Marvel Comics Group · Vault of Evil #2 · April 1973 · $0.20 · 20 pages · Bi-Monthly
Grade: [GRADE PLACEHOLDER]
Edited by Roy Thomas.
Cover by Gil Kane and Frank Giacoia.
This issue features reprinted horror stories from Marvel's Atlas era, presented with new cover art. The cover story is titled “The Hour of the Witch,” involving supernatural horror elements typical of the period's witch-themed tales.
Additional stories showcase the atmospheric horror storytelling that characterized Atlas Comics' pre-code era, featuring tales of supernatural menace, cosmic terror, and psychological suspense that were originally published in the early 1950s.
Part of Marvel's early 1970s horror anthology revival that capitalized on the relaxed Comics Code restrictions, presenting classic Atlas horror material to Bronze Age readers.
Condition [GRADE PLACEHOLDER] with [wear description consistent with grade], complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
All grades are assigned by a human collector. We do not use AI to grade comics — not now, not ever. Product descriptions are AI-assisted
Marvel Comics Group · Vault of Evil #2 · April 1973 · $0.20 · 20 pages · Bi-Monthly
Grade: [GRADE PLACEHOLDER]
Edited by Roy Thomas.
Cover by Gil Kane and Frank Giacoia.
This issue features reprinted horror stories from Marvel's Atlas era, presented with new cover art. The cover story is titled “The Hour of the Witch,” involving supernatural horror elements typical of the period's witch-themed tales.
Additional stories showcase the atmospheric horror storytelling that characterized Atlas Comics' pre-code era, featuring tales of supernatural menace, cosmic terror, and psychological suspense that were originally published in the early 1950s.
Part of Marvel's early 1970s horror anthology revival that capitalized on the relaxed Comics Code restrictions, presenting classic Atlas horror material to Bronze Age readers.
Condition [GRADE PLACEHOLDER] with [wear description consistent with grade], complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
All grades are assigned by a human collector. We do not use AI to grade comics — not now, not ever. Product descriptions are AI-assisted