Marvel Frontier Comics: The Complete Collection #[nn]
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join free"Chapter One: The Devils Due" kicks off a haunting journey with Nick Abadzis and Paul Johnson crafting a story where an immortal Wayfarer, having scattered his essence across humanity in search of true understanding, encounters unexpected defiance in his final incarnation—Sam Wantling. The stark, emotionally charged art by Johnson, with colors by Abadzis and lettering by Ellie de Ville, complements a narrative that lingers in the quiet tension between connection and resistance. Mark Buckingham and D'Israeli deliver a striking cover that captures the story’s brooding, otherworldly tone.
In "That Sleep of Death," a college student haunted by his crimes is trapped in a waking nightmare, forced to relive Edgar Allan Poe’s most chilling tales with every breath he takes—his mind a prison where every dream is a descent into the macabre. Written by an unnamed author and illustrated by an unnamed artist, this eight-page horror-suspense tale from Marvel Frontier Comics: The Complete Collection turns the mind into a haunted house, where the past never sleeps.
In "Chapter One: Ghost Dancer," James Owl grapples with the burden of ancestral power he never asked for, as a malevolent spirit hunts him through shadowed landscapes, leaving a trail of blood and ruin in its wake. The story unfolds with a haunting intensity, weaving spiritual dread and personal reckoning in a tale that lingers long after the final page.
In "Savage Illusions," a cunning 1920s photographer—secretly a minor demon—uses his craft to manipulate and harm Native communities, all while evading those who would destroy him. As his illusions grow more real, the very human form he gains becomes his undoing.
In "Shadows and Fog," an immortal Wayfarer, scattered across the world in countless human forms, seeks to understand humanity by reabsorbing his final incarnation—Sam Wantling—only to find that this last child resists his return. Written by a mysterious hand and illustrated with haunting precision, the story unfolds in quiet dread as the boundary between creator and creation begins to blur.
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Reprints
↩ Reprints Marvel Age #126 (1993), Children of the Voyager #1 (1993), Dances with Demons #1 (1993), Mortigan Goth: Immortalis #1 (1993), Bloodseed #1 (1993), Children of the Voyager #2 (1993), Dances with Demons #2 (1993), Mortigan Goth: Immortalis #2 (1993), Bloodseed #2 (1993), Children of the Voyager #3 (1993), Dances with Demons #3 (1993), Children of the Voyager #4 (1993), Dances with Demons #4 (1993), Marvel Frontier Comics Unlimited #1 (1994), Mortigan Goth: Immortalis #3 (1994), Mortigan Goth: Immortalis #4 (1994)
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