Confessions Illustrated

Summary

Confessions Illustrated was a black-and-white magazine published by EC Comics in early 1956. Part of EC's Picto-Fiction line, each magazine featured three to five stories. The format alternated blocks of text with several illustrations per page.[1]

Confessions Illustrated
Bud Parke cover, issue #1
Publication information
PublisherEC Comics
ScheduleQuarterly
FormatAnthology
Publication dateJanuary/February 1956 - May 1956
No. of issues3
Creative team
Created byWilliam Gaines
Al Feldstein

The first issue had a cover date of January–February 1956, but the second issue was the last. A third issue existed but was not printed by EC. The Picto-Fiction magazines lost money from the start, and the line was canceled when EC's distributor went bankrupt.

Confessions Illustrated was edited by Al Feldstein. The stories were written by Daniel Keyes. Artists featured include Bud Parke, Jack Kamen, Joe Orlando, Wally Wood, Johnny Craig, Rudy Nappi and Reed Crandall.

In 2006 Confessions Illustrated was reprinted along with the other Picto-Fiction magazines by publisher Russ Cochran (and Gemstone Publishing) in hardbound volumes as the final part of his Complete EC Library. The reprint volume included the previously unpublished third issue of Confessions Illustrated. Dark Horse reprinted Confessions Illustrated as part of the EC Archives series in 2022.

Issue guide edit

# Date