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Creepy and Eerie and Vampirella, Oh My!
Knowing that I have over five decades of trivia stuffed in
my brain, and that a lot of it has to do with comics,
science fiction, and writing in general, Paul asked me if I
was interested in writing a column for Stumblebum. “Hmm,” I said, “I don’t know. I don’t have time for the
things I have to do now. Besides, I don’t know much about
the current trends in comics and such.” After assuring me
that I didn’t have to expound on recent things, he then said
that there was no deadline, and I could do it when I had the
time.
So here I sit at my lunch hour at work, adding to a
case of terminal carpal tunnel syndrome. (Just kidding. Why,
I have the wrists of a 50-year old. Wait. I’m only 51. Oh,
well...)
Years ago, I thoroughly dismayed my son by telling him that
I had once owned copies of every issue of the great Warren
black-and-white comics, Creepy, Eerie and Vampirella, up
through about 1975. The fact that I had owned them wasn’t
the cause for dismay, but rather that I had given them all
away shortly before I married his mother. (I also once
possessed first issues of The Amazing Spiderman, The
Incredible Hulk, Deadman, Swamp Thing and others, but that’s
a topic for another time.)
Thinking about this, I started reflecting on what I consider
a great period in comic book history. When Warren put out
Creepy in the mid-sixties, followed by Eerie and then
Vampirella, it opened up an entirely new world of
illustrated literature to me. A mixture of horror and
science fiction stories, with articles on mythology and the
supernatural, I could hardly wait for each issue to come out
so that I could get my next treat. The artwork was stark and
raw, the stories no less so, and they inspired me to read
more traditional literature to fill in the time between
issues. It didn’t hurt that some of the best stories were
drawn from Edgar Allen Poe and other great authors, spurring
me to read the original stories and others by the same
writers. Of course, adults looked down on comics in general
as juvenile and trashy, and a complete waste of time. I knew
better than to argue with elders who had already made up
their minds about the subject. I merely continued to mow
lawns, rake leaves and shovel sidewalks to earn the money I
needed to feed my habit, the insidious drug of comic books. Many of the stories were straight-forward horror, similar to
the content of Tales from the Crypt and other ‘50s EC horror
comics, but the exceptions were gems, stories and series
that could send a shiver down your spine, or make you see
the possibilities of the as-yet unwritten future or the
maybe-not so unchangeable past. Some of them stand out in my
memory even today, mostly series that carried on over
several years:
Adam Link was an intelligent robot with human emotions,
hated and feared for being different. It was several years
after I first read the Adam Link stories that I consciously
recognized the metaphors of prejudice and discrimination,
but even before that I could see the message in the tales.
The Demons of Jedidiah Pan featured an old
man who possessed a pair of supernatural bracelets, each
of which could summon three different demons from Hell
to do his bidding. Jeremiah’s estranged son wanted to
destroy his father, thinking that he was evil, but found
that his father’s motivations were much different than
he could have imagined, and ended up joining forces with
him to fight even greater evils.
Night of the Jackass took its title from a drug called
Jackass, a derivative of the formula that turned Doctor
Jekyll into Mister Hyde. Set in Victorian England, the main
characters of the series were a trio of unlikely companions
trying to find an antidote to the effects of the drug, and
to force it on those who had taken the drug. Groups of
people in despair, such as coal miners dying from black
lung, and orphans with no hope for the future, took the drug
and became incredibly strong, insanely violent and nearly
invulnerable, wreaking havoc on society until the effects of
the drug wore off and they died from the withdrawal.
Hunter the Demon Killer was set in a post-Apocalyptical
future, where mutants known as demons roved the Earth
preying on the tattered remnants of the human race. Hunter
was half-human, half-demon, the offspring of a mutant leader
who had raped his mother and killed her husband. His life’s
work was to track down and kill every demon he could find,
always searching for the monster that sired him, all the
while wearing an ancient US Air Force jet pilot’s helmet.
These and many others tales motivated me to read more, to
write, to develop my imagination. They stimulated my mind,
made me wonder why about nearly everything, and forced me in
some cases to do some honest self-examination. A waste of my
time? Hardly. I think rather that these “juvenile comic
books” achieved the purpose of any true literature; to
engage, to inform, expand the horizons of the reader, and to
make that reader think. Yes, they were entertaining, and a
lot of fun as well – things that I think any good literature
should be. If you should ever get the chance, read some of these
comics. While they were written and drawn thirty and forty
years ago, I think that the artwork and the tales themselves
will prove timeless. They are certainly unique in the annals
of comic books, and I don’t think we’ll see anything exactly
like them again.
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