Weird #11
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "Fangs of Fear," two enigmatic figures circle each other on a fog-drenched waterfront, their rivalry a silent war beneath human guise. One rules the shadows as the king of the rats, the other commands the night as the king of the cats—each driven by a hunger for dominance that turns the docks into a battleground of primal instinct.
In "Murder on the Moor," a condemned man breaks free on the night of his execution, fleeing through the fog-laden moors toward a lone shack. Inside, he finds an old woman and her cat—only to murder them both in a desperate bid to survive. As he vanishes into the treacherous swamp, the ghost of the cat begins to haunt him, leading him deeper into the bog where the ground itself seems alive with vengeance.
In "Be My Ghost," a man haunted by his grim profession returns home to his family, only to find his world unraveling in quiet, chilling ways. When his wife’s secret comes to light and their son plays with a toy guillotine, the line between duty, love, and madness begins to blur.
In "Monster in the Mist," the ancient Dorset monster—summoned long ago by Druids to battle the Romans—rises again to haunt the countryside. With the help of his companion Wendy, Doctor Christopher Fenn turns to the mysterious "Devil's Catalogue" in a desperate bid to summon the ghosts of Roman soldiers and face the creature head-on.
In "Night of Terror," John Trent sets a chilling prank by hiding his friend Morris Slattery in a supposedly haunted house to frighten his wife Sue. But when the couple arrive, they find Morris dead—and the house is far more dangerous than any ghost story. The truth behind the terror lies in the hands of an old crone with an axe, and the night is far from over.
In "Little Red Riding Hood and the Werewolf," the Old Crone recounts a chilling tale of deception and dread: Elmer Dowd, transformed into a werewolf, stalks Little Red Riding Hood, only for his friend Zach Parker to mistake him for a beast and shoot him twice. As the violence unfolds, Zach’s pursuit leads him to a horrifying revelation—Red Riding Hood is not the innocent girl she appears to be, but something far more sinister. The story twists beneath the surface of a familiar fairy tale, where every familiar trope hides a darker truth.
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Reprints
↩ Reprints Fantastic Fears #8 [2] (1953), Haunted Thrills #10 (1953), Fantastic Fears #7 (1954), Strange Fantasy #12 (1954), Fantastic Fears #8 (1954), Haunted Thrills #16 (1954), Voodoo #16 (1954), Haunted Thrills #17 (1954), Fantastic Comics #10 (1954)
Reprinted in Weird #2 (1971), The Chilling Archives of Horror Comics! #2 (2011), Gwandanaland Comics #2736 (2020)
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