and-white comics magazines, and manga focusing on horror fiction.In the US market, horror comic books reached a peak in the late 1940s through the mid-1950s, when concern over content and the imposition of the self-censorship Comics Code Authority contributed to the demise of many titles and the toning down of others.
(magazine) #1 – 4 June 1976 – Nov. 1976 Black and white magazine version Fightin' Air Force #3 – 53 Feb. 1956 – Feb.-March 1966 becomes War and Attack: Fightin' Army #16 – 172 Jan. 1956 – Nov. 1984 formerly Soldier & Marine Comics: The Fightin' Five #28 – 49 July 1964 – Dec. 1982 formerly Space War, #42–49 all reprints Fightin ...
Comic magazines: Fiction genres: Horror, science fiction: Eerie Publications was a publisher of black-and-white horror-anthology comics magazines. History
House of Hammer (Top Sellers/General Books, 23 issues, Oct. 1976–July 1978) — changed title to Hammer's House of Horror and Hammer's Halls of Horror; later revived as Halls of Horror by Quality Communications; Kid Colt Outlaw (Thorpe & Porter, 58 issues, 1950–1960) — contained black-and-white reprints from both Atlas Comics and DC Comics
Creepy was an American horror comics magazine launched by Warren Publishing in 1964. Like Mad, it was a black-and-white newsstand publication in a magazine format and did not carry the seal of the Comics Code Authority. [1] An anthology magazine, it initially was published quarterly
Morrow next began a three-year association with Warren Publishing's line of black-and-white horror-comics magazines in 1964, starting with the six-page story "Bewitched!," written by Larry Ivie, in Creepy #1, and contributed over a dozen stories to that magazine and its sister publication Eerie, as well as to the war-comics magazine Blazing ...
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