Monday, May 11, 2026

SKYWALD'S NIGHTMARE NO. 5 (PART 1)


A nice cover by Boris Vallejo invites readers to this issue. A good variety of tales by some established talent such as Ralph Reese, Dan Adkins, Tom Sutton and Doug Wildey. Ex- T.H.U.N.D.E.R. AGENTS co-creator and writer Len Brown scripts a werewolf story. As expected, the edgiest story is by Al Hewetson marred only by the rustic art of Serg Moren.

The text article on the ubiquitous horror actor Boris Karloff is written by veteran Allan Asherman. Whether a typo or a mis-used word by Asherman for a photo caption overlooked by the copy editor, "The Invisible Ray" appears here as "The Sensible Ray". A sequel, maybe?

NIGHTMARE
Vol. 1 No. 5
August 1971
Skywald Publishing Corporation
Editors: Sol Brodsky: Herschel Waldman
Cover: Boris Vallejo (illustrating "Creature of the Deep")
Pages: 68
Cover price: 60 cents

CONTENTS
"The Man Who Became Frankenstein's Monster" (inside front cover)
Script: Allan Asherman
Art: Harold Shull

"Slime World"
Script: Chuck McNaughton
Art: Ralph Reese

"Whence Stalked the Werewolf"
Script: Len Brown
Art: Carlos Garzón

"The Doom Star!"
Script: Chuck McNaughton
Art: Sean Todd (Tom Sutton); Dan Adkins; Ralph Reese

"Great Men of the Horror Films: Boris Karloff"
Text story by Allan Asherman

"Creature of the Deep"
Script: Chuck McNaughton
Art: Jack Katz; Jack Abel

"Nazi Death Rattle"
Script: Al Hewetson
Art: Serg Moren

"Within the Torture Chamber"
Script: Kevin Pagan
Art: Doug Wildey
































Sunday, May 10, 2026

TIMMY THE TIMID GHOST


One of several Casper clones, Timmy the Timid Ghost was Charlton's take on the character. This is issue #45 from September 1966 and the last of its first 43 issue run (it started with #3) that began in 1956. Another 26 issues ran from 1967 - 1986. The tales--combined with various funny witches, goblins and animals--are amusing.

Jon D'Agostino drew the cover showing Timmy (whose head reminds me of the top of a soft-serve ice cream cone) reading GHOSTLY TALES #56, illustrated by Rocke Mastroserio. The interior stories are by unknown writers and artists.