Saturday, October 27, 2007

All Hallows

Countdown to Halloween: Post #4A! In the 80’s and early 90’s there were several excellent attempts by independent comic book publishers to re-capture the spirit of Golden Age pre-code horror. Some were successful; many were not, but what matters most is that at least someone gave it a shot. And with that here's two Modern Age halloween horror story posts, our first for today from Bruce Jones’s terrific Twisted Tales #1, released by Pacific Comics in November 1982.







9 comments:

Anonymous said...

damn what a chilling little tale.....the mood is perfect and really captures the feeling of halloween at that age

I have to admit that these 2 modern age stories yuo've posted today are better than any of the golden age halloween storys so far

Anonymous said...

Hot damn!that's a good one,really creepy,and yeah the best of the halloween posts so far,could have been a little longer,but that would terminate the firepower(no pun intended)of the last scene.

Mr. Karswell said...

Glad to hear people are enjoying these modern age horror stories... I threatened to do this before and come Nov I think I may begin posting maybe one a week, or every other week. There's many great entries from the Twisted Tales series alone to keep us all properly snug as a bug within the vibe of the pre code horror realm.

Eyeball said...

I got this one too-- i still break out the modern-age ones from time to time, I always liked this story.

Anonymous said...

Great story ..this prompted me to pull out my TT collection and read a few each night in honor of All Hallows.

Anonymous said...

I remember reading this years ago, excellent story. I wish I still had alot of my comics that I sold.

Mr. Karswell said...

>wish I still had alot of my comics that I sold.

I heard that!

THE APOCOLYTE said...

My favorite modern Halloween story! Excellent work by Jones and Conrad! Karswell, I like this story so much, I'm going to post it in MY blog two years from now...

Bill the Butcher said...

This one is truly excellent. Stephen King without the overwriting that ruins King.