Eerie (Avon)
Eerie Comics | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Avon Periodicals |
Format | Standard |
Genre | horror |
Publication date | January 1947 |
Number of issues | 1 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Edward Bellin |
Artist(s) |
Fred Kida George Roussos |
Penciller(s) | Joe Kubert |
Eerie was a one-shot horror comic book cover-dated January 1947 and published by Avon Periodicals as Eerie #1. Its creative team included (among others) Joe Kubert and Fred Kida. Eerie holds the distinction of being the first true, stand-alone horror comic book and is credited with establishing the horror comics genre.[1][2]
After the initial issue, the title went dormant for a number of years but returned to newsstands as an ongoing title in 1951.
Description, contents, and creative team
Eerie is a full-color, 52 page, standard format, one-shot horror comic published by Avon Periodicals with a price of US$0.10 and cover-dated January 1947. The book was released as Eerie #1.[3][1]
The comic book's glossy,[3] cover depicts a red-eyed ghoul clutching a dagger and a rope-bound, voluptuous young woman in a derelict moonlit ruin. The book's contents comprised six full-length horror feature stories and a two-page humorous tale.
The issue featured six stories that were fairly tame in the depiction of the gore and violence generally found in horror fiction.[2] "The Eyes of the Tiger" follows a man haunted by the ghost of a stuffed tiger;[3][2] "The Man-Eating Lizards" (with a script by Edward Bellin and pencils by Joe Kubert), tells the story of an island infested with flesh-eating lizards;[3][2] and another, "The Strange Case of Henpecked Harry" (with art by Fred Kida), follows a man spooked by the bloody corpse of his murdered wife.[3][2] Other feature stories include "Dead Man's Tale", "Proof", and "Mystery of Murder Manor". A two-page humorous tale starring Goofy Ghost rounds out the issue.[3] Members of the creative team include Fugitani[1] and George Roussos.[2]
Following the January 1947 issue, Eerie disappeared from newsstands shelves.
Ongoing series
Eerie Comics | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Avon Periodicals |
Format | Standard |
Genre | horror |
Publication date | May/June 1951 – Aug./Sept. 1954 |
Number of issues | 17 |
Creative team | |
Artist(s) |
Joe Orlando Wallace Wood |
In 1951, Eerie #1, cover-dated May/June 1951, was published by Avon and saw a run of seventeen issues.[2] The first issue of Eerie reprinted "The Strange Case of Henpecked Harry" from the 1947 Eerie one-shot as "The Subway Horror",[3] and issue #12 printed a Dracula story based on the Bram Stoker novel. Several covers featured large-breasted women in bondage. Artists Joe Orlando and Wallace Wood were associated with the series. The title saw a run of seventeen issues, ceasing publication with its August/September 1954 issue.
Eerie then morphed into the second iteration of the science fiction anthology Strange Worlds with issue #18 (October/November 1954).[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Overstreet, Robert M.. (2004). Official Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide. Random House. 527.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Goulart, Ron. (2001). Great American Comic Books. Publications International, Ltd.. 173.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Smith, Keith (2009). "GCD Issue Details: Eerie #1". Grand Comics Database. Retrieved 2009-02-07.