Eerie #131
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "Killer Hawk," Wally Wood crafts a chilling descent into cosmic dread, where a lone survivor stumbles upon a desolate world teeming with eerie silence and forgotten remains. The story unfolds with a haunting blend of isolation and unseen menace, as the last human mind confronts a force beyond comprehension—its origins and true nature left shrouded in dread. Cover by Rudy Nebres captures the chilling atmosphere with stark, unsettling imagery, making this 1982 Warren classic a standout in the series' eerie legacy.
In "Killer Hawk," Colonel Hawkins—renowned as the most formidable warrior in the Martian Army—finds his legendary status drawing dangerous attention from both the President of United Mars and an unseen rival, setting off a high-stakes game of power and deception on a world where loyalty is a weapon and every move could be a trap.
In the eerie silence of a forgotten world, a lone space crew stumbles upon a planet covered in endless rows of humanlike skeletons—beneath a sky that seems to pulse with unseen life. What they find first is a slimy, shifting mass of protoplasm, and though they flee in terror, they soon realize the true horror isn’t behind them—it’s all around, and it’s already everywhere.
In the blistering skies over England, the Luftwaffe and the R.A.F. clash in a brutal aerial duel, each side pushing to the brink in a war of sheer numbers and will. As the odds tilt against the defenders, one pilot’s resolve becomes the unexpected spark in a battle that will shape the course of history.
In "War of Wizards," the sorcerer Thanos enlists the brutal warrior Torin to eliminate his arch-rival, unaware of the hidden truth that could unravel his entire plan. As the clash of magic and might looms, the line between master and minion blurs in ways neither man could foresee.
Brenda Buckler’s desperate search for her missing husband leads her to Thyna, a planet where she’s the only human among a race of tentacled beings—no help, no answers, just the quiet dread of being utterly alone in a world that doesn’t understand her.
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↩ Reprints Blazing Combat #3 (1966), Creepy #9 (1966), Creepy #38 (1971), Vampirella #10 (1971), Eerie #60 (1974), Eerie #61 (1974)
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