DC Comics · The House of Mystery #277 · February 1980 · $0.40 · 17 pages
Grade: null
Edited by Paul Levitz. Indicia publisher: DC Comics Inc.
Cover by Luis Dominguez.
“Limited Engagement” features a performer cursed to perform before an audience of demons — a classic horror anthology setup that explores the price of entertainment and the thin line between performance and damnation. The story showcases Cain as host, guiding readers through another tale of supernatural justice with DC's signature blend of moral consequence and otherworldly terror.
Part of DC's horror anthology line during the Bronze Age, when these books maintained their gothic atmosphere while adapting to the post-Comics Code horror revival.
Condition null — . Noting: Minor spine wear visible at top edge, Light corner wear on upper right.
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 · The House of Mystery #277 · February 1980 · $0.40 · 17 pages
Grade: null
Edited by Paul Levitz. Indicia publisher: DC Comics Inc.
Cover by Luis Dominguez.
“Limited Engagement” features a performer cursed to perform before an audience of demons — a classic horror anthology setup that explores the price of entertainment and the thin line between performance and damnation. The story showcases Cain as host, guiding readers through another tale of supernatural justice with DC's signature blend of moral consequence and otherworldly terror.
Part of DC's horror anthology line during the Bronze Age, when these books maintained their gothic atmosphere while adapting to the post-Comics Code horror revival.
Condition null — . Noting: Minor spine wear visible at top edge, Light corner wear on upper right.
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.