Voodoo #5
In "The Strangler," Doctor Latoza unleashes the long-dead killer Akimbo, only to find himself bound by the very formula that resurrected him. With Akimbo dependent on the doctor’s creation, a tense game of control begins—one where life and death hang in the balance.
In "The Phantom Hitch-Hiker," John Morley’s greed leads him to sabotage his ward Gail’s car, hoping to cover his thefts. But when her ghostly figure appears as a hitch-hiker on the road, he’s haunted by a dread that turns his escape into a deadly reckoning.
In "The Hands of Death!", a desperate violinist haunted by the loss of his ability to play must make a chilling choice: accept a pair of hands from the undead, offered by the enigmatic Dr. Necros. But these new limbs carry a sinister will of their own, leading him down a path of crime he never intended—each note he plays echoing with a price far heavier than he ever imagined.
In the frostbitten peaks of the Bavarian Alps, American tourist Johnson ignores a guide’s chilling warning about the Northern slope. As he carves down the snow-laden trail, a skeletal figure emerges from the mist—no living man, but a vengeful spirit seeking retribution for a son lost to a reckless skier. Now, Johnson must outrun the ghostly racer through treacherous terrain, where every turn could be his last.
In "The Haunted Melody," a gifted young pianist is tormented by the haunting echoes of Chopin’s "raindrop" prelude, a melody that summons the spectral presence of Nona, the muse once beloved by the composer. As he becomes increasingly drawn to her ghostly form, his obsession blurs the line between music and madness—until a desperate chase through the night ends in tragedy.
In the flickering glow of a midnight subway car, Dave Bartlet finds himself caught in a strange and terrifying confrontation with a mysterious woman and her unsettling companions. When the train suddenly stops and shadowy, fish-like creatures pour in, Bartlet must fight to survive — and prove that what he saw was real. Only when he finally removes her sunglasses does the truth surface, revealing a horror beyond belief.
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 Worlds of Fear #3 (1952), Eerie #9 (1952), Black Magic #1 (19) (1952)
Reviews
Reader reviews
No reader reviews yet.