tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9181661843785521752.post8243369861624680112..comments2024-03-03T08:46:56.169-08:00Comments on A Very Creepy Blog: Eerie 135Quiddityhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13986124694445522253noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9181661843785521752.post-1662800727108006322010-06-03T05:54:04.577-07:002010-06-03T05:54:04.577-07:00Thanks for this annotated blog post filled with in...Thanks for this annotated blog post filled with insightful comments and especially for listing where these stories were originally published. I've had EERIE #135 for awhile and just pulled it out again; one of those books I can revisit and enjoy again and again. -- Gary Peterson (Omaha, NE)Gary R. Petersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00811008380554433446noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9181661843785521752.post-12518548710227359692009-05-30T11:48:15.821-07:002009-05-30T11:48:15.821-07:00I purchased this a short while back, at last year'...I purchased this a short while back, at last year's big comic con here in Detroit (Novi, actually). I've owned just about everything Ditko's ever done during the Fifties and Sixties at one point or another in my life, he had a style well-suited for the horror genre. Some have said that he did his best work in the pages of CREEPY and EERIE, although some of his pre-code work from the early Fifties is pretty impressive in its inventiveness, even though his style was a bit raw at the onset. He had to tone things down a bit when he was doing those short stories for Atlas/Marvel in the late Fifties/early Sixties, but still the inventiveness shone through. Truly one of the most unique talents ever to work in comics, I'll always have an abiding fondness for his work.Guy Budziaknoreply@blogger.com