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  • Published: 31 March 2026
  • ISBN: 9781506749693
  • Imprint: Dark Horse Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 544
  • RRP: $85.00

Creepy Archives Volume 13



A DOUBLE SHOT OF TERROR: TWO HORRIFYING VOLUMES IN ONE!

LEGENDARY CREATORS OF LEGENDARY TERROR!

Includes classic tales by Bernie Wrightson, Bruce Jones, John Severin, and more, as the esteemed horror magazine hits another fruitful period of frightful delights in the mid-seventies! Collecting the classic Creepy magazines #60 through #63, Creepy Archives Volume 13 includes several color pieces by Richard Corben, Sanjulian, and Ken Kelly — with black-and-white stories throughout by Tom Sutton, Jose Bea, Bill DuBay, Jose Gual, and many others. This archival collection is a perfect repast for those starving for a ferociously macabre feast and features a foreword by Howard Chaykin and an afterword by Michael T. Gilbert!

  • Published: 31 March 2026
  • ISBN: 9781506749693
  • Imprint: Dark Horse Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 544
  • RRP: $85.00

About the authors

Bernie Wrightson

Bernie Wrightson (1948–2017) was a comic book artist and the famed creator of Swamp Thing. He was educated at the Famous Artists School and soon after got a job working for the Baltimore Sun. He made the switch to comic books in 1968 with The House of Mystery and had a storied career in illustration, often working in the horror genre. 

You can learn more about Wrightson at berniewrightson.com.

Richard Corben

Richard Corben was born on a farm in Anderson, Missouri, and went on to get a bachelor of fine arts degree from the Kansas City Art Institute in 1965. After working as a professional animator, Corben started doing underground comics, including Grim Wit, Slow Death, Skull, Rowlf, Fever Dreams, and his own anthology Fantagor. In 1970 he began illustrating horror and science-fiction stories for Warren Publishing. His stories appeared in Creepy, Eerie, Vampirella, 1984, and Comix International. He also colored several episodes of Will Eisner's Spirit. In 1975, when Mœbius, Druillet, and Jean-Pierre Dionnet started publishing the magazine Métal Hurlant in France, Corben submitted some of his stories to them. He continued his work for the franchise in America, where the magazine was called Heavy Metal. In 1976 he adapted a short Robert E. Howard story in Bloodstar. In 2012 he was elected to the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame.