Weird Mystery Tales

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Weird Mystery Tales
Weird Mystery Tales #1 (July–August 1972), art by Michael Kaluta.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
ScheduleBimonthly
FormatOngoing series
Genre
Publication dateJuly–August 1972 – November 1975
No. of issues24
Main character(s)Dr. E. Leopold Maas
Destiny
Eve
Creative team
Written by
Penciller(s)
Inker(s)
Editor(s)
List

Weird Mystery Tales is a mystery horror comics anthology published by DC Comics from July–August 1972 to November 1975.

Publication history

100 Page Super Spectacular

The title Weird Mystery Tales was first used for DC 100 Page Super Spectacular #4 in 1971.[1] It reprinted stories from My Greatest Adventure #8, 12, 14, 15, and 20; Sensation Mystery #110 and 116; House of Secrets #2; The Phantom Stranger #1; Tales of the Unexpected #15 and 24; and House of Mystery #49.[2]

Ongoing series

The Weird Mystery Tales ongoing series was launched in July–August 1972

Eve, who fully assumed the title with issue #15 (December 1974–January 1975).[1] The title's name was partially inspired by the sales success of Weird War Tales and Weird Western Tales.[6] Early issues printed material by Jack Kirby that had been intended for his black-and-white, magazine-size DC comic series, Spirit World, which lasted only one issue.[7]
These stories featured Dr. E. Leopold Maas as host, sometimes with an appended hosting segment by Destiny.

Weird Mystery Tales contributors, in addition to Kirby, included Alfredo Alcala, Tony DeZuniga, Michael Kaluta, Alex Niño, Howard Purcell, Nestor Redondo, Jack Sparling, and Bernie Wrightson.[1] Howard Purcell's last known work in the comics industry was a story each in Weird Mystery Tales #1–3 (Aug.–Dec. 1972), plus the cover of #2.[8]

Ashcan edition

In 1996, DC published a free

ashcan edition titled Weird Mystery Tales, with the tagline, "Welcome to the Dark Side of DC". It was written by Adam Philips and drawn by Anthony Williams.[9]

Collected editions

References

External links