Danger and Adventure
Charlton · 1955–1957 · 6 issues
About the series
A short-lived but punchy Charlton Comics anthology, Danger and Adventure ran for six issues from 1955 to 1957, offering a showcase for the studio's reliable house talents. Joe Gill, the prolific writer behind countless Charlton titles, penned most of the stories, with art from regulars like Chic Stone, Harry Anderson, and Charles Nicholas. The series delivered a straightforward mix of action and suspense tales, a modest but representative example of the low-cost, high-output adventure comics that defined the publisher's mid-1950s output. It's a compact snapshot of Charlton's approach to genre storytelling, leaning on dependable craftsmen rather than star creators.