9 thoughts on “The Corpse’s Wedding Night”

      1. That source is correct. A comparison with The Bus Death Drove shows that both were done by the same artist. So it’s definitely Drew.

        1. Here is the list of Terror Tales covers (found on this blog) that John Drew did, per my eyes doing comparisons:

          The Corpse’s Wedding Night (this cover)
          Dolls of Doom
          The Damned May Dance With Satan
          Satan’s House Party
          March Of The Homeless Corpse
          Slaves For The Wine Goddess
          Dance To Satan’s Drums

          1. Another little typo that hardly changes the meaning:

            The Corpse’s Wedding Night (this cover [was not done by Drew, but I’m listing it anyway just for kicks])

        2. Ah, the pesky typo! Even though they hardly change the meaning, at all, I guess it’s time I correct my typos on this blog, starting with the above comment. It should have read as follows:

          That source is [in]correct. A comparison with The Bus Death Drove shows that both were [not] done by the same artist. So it’s definitely [not] Drew.

  1. Phewie!… shit this shiela’s heavy. Hey! Wait a minute, baldy, I’m not carrying you too. Go find ya own mummy!!

  2. Well, it only took me four years to figure this one out! It’s neither John Drew, nor Rudolph W. Zirm. It’s…[drum roll, please]…

    Monroe Eisenberg.

    Once again I find myself disagreeing with David Saunders, so I guess I’ll have to wait another four years before it’s verified by some pulp authority.

    In the meantime, I’ll ask marc to scrutinize this cover and compare it to the other Monroe Eisenberg covers found on this site. What do you think? Do you see the same style or should I get my eyes checked?

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