Relatos Fabulosos #29
In "Los Suplantadores del Más Allá," a police officer’s quiet walk through a deserted city park takes a wild turn when a playful fairy, wielding her magic wand, turns him into a caveman—leaving readers wondering just how far the transformation goes. The story, drawn with sharp, expressive lines by Dick Dillin and inked with dynamic precision by Sheldon Moldoff, arrives in a 1962 issue from Editorial Novaro, a standout in the Relatos Fabulosos series.
Chiricuto swaps his uniform for a doctor’s appointment, trekking to see Dr. Koso Tripitas to solve his military leave insomnia. With a straight face and a wry twist, this one-page gem from *Relatos Fabulosos* #29 delivers quiet absurdity in classic 1962 humor, letters set in typeset precision.
In the quiet hush of a city park, a bored police officer takes a rare break—until a playful fairy, unseen and mischievous, waves her wand and turns him into a caveman. No explanation, no warning—just one moment of ordinary patrol, the next, a full-blown prehistoric twist.
In "El Desquite del Hechicero," reporter Jim Lowery arrives in the remote European village of Waldyk determined to debunk its famed wizard as a fraud—yet the more he investigates, the harder it becomes to ignore the impossible events unfolding around him. Written with a sharp eye for atmosphere and suspense, this eerie tale from Relatos Fabulosos #29 weaves mystery and the uncanny into a story where the line between illusion and magic blurs.
In "El Pájaro Que No Habla," Lucas's daily attempts to get his parrot to speak finally pay off—after endless tries, the bird breaks its silence with a single, unexpected word: "Bobo."
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