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InDELLIble Comics brings an assortment of graphic novel short stories in this anthology by a number of indy creators. This issue features a Phantasmo story as well as a number of holiday and winter themed stories.
The superheroes and villains of the InDELLIble Comics univ erse are re-imagined as little kids on the playground attending the same school, Dell Elementary. Story by David Noe, art by Will Boyer and colors by Anna Holley
Brief family histories of people who lived in Tennessee in the 18th and 19th centuries.
No joke! Voices in My Pen is the funniest thing I've ever written. It's wacky and witty, pithy and sardonic. It goes from satire to parody, from slapstick to Dada, from nonsense to cerebral. It covers the gamut. It runs the gamut. It takes the gamut dancing and then to meet its Uncle Phil who it hasn't spoken to in months after the incident at Thanksgiving. Phil seems to think it's a nice gamut, as gamuts go, but it's spread a little thin, working several jobs, and still paying off those college loans... Voices in My Pen makes a great gift for people you love and for folks you maybe don't like so much. It breaks all the rules! It's CRAAAAZY! Believe me, if you think it's overhyped, wait unti...
Haunted Hero When Dr. Miles Murdoch's brother was murdered by the mobs, he vowed vengeance. In the following weeks, wearing a horrifying death mask, a new avenger appeared on the streets of Akelton, bringing with him righteous retribution. The city now finds itself under the protection of a haunted hero, a mysterious angel of doom who metes out his own brand of permanent justice. In this second volume featuring this little known classic pulp figure, writers Gene Moyers, Paul Kevin Findley, Erik Franklin and David Noe pit the purple-hued Master of Fright against a quartet of villainous opponents: from a gang of deadly jewel thieves to a merciless arsonist bent on burning down the entire city. In these new tales of the Purple Scar, justice and horror are on a collision course you don't want to miss.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1883.
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