Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
Judy Garland tribute magazine (1970). Cover artist unknown. Another two-issue title, The Crime Machine, consisted solely of comic-book crime fiction reprints from the 1950s. [9] A remaining title, Science Fiction Odyssey, was planned for September 1971 publication, but withdrawn; some of its stories eventually appeared in the horror magazines.
All of these magazines featured grisly, lurid color covers and no advertisements, [citation needed] having the final page of a story on the back cover. New material was mixed with reprints from 1950s pre- Comics Code horror comics.
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.
A later publication also called Terror Tales was a black-and-white horror comics magazine published by Eerie Publications. [3] There were 46 issues, from March 1969 ...
This page was last edited on 20 December 2023, at 22:21 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Haunt of Fear is an American bi-monthly horror comic anthology series that was published by EC Comics from 1950 to 1954 created by Bill Gaines and Al Feldstein. The magazine began in June 1947 as Fat and Slat. It continued under this title for four issues before becoming Gunfighter (#5–14).
Tom Sutton's cover for Creepy #22 (Aug. 1968). Sutton's first two comic-book stories appeared the same month. His first sale, "The Monster from One Billion B.C.", was published in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror-comics magazine Eerie #11 (Sept. 1967), though it was originally commissioned for Famous Monsters of Filmland (where it was reprinted four months later).