The Vault of Horror (book)

The Vault of Horror is a mass-market paperback collection of eight horror comic stories gathered from the pages of the EC Comics comic books of the 1950s. It is one of five such collections published by Ballantine Books between 1964 and 1966 (the others are Tales from the Crypt, Tales of the Incredible, The Autumn People and Tomorrow Midnight). The presentation of the material is problematic at best, since the color comic book pages are represented in black and white and broken into horizontal strips to fit the mass-market paperback format. Still, the collections are historically important. They were the first attempt to resurrect the EC comics, only a decade after public outcry had driven them off the racks. They were the first introduction of those comics to a generation of readers too young to remember them in their first run.

The Vault of Horror
First edition
Date1965
Main charactersThe Crypt-Keeper, The Old Witch, The Vault-Keeper
PublisherBallantine Books
Creative team
WritersAl Feldstein
ArtistsJohnny Craig, Jack Davis, George Evans, Frank Frazetta, Graham Ingels, Joe Orlando
Original publication
Published inThe Haunt of Fear, Tales from the Crypt, The Vault of Horror

The stories are drawn from the comic books The Vault of Horror, Tales from the Crypt and The Haunt of Fear. The writer was not credited in the original publications but was probably Al Feldstein, the editor of the books. The artists were such EC stalwarts as Johnny Craig, Jack Davis, George Evans, Graham Ingels and Joe Orlando.

The cover painting by Frank Frazetta, himself an EC alumnus, depicting the Vault-Keeper reading in a candlelit burial vault, is original to this collection.

Contents

  • "Star Light, Star Bright" (Craig)
  • "Last Respects" (Ingels)
  • "The Trophy" (Davis)
  • "Curiosity Killed" (Evans)
  • "The Basket" (Davis)
  • "Fed Up" (Craig)
  • "Wish You Were Here" (Ingels)
  • "The Craving Grave" (Orlando)

References

  • "Grand Comics Database". Retrieved 2011-06-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.