DC Comics · House of Mystery #210 · January 1973 · 20¢ · 36 pages
Grade: VF+ 8.5
House of Mystery continues its Bronze Age transformation under the Comics Code, delivering supernatural chills without the pre-Code gore. This issue features the anthology's signature mix of ghostly tales and psychological horror, maintaining the series' reputation as DC's premier mystery title.
Issue #210 falls squarely in the middle of the title's most consistent Bronze Age period, when DC had found its horror formula under the Comics Code Authority.
Condition VF+ 8.5 with minor wear consistent with age, signed by Rudy Nebres at Pittsburgh Comic Con on April 28th, 2007, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.
DC Comics · House of Mystery #210 · January 1973 · 20¢ · 36 pages
Grade: VF+ 8.5
House of Mystery continues its Bronze Age transformation under the Comics Code, delivering supernatural chills without the pre-Code gore. This issue features the anthology's signature mix of ghostly tales and psychological horror, maintaining the series' reputation as DC's premier mystery title.
Issue #210 falls squarely in the middle of the title's most consistent Bronze Age period, when DC had found its horror formula under the Comics Code Authority.
Condition VF+ 8.5 with minor wear consistent with age, signed by Rudy Nebres at Pittsburgh Comic Con on April 28th, 2007, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.