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Jon Clark Returns This October For The Oversized Bite-Sized Tales of Terror #1

This October, Jon Clark returns with three deeply disturbing horror stories guaranteed to linger with you with Bite-Sized Tales of Terror #1.

A collection of three deeply disturbing horror stories:

● OBJECTS. The discovery of a strange lump on his chest shatters everything a ladies man knows about love.

● CONTACT. An abused housewife claims that aliens are trying to get in touch with her, all they need is her location.

● CRAVE. A corporate meeting descends into absolute insanity when a “scentologist” unveils her latest creation.

With art and story by Clark, Bite-Sized Tales of Terror #1 features lettering by April Brown.

Bite Sized Tales of Terror #1

Review: Playthings #1

Playthings #1

Scout Comics is becoming a legitimate voice in the field of horror comics, and Playthings #1 is shaping up to be another great example of what the publisher is capable of. The new series, written by Jon Clark and illustrated by Travis Williamson (the team behind the amazing Black Friday), finds its scares in the realities of a broken family with shared custody problems. The mother figure ends up being the target of this story’s haunting, but the first issue is bizarre enough that it keeps things unpredictable. This is a good thing.

Playthings opens with bright, poppy colors juxtaposed with inky blacks and dark shades. Clown faces huddle around a woman tied to a chair, her hands (or something resembling hands) bound in licorice. As the woman surveys the room she’s in, a kind of anti-funhouse explodes around her. The woman realizes she’s somewhere that’s not entirely within the realm of reason, a place with a child-like sensibility and a whole lot of violence hanging over it.

The woman is revealed to be the mother of a small girl and it is made apparent quite quickly that she has a very strained relationship with her ex-husband. The girl’s birthday is coming up and a strange box has appeared out of thin air with a creepy clown doll inside it. As can be expected with anything clown-related, chaos unfolds in relentless fashion.

Playthings #1

Clark and Williamson let the readers know that whatever’s coming after the clown is out of the box is going to be intricately disturbing. The setting and the characters all feel as if ripped straight out of a dark fairy tale, of the kind early Vertigo comics were known for. The story has a kind of 1990’s weird fiction vibe to it, especially in how it displays familial dysfunction early in the story to then transition into more terrifying things. It works well and it signals a very focused set of ideas that the creators are eager to get to as quickly as possible.

Williamson’s art style is perfect for the type of story Clark scripted out. It often reminds of Sam Keith’s own takes on the dark fairy tale aesthetic while also offering enough variation to make it its own. Clark also colors the comic and he adds a notable layer of story through his chosen color palette. Both creators showcase an appreciation for loud and discomforting imagery in Playthings and it makes the horrors they conjure up leave an impression.

The decision to go for a dark fairy tale-style of storytelling allows Clark and Williamson to keep their metaphors and messages at the fore. For Playthings, the focus is on divorce and the hells it can create when there’s a child involved. The mother, for instance, is presented as a tightly wound and angry person that lets her emotions spill unto her innocent kid. The trials of being a single parent are on full display and the haunting the toy clown is intent on making the mother sit through looks to be aimed at turning the scenario into a cautionary tale, the kind fairy tales are well-known for.

Playthings #1

Playthings #1 should please fans of classic horror, fairy tales, and 1990s fantasy comics. It establishes a dark event with terrifying potential, full of painful promises that readers can engage with in more ways than one. Issue #2 should satisfy both readers with dark sensibilities and readers who quite simply enjoy a good story. Keep this one on your radar.

Story: Jon Clark Art: Travis Williamson Lettering: April Brown
Story: 9.0 Art: 9.0 Overall 9.0
Recommendation: Read and look out for clown dolls that weren’t in the room with you before.


Purchase: Scout Comics

Black Friday #1 Sells Out and Goes to Second Print

Scout Comics has announced that Black Friday #1 has sold out and is going back to print.

Black Friday is the biggest shopping day of the year. Millions of Americans pack the aisles of retail outlets all over the country battling for the best bargains. While an unlucky clean-up crew deals with the aftermath of the latest Black Friday frenzy, they discover that years of pent-up negative energy has released something very evil and dark into their superstore, which is just the way corporate wanted it.

