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In July 2009, Dark Horse Comics and New Comic Company LLC released the new Creepy magazine. [8] Edited by Shawna Gore and Dan Braun with Craig Haffner, it displayed the work of artists Bernie Wrightson, Angelo Torres, Saskia Gutekunst and Jason Shawn Alexander illustrating scripts by Michael Woods, [9] Dan Braun, Joe Harris and Bill Dubay.
A 1998 lawsuit by James Warren [13] resulted in his reacquisition of the rights to Creepy and Eerie. Dark Horse Comics began issuing reprints with the ongoing licensed series Creepy Archives in 2008, [14] and began publishing new material with Creepy vol. 2 in 2009 [15] and Eerie vol. 2 in 2012. [16]
Dark Horse Comics is an American comic book company.These are the ongoing and current limited series publications it has released under its own brand. Comics published through their various imprints appear on the List of Dark Horse Comics imprint publications, collected editions of its own publications appear on the List of Dark Horse Comics collected editions, and reprints appear on the List ...
Creepy: 1 Creepy #1-5 HC August 2008 978-1-59307-987-1: 2 Creepy #6-10 HC November 2008 978-1-59582-168-3: 3 HC April 2009 4 HC August 2009 5 HC January 2010 6 HC February 2010 7 HC June 2010 8 HC November 2010 9 HC January 2011 10 HC July 2011 11 HC October 2011 12 HC February 2012 13 HC March 2012 14 HC October 2012 15 HC February 2013 16 HC ...
This is a list of collected editions of material published by Dark Horse Comics as ongoing and limited series. For collected editions reprinting webcomics and material originally published by other companies, including manga and manhwa series that were translated and distributed in America, see the List of Dark Horse Comics reprints
Eerie was an American magazine of horror comics introduced in 1966 by Warren Publishing. Like Mad, it was a black-and-white magazine intended for newsstand distribution and did not submit its stories to the comic book industry's voluntary Comics Code Authority. [1] Each issue's stories were introduced by the host character, Cousin Eerie.
A TikToker recorded a video of his horse getting spooked by what seemed to be an unexplained voice while riding on a trail. User @that1cowboy shared the clip on TikTok on Nov. 10, where it has ...
His stories appeared in Creepy, Eerie, Vampirella, 1984 and Comix International. He also colored several episodes of Will Eisner's Spirit. All the stories and covers he did for Creepy and Eerie have been reprinted by Dark Horse Books in a single volume: Creepy Presents Richard Corben. [7]