U.F.O. and Alien Comix #1
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "U.F.O.", a cosmic Noah arrives on Earth to choose two humans to survive an impending planetary catastrophe, but when the selection goes awry, the spacefaring savior and his unlikely crew flee aboard a massive Ark. Written by Roger McKenzie and illustrated by Leo Duranona, this 1977 tale blends sci-fi dread with a mythic tone, all rendered with striking visuals from cover by Kim McQuaite and James Warren.
In "Daddy and The Pie [Part 1 of 2]," Dick Haris recounts the strange and unforgettable summer he and his father, Richard Harris, formed an unlikely bond with an otherworldly visitor named Pie. What began as a quiet encounter in the woods soon unraveled into a connection that reshaped their lives in ways neither could have predicted.
When Richard’s plane crashes in the desert, he stumbles upon the wreckage of a U.F.O. and finds a survivor—Phoebus, a being unlike any he’s ever seen. As the sun beats down and the silence stretches, an unlikely connection forms between man and alien, bound by isolation and the strange beauty of the wasteland.
In a quiet corner of the cosmos, Noah—a celestial caretaker from a dying world—arrives on Earth to choose two souls to preserve through an impending galactic catastrophe. With Mindy Jane and Jimmy selected, the plan begins to unravel, forcing Noah and his unlikely crew to flee aboard a makeshift Ark, leaving behind a planet on the brink.
When an alien arrives at Pliny Marsh, it reanimates the corpse of Joseph Prentiss, who was murdered months earlier. Now awakened, Joseph is driven by a thirst for vengeance against those who killed him—until the alien intervenes, forcing him to confront a truth far beyond his own rage.
In a fractured timeline where Earth’s Civil War rages alongside a galactic conflict, soldiers from opposing factions—Union and Confederate, Valorjack and Phaedraite—find their battles colliding across time and space. When the front lines bleed into one another, the cost of war becomes a shared burden no side can escape.
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Reprints
↩ Reprints Creepy #68 (1975), Eerie #64 (1975), Eerie #72 (1976), Creepy #79 (1976), Vampirella #61 (1977), Vampirella #62 (1977), Creepy #92 (1977)
Reprinted in A Display of Art Work by Alex Toth #[nn] (1977)
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