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Tales from the Crypt; Foot Soldiers

Suspended Animation Classic #400

Originally published August 18, 1996 (#33)

(Dates are approximate)

 

Tales from the Crypt: the Official Archives; Foot Soldiers

By Dr. Jon Suter

 

Readers who grew up in the early 1950s can recapture their childhoods by acquiring Digby Diehl’s “Tales from the Crypt: the Official Archives” (St. Martin’s Press, 1996).

 

Those who grew up later will also want a copy, but they will never be able to share the earlier generation’s memory of joy at seeing new EC horror titles on racks and wallowing in the gruesomeness perpetrated by EC writers and artists.

 

The rise, fall, and eventual triumph of EC has been chronicled in many places. American popular culture has been indelibly marked by editors and writers William Gaines and Al Feldstein, artists Jack Davis and Graham Ingels, and numerous others.

 

Readers unfamiliar with the Gaines saga catch up quickly with this volume’s valuable historical and biographical information. The price is ghastly ($45), however, paper quality and illustrations make it worthwhile.

 

Other EC reprint materials are available, but this book brings the story up to date with extensive coverage of the popular television series.

 

Hollywood’s special effects can equal or surpass anything Gaines’ team put on paper, but this reader still retains fondness for letting the imagination add a few hideous details to the final moments of a story.

 

If there was one dominant theme in these horror titles, it was that evil will bring retribution. Virtue may not be rewarded, but justice will be visited upon the predatory, the abuse, and the corrupt.

 

Dante’s “Inferno” was mild in comparison to EC’s version of justice. One wonders what punishments Gaines and his team would mete out for transgressors who stalk our world today.

 

This book is not for small children, particularly because of photographs from the television series.

 

Even those who won the Russ Cochran reprints of EC titles will want to consider adding this to their collections.

 

MINIVIEW: “The Foot Soldiers” [Dark Horse]. Quirky and theatrical, well written and drawn, this twist on the overworked superhero theme is entertaining, irritating (for its overuse of puns) and recommended. MV

 

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Uploaded on March 22, 2010