From the January 1953 issue of Chamber of Chills #15 stalks this exceptionally insane excursion into another THOIA Mummy Monday, with "gruesome 'n gory" being the understatement of the week here. So hold onto your explorer caps and don't forget the can of man eating bug spray, the mummy spray, and even the iron maiden spray! "M-M-M-M--AARGH-H-H!!!"
13 comments:
That reminds me, I need a new pincushion.
OH MAN THAT WAS SERIOUSLY F'D UP AND AWESOME! BUT DID THEY EVEN HAVE IRON MAIDENS BACK IN THE DAYS OF THE PHAROHS?
If the story was a bit rushed and weak, the man-eating ants and Iron Maiden death sure made up for it! So what happens to Wade at the end? Is he to wander the desert for eternity?
in the name of all that's hole-y...
Fast and over the top. It gets to the point very quickly and delivers.
Yep, that "Iron Maiden" panel on the last page of the first story is quit the show stopper. Wow. No that's a perfect example of the glory of pre-code. Even in this day and age of Saws I, II, III, IV, etc, that was gnarly. -- Mykal
Why is it that in every horror story I've ever ever read about archaeologists, they're either stupid, superstitious, or pussies (or in today's story's case, all three)?
Hope everyone is enjoying our look at Chamber of Chills this week, I have a few more tales lined up and then it's back to the mix, as well as a couple submissions that I keep meaning to get too and another THOIA Halloween contest.
As always, thanks for the comments...
from wiki: The iron maiden is often associated with the Middle Ages, but in fact was not invented until the late 18th century: No account of the iron maiden can be found earlier than 1793.
Wow, I didn't know that ants could turn flesh into chewed bubble gum.
Thanks for the iron maiden info Anon!
Great story and while I've never seen this take on the tale, the redrawn version from Eerie Publications was always a favorite.
"Well preserved mummy cases."
That's true-blue archaeologistic-speak, bro.
Not only is the Iron Maiden a very recent invention, as Anonymous points out, it probably has never been used. Except by the Vincent Price's wife character in "The Fall Of The House Of Usher", of course.
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