Adventure Into The Unknown (174 Issues FULL RUN)

Adventures Into Darkness (10 Issues FULL RUN)

Adventure Into Fear (31 Issues FULL RUN)

Adventure Into Mystery ( 8 Issues FULL RUN)

Adventures Into Terror (31 Issues FULL RUN)

Adventures Into Weird Worlds (30 Issues FULL RUN)

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Adventure Into The Unknown

Adventures Into the Unknown is an American comic-book series best known as the medium’s first ongoing horror-comics title. Published by the American Comics Group, initially under the imprint B&I Publishing, it ran 174 issues (cover-dated Fall 1948 – Aug. 1967). The first two issues, which included art by Fred Guardineer and others, featured horror stories of ghosts, werewolves, haunted houses, killer puppets and other supernatural beings and locales. The premiere included a seven-page, abridged adaptation of Horace Walpole’s seminal gothic novel The Castle of Otranto, by an unknown writer and artist Al Ulmer.

Unlike many horror comics of the Golden Age, it weathered the public criticism of the early 1950s and survived the aftermath of the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency hearings of April and June 1954 when the comics industry attempted self-regulation with a highly restrictive Comics Code

Adventures Into Darkness

Adventures Into Darkness is a Golden Age comics series that ran for 10 issues from August 1952-1954. The series was published by Nedor Comics. Nedor Comics was the comic book line of publisher Ned Pines, who also published pulp magazines under a variety of company names (primarily Standard, Better and Thrilling) that he also used for the comics. In business from 1939 to 1956, Nedor was a prolific publisher during the Golden Age of comic books. Its best-known character is The Black Terror. In June of 1949, all comics were moved to the “Standard Comics” line, with a “Standard Comics” flag-like cover logo (all titles previously had no publisher logo, which was the norm at the time). In 1956, Standard ended and only two were continued by Pines Comics. What connection this new company had with Ned Pines and his company is unclear.

Adventure Into Fear

Adventure into Fear is an American horror comic book series published by Marvel Comics from cover dates November 1970 through December 1975, for 31 issues. This is its trademarked cover title for all but its first nine issues, though the series is copyrighted in its postal indicia as simply Fear.

The first nine issues, cover-titled Fear, reprinted science fiction/fantasy and monster stories from the late-1950s and early 1960s “pre-superhero Marvel” comics, primarily Journey into Mystery, Strange Tales, Tales to Astonish, and Tales of Suspense. Most were written by Marvel editor-in-chief Stan Lee and/or Larry Lieber, and generally penciled by Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, or Don Heck, though occasionally by Paul Reinman or Joe Sinnott. Most covers were reprints, though Marie Severin drew the new top half of #4, John Severin the cover of #8, and the team of Gil Kane (penciler) and Frank Giacoia (inker) the covers of #5, 6 and 9.

With issue #10 (Oct. 1972), the series was retitled Adventure into Fear (though remained titled Fear in the indicia) and began featuring new material. Issues #10-19 featured the swamp creature the Man-Thing, continuing from his introduction in the black-and-white comics-magazine Savage Tales #1 (May 1971). Following a story written by Man-Thing co-creator Gerry Conway, scripting was taken over by Steve Gerber, for whom the feature and eventual comic-book series Man-Thing would prove a signature work. Through issue #14, a back-up reprint story would be featured, similar to those that appeared in the first nine issues.

The story in #19 (Dec. 1973) introduced Howard the Duck, a cynical, cigar-smoking, anthropomorphic water fowl — a parody of funny animals — intended as a throwaway character. That plan changed when the duck quickly proved popular, becoming one of Marvel’s biggest 1970s characters and a pop-culture phenomenon that would later get a solo series as well as a notoriously disastrous feature film produced by George Lucas.


Adventure Into Mystery

SF/Horror anthology. This series was one of eight SF anthologies launched or revived in an eight-month period (cover dates October 1955–June 1956), increasing Atlas’s SF line from eight to sixteen books. This book ran until the collapse of Atlas’s distributor and the subsequent restructuring known as the “Atlas Implosion”.


Adventures Into Terror


Adventures Into Weird Worlds

SF/Horror anthology. This series was one of five SF anthologies launched in a six-month period (cover dates January 1952–June 1952), increasing Atlas’s SF line from seven to twelve books. It was also one of five such anthologies cancelled together, reducing Atlas’s SF line from thirteen books to eight.

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