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  1. Horror comics are comic books, graphic novels, black-and-white comics magazines, and manga focusing on horror fiction. In the US market, horror comic books reached a peak in the late 1940s through the mid-1950s, when concern over content and the imposition of the self-censorship Comics Code Authority contributed to the demise of many titles and ...

    • Uzumaki. Junji Ito. 148 votes. A city is plagued by a curse that is somehow related to spirals. It's disturbing and will have you on the edge of your seat.
    • Saga of the Swamp Thing. Stephen R. Bissette, Alan Moore. 86 votes. A monster series that combines environmentalism. The Swamp Thing struggles with its own identity, which gives way to some of the greatest horrors ever.
    • 30 Days of Night. Steve Niles, Ben Templesmith. 83 votes. A small town in the middle of nowhere experiences 30 days of night every year. That's when the vampires come out to play.
    • Locke & Key. Joe Hill, Gabriel Rodriguez. 114 votes. The Locke family has a history of murder, betrayal, and demons. Unimagined terrors arise, making way for a nightmare that never ends.
  2. Apr 26, 2023 · I. The Early Days: The Birth of a Genre. Horror first crept onto the comic book scene in the 1940s with groundbreaking titles like “Adventures into the Unknown” and “Eerie Comics.”

    • Tales from the Crypt/ Vault of Horror/Haunt of Fear (1950-1955) By Many Masters of blood curdling Mayhem. In the first half of the 1950s, one comic company ruled the roost when it came to vivid horror, and that company was EC Comics.
    • Swamp Thing (1973- present with so many horrific stops in between) By Len Wein, Bernie Wrightson, Nestor Redondo, Martin Pasko, Alan Moore, John Totleben, Steve Bissette, Rick Veitch, Nancy A. Collins, Mark Millar, Brian K. Vaughan, Andy Diggle, Scott Snyder, and holy crap, so many more.
    • The Walking Dead (2003 – Present) By Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, and Charlie Adlard. Now here’s a little comic you may have heard of. There hasn’t been a bigger comic book success story in the 21st Century than The Walking Dead.
    • Creepy (1964-1983) Eerie (1966-1983) By So many madmen, lunatics, and mad scientists. EC Comics may be the most famous horror publisher of all time, but Warren Publishing raised it to the next level of atrocity.
    • 30 Days of Night. Writer: Steve Niles. Artist: Ben Templesmith. Publisher: IDW Publishing. Every time I read Steve Niles and Ben Templesmith’s grisly vampire yarn, 30 Days of Night, I say the same thing over and over: “How did no one ever think of this genius story before?”
    • Afterlife With Archie. Writer: Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa. Artist: Francesco Francavilla. Publisher: Archie Comics. In 2013, the Archie editorial crew took the definition of on-brand and fed it to a ravenous horde of flesh-eating shamblers.
    • Aliens: Dead Orbit. Writer/Artist: James Stokoe. Publisher: Dark Horse Comics. Like fellow precision artists Geof Darrow and the late, great Bernie Wrightson, James Stokoe doesn’t stop drawing until nearly every millimeter of canvas is shaded, hatched and stylized.
    • Aliens: Salvation. Writer: Dave Gibbons. Artist: Mike Mignola. Publisher: Dark Horse. The Aliens franchise has seen a host of worthy comic installments under the purview of longtime license holder Dark Horse, but few have tapped into the oppressive terror of Ridley Scott’s original vision rather than the guns-blazing sci-fi action of the sequels.
  3. Nov 3, 2021 · There are plenty of examples of comics and graphic novels hitting the same heights that a horror film can, from psychological terror to revolting moments to gory humor a la Shaun of the...

  4. May 4, 2023 · If you love a comic book that instills a sense of uneasiness, fear or even terror, buckle up as we take you on a chilling ride through the best horror comics ever made. Let’s jump in! 1. Afterlife with Archie.

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