Journey into Mystery #97, October 1963. Jack Kirby cover pencils, George Roussos inks, Stan Goldberg colors, Artie Simek letters.
Info from Grand Comics Database
seen from China

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
Journey into Mystery #97, October 1963. Jack Kirby cover pencils, George Roussos inks, Stan Goldberg colors, Artie Simek letters.
Info from Grand Comics Database
Bailey School Kids: Mrs. Jeepers' Scariest Halloween Ever (2005)
Story: Debbie Dadey & Marcia Thornton Jones -- Art: John Steven Gurney
BAE HOYOUNG | SUPER SPECIAL
Finally, some 1995 Trainer Cards
…some supah special Energy Cards
…and this severely damaged Fire Energy that looks like the surface of the Sun. Funny enough it’s only this one side that’s damaged, so I could totally use this legal battles.
with creepypasta its cool how nearly everyone has their own versions of the creeps: designs, relationship dynamics, ages,backstories, abilities, and more! its super cool to see all the unique takes on em, in a way it helps to keep thing fresh and creative
AHHH ME TOO THIS IS MY FAVORITE THING ABOUT IT. i love walking onto someones blog and having no clue what ideas they got going on but being able 2 read all about it. its so fun and lets me relive my favorite characters over and over
A selection of Don Martin Sound Effect Stickers (MAD Special #23, 1977)
Artist & Writer: Don Martin
A roomie, huh? I wonder what they’ll be like...
“I don’t know either,”
“but... I guess I can’t do much about it. Whoever they are...”
“I hope we at least get along.”
1996 edition of Mrs. Jeepers is Missing! by Debbie Dadey and Marcia Thornton Jones, 59 pages. For fans of children’s literature, scary stories, witches, or kids going out on weird adventures.
If memory serves me correctly, I think I chose this book after finishing a Summer Reading Challenge as a wee seven-year-old. Or maybe eight-year-old. This book had it all - a maze and crossword puzzle, blurbs about all the monsters in the series, jokes, recipes - not to mention a story I was obsessed with for some gosh-forsaken reason. I used to bring this book to my older sister’s volleyball practices and just look at all the extras in the back (I wasn’t a huge fan of reading as a kid). I had a bunch of the other books in the series, but they never caught my imagination like this one did.