
Eerie returns to the comic planet with multiple horror stories and science fiction perpetrated by authors such as Esteban Maroto or Doug Moench
The editorial Comic planet Does not attach the step to your work to save a jewel with a classic terror as Unsettling. A series that, together with its inseparable CreepingIt occupies a place of honor among the great anthologies of horror comic. In this new double episode (as usual), volumes 6 and 16 arrive, full of chilling stories and fantastic ideal for lovers of the genre …

Eerie 6
In this volume we find a particularly juicy phase of the magazine: increasingly sophisticated stories, authors who begin to emerge and a clear intention of experiencing terror beyond the classic easy fright. Here not everything is blood and viscera (even if there are), but also strange ideas, alternative worlds and even some macabre poetry. We enter directly into stories that mix classic terror as The hidden evilsWhere the horror takes place in a Spanish people devastated by cultists who serve infernal beings. Then it comes The swamp beastAnd this is literally this: a monster born from the mud and the mud that silently establishes.
One of the stories that stands out in this block is The last train for OrionA science fiction story with an oppressive, almost cosmic atmosphere, which deals with a strange disease that extends through the universe as a plague. More than the monster on duty, here what scares is the idea that something can devour reality as we know it. The tone is very different from the other stories of volume: more contemplative and more elegant, with a detailed and gloomy design. It is one of those stories that echo.
We too have Glacial screamsA small jewel of futuristic horror with an ironic point for Warren: a millionaire decides to criticize to escape old age … but the future is not what I expected. The end, between black humor and pathetism, is one of those that are blocked and remember the best stories of Twilight area. In The Vorpal swordwhere the veteran Tom Sutton Give freely his fantastic imagination, we have a mixture of heroic fantasy and degenerated witchcraft. This story does not shine so much for the script and the exuberant Sutton shot, which makes each page a spiral of shadows, tense muscles and exorbitant eyes. Here what frightens is not so much the story and intensity with which it is designed.
Another essential is Ice ladywith the doctor October WeirA kind of supernatural hero who played several stories in the magazine. Here he faces the mystery of a frozen figure who seems to be alive and dead at the same time. This story skillfully mixes investigating elements with a thin, almost Gothic horror. Weir is also one of the few recurring characters of Eerie and his appearances always add a very appreciated touch of continuity.
And of course we cannot leave out The Himicrus h.Written by Steve Skeates and designed by Carlos GazónWhich plays largely with urban terror that shows a viscose and lethal mass that is dragged through the Fogne of New York. The story is exaggerated, shameless, almost a satire, but it works thanks to the dizzying rhythm and dirty and sticky art that honors its title. It is pure pulp of the good, without complexes.

Eerie 16
In the years in which this volume has been originally published, it is in a very particular moment. He left behind his first naive years and now shows that the authors are playing strong, sometimes even passing from the thread. There is a taste for experimentation, mixing the genres and transforming the classic terror formulas until the edges have tasted. The result? A collection of stories that the same leaves you with a bad body that with an eyebrow raised by how rare they are. Now we are facing a narrative machine that mixes terror, fantasy, science fiction and even some social criticisms. This is where the episodic stories of recurring characters begin Peter hypnosis Reports signed by authors such as Budd Lewis, Bill Dubay, José Beà y Esteban MarotoRecognizable faces of the Warren universe.
With Jeremiah Cold’s demons We have a Dubay serial e José Ortiz This follows the terrifying saga Jeremiah ColdA man owned and tormented that distributes supernatural justice in a small town. It is one of those stories that mixes physical and psychological horror, with betrayal, possessions and an aura of ancestral curse. It also distinguishes itself Oogie and the Worm!, From Dubay and Maroto, where that bizarre monster called Oogie becomes a surreal figure, a perfect example of polished and stylized terror of Maroto. And let’s not forget the chapters of Peter Hypnos de Beà, where the logic of sleep and fantasy is combined to create a strange but powerful dream journey.
In Tejelunasby Budd Lewis e Leopold SánchezThe authors play with dark imagination around rituals and alternative dimensions. We also have a Darklon the mysticalwork of Jim Starlinwhich combines mysticism, powers and an epic tone with cosmic comic aesthetic. It is rare to see him disturbing, but his style adapts like a glove with the dense atmosphere of cosmic horror. The best thing about this volume is that it does not contain stories of economic fear. They are stories of parallel universes, conscious nightmares, destroyed heroes and symbolic monsters.
In short, volumes 6 e 16 De Eerie, recently published by Planeta Comic, marks a new step forward in the careful recovery of this mythical horror header. Both volumes are presented in a careful edition on a rigid cover, without jacket, following the sober and elegant style that characterizes this collection. Volume 6 has 248 pages and volume 16 with 312, both in an impeccable black and white (with a certain history of color) which maintains the original atmosphere of the stories.
The size of each volume, 20 × 27.6 cm., Allows you to enjoy art with everything that is luxurious detail, respecting the almost original publication format. Inside, the translation of US numbers from #28 to #31 and from #75 to #80 of the series is collected, thanks to the work of Ignacio Bentz, who successfully transfers the macabre and pulp of the stories in Spanish.
With a recommended sale price of € 40, each these volumes were on sale in July 2025 and are consolidated as essential pieces for collectors and lovers of the classic horror comic. Or to revive Eerie’s disturbing spirit or to discover it for the first time, this edition offers a solid and quality reading experience.

Eerie 6
A sixth volume full of ghosts of our luxury reprint series on the rigid cover.
At the beginning of the 70s, Eerie continued with Warren’s great tradition to terrorize readers with short and cunning horror stories and a distribution of legendary comics creators. The sixth volume full of ghosts of our luxury reprint series on the rigid cover presents a new giant ration of black and white classics made by cartoonists and screenwriters venerated by fans, such as Richard Corben, Nicola Cali, Pat Boyette, Ken Kelly, Doug Moench, Don Glut and Jack Sparling.
This death diary collects the numbers from 28 to 31 of Eerie and ends really terrifying in 1970, in the purest style of Warren. Volume 6 of disturbing files presents an unpublished and exclusive interview with the screenwriter Doug Moench, all the original color covers, the mail pages and the articles appeared in the original magazines.

Eerie 16
The legendary anthology of the Warren Publishing House.
Demon, Romans, executioner? Take your eyes! Your disturbing cousin, thinking of his fellow citizens, has organized an exclusive campaign for your pupils with classic horror comics full of massacres that promise emotions and chills for everyone.
The legendary anthology of the Warren Publishing House offers an imposing variety of imagination full of witchcraft, sexy science fiction, peculiar Victorian mysteries and modern morbid adventures?
All united by a repeated feeling of profound horror! Richard Corben, Carmine Infantino, Jim Starlin, Bruce Jones, Sanjulián, Ken Kelly and other classic creators offer unparalleled screams and chills in this luxury volume, which collects all stories, e -mail columns, extra pages, color supplements, elves, frightening and ardent warriors of the number 75 to 80 of reputation. This compilation also includes a fascinating prologue by Peter Bagge (hatred, reset).