The Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves #45 - VF 8.0

$134.00

Charlton Comics · The Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves #45 · May 1974 · 20¢ · 36 pages

Grade: VF 8.0

Cover artist unconfirmed for this issue.

Specific story titles, plot details, and creator credits for this issue are not confirmed in our reference sources. The Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves operated as a host-framing horror anthology throughout its run — Doctor Graves introduces and closes each short tale, typically two to four stories per issue, running the range of supernatural dread, twist endings, and morality-play haunts that defined Charlton's horror output in the early 1970s.

Charlton drew from a rotating pool of writers and artists through this period — Joe Gill was the dominant scripter across the horror line, with art from contributors including Don Newton, Sanho Kim, and others working in Charlton's characteristically lean, unadorned style. Specific credits for issue #45 remain unverified and are not listed here.

Issue #45 sits in the middle stretch of a 66-issue run that launched in 1967 and held on through 1982 — one of Charlton's longer-lived horror titles and a consistent if unheralded presence in the Bronze Age horror market alongside Haunted and Ghost Manor.

Condition VF 8.0 — .

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.

Charlton Comics · The Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves #45 · May 1974 · 20¢ · 36 pages

Grade: VF 8.0

Cover artist unconfirmed for this issue.

Specific story titles, plot details, and creator credits for this issue are not confirmed in our reference sources. The Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves operated as a host-framing horror anthology throughout its run — Doctor Graves introduces and closes each short tale, typically two to four stories per issue, running the range of supernatural dread, twist endings, and morality-play haunts that defined Charlton's horror output in the early 1970s.

Charlton drew from a rotating pool of writers and artists through this period — Joe Gill was the dominant scripter across the horror line, with art from contributors including Don Newton, Sanho Kim, and others working in Charlton's characteristically lean, unadorned style. Specific credits for issue #45 remain unverified and are not listed here.

Issue #45 sits in the middle stretch of a 66-issue run that launched in 1967 and held on through 1982 — one of Charlton's longer-lived horror titles and a consistent if unheralded presence in the Bronze Age horror market alongside Haunted and Ghost Manor.

Condition VF 8.0 — .

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.