Doomsday #22
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "I Was A Zombie," engineer Alden Blake travels to Haiti to oversee the construction of a dam, only to uncover a chilling secret: the laborers are not merely overworked, but living zombies. When Blake threatens to expose the truth, he is transformed into one of them—yet even in undeath, he finds a way to strike back.
In "Nothing He Couldn't Do," four shipwrecked men find themselves trapped on a cannibal island, their hopes of survival quickly shattered when they're captured. While three of them cling to the faint hope of enduring a few more days, the island’s natives turn their attention to Jonesy, the ship’s handy mechanic, subjecting him to relentless torment.
In "Partners In Death," a cold-blooded act of betrayal comes back to haunt Ray Bruce, who slowly killed his business partner Howard Croft by withholding his heart medication. Now, Croft’s ghost returns, not with vengeance, but with a chilling presence that forces Bruce to confront the consequences of his crime—alone, in the silence between heartbeats.
In "Mental Wizard," a man haunted by a past crime finds his secret unraveling when a mysterious mentalist begins reading his thoughts—and using them to demand payment. As their tense game of psychological warfare escalates, the two men set out on a fishing trip that promises to be the final act in a deadly game of minds.
In "The Warlock of London," the sinister witcher Rego masquerades as the aristocratic Lord Harwood, weaving terror through London’s elite with dark magic and deception. When the relentless lawyer Percy Wynbrock uncovers the truth, he must confront the warlock in a deadly duel of wits and enchanted blades.
ComicBooks.com Value
Find on ebay
Sell my copy
Have this issue — or a whole collection? Get a fair offer from us, skip the marketplace fees and the hassle.
We Buy Collections ▸Full credits
Reprints
↩ Reprints Beware! Terror Tales #1 (1952), The Thing #4 (1952), The Thing #6 (1953), The Thing #14 (1954), The Thing #16 (1954)
Reviews
Reader reviews
No reader reviews yet.