Black Friday is written by Jon Clark with art by Travis Williamson and lettering by April Brown. Check out our review.

Black Friday #1 2nd print

Review Black Friday #1

Black Friday #1

I’m not a big fan of horror stories. There are rare ones I enjoy but overall, it’s pretty rare for the genre. Black Friday #1 kicks off a new horror series from Scout ComicsBlack Caravan imprint that takes the notorious shopping day and giving it a horror spin.

When you think of Black Friday, you don’t really think about the sales and deals as much as there’s the rush of the shoppers resulting in fights, chaos, and damage. All of it now caught on video for us to consume and be entertained by. It’s the perfect encapsulation of capitalism. Writer Jon Clark uses that already horrific day as the basis for his story.

We’ve seen the injuries and bloody mess that is the real life rush to consume and save but Black Friday #1 takes that up a notch adding a body count in one store. A clean-up crew is at work cleaning up from the day’s chaos when they discover something brewing in the spot where a costumer was murdered. The death and destruction has fed and awaken… something.

Clark does a fantastic job of building up the suspense and tension for the series. The story really progresses as it moves along. At first, we’re treated to a Clerks like story of a big box store employee who hates his job taking us through his life and world. From there, there’s a bit of inspiration from the “ghost hunting” genre of television series that has exploded. And from there, it transitions into a straight-up horror story. And it delivers the creepy.

A lot of Clark’s concepts are helped by the art of Travis Williamson. There’s some disturbing imagery in the comic that’ll unsettle readers. It never crosses the line to distract, instead Williamson focuses on small details that emphasizes what’s happening. Think of the concept of panning out of an image discover something more and then doing it over and over. That’s what Williamson does as he layers the gruesome discoveries by the store staff. Williamson has a Sam Keith style to it all too that exaggerates things in a helpful way. It’s very stylized in a good way.

The lettering choices by April Brown also helps add to the atmosphere of the comic. Narrative dialogue boxes are used heavily forgoing thought bubbles. The choice is important as the latter wouldn’t work with the imagery. It also gives us a running thought process as to what’s going on beyond the dialogue and body language.

Black Friday #1 is a fantastic start to the series. It builds the tension and ups the scare factor as the store progresses right until the final panel. It makes sure to deliver doses of humor throughout and presents the characters enough to connect and care about what happens to them. This is a horror story that’ll keep you bundled up safely in the cold months.

Story: Jon Clark Art: Travis Williamson Letterer: April Brown
Story: 8.25 Art: 8.25 Overall: 8.25 Recommendation: Buy

Scout Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Scout Comics

Black Friday is Coming in February from Scout Comics’ Black Caravan

A very unlucky clean-up crew dealing with the aftermath of Black Friday discovers that years of pent-up negative energy has released something very evil and dark into their superstore, just the way corporate wanted.

Pent up negative energy has been building up in the local superstore, Star-Mart, from yearly, monthly, and daily “deplorable” things that happen there. Javier and a few other unlucky employees are cleaning the aftermath of a particularly awful Black Friday, when Ceci discovers a trail of blood that leads directly into the toy aisle. Beneath it, they discover what appears to be a sheet of glass inlaid in the floor, and numerous freakishly large dead humanoid-like bodies — only, they aren’t dead. They’re alive and begin to break free and attack the workers with a vicious hunger. Javier and his coworkers must battle their way through the store to survive and uncover the real, even more sinister reason why the creatures are here.

Black Friday is written by Jon Clark, art by Travis Williamson, and lettering by April Brown. It comes to shops in February 2021 from Scout Comics.

Black Friday

Preview: Hag #1

HAG #1

Publisher: American Gothic Press
Writer: Chad Stroup
Artist: Jon Clark
Letterer: April Brown
Price: $0.99
Release Date: January 15, 2020

When it starts to rain, Carl Simmons does not expect his retired, uneventful existence to change. But the rain doesn’t stop, and when it starts to flood, Carl heads out in his fishing boat to find survivors. Something finds him first.

HAG #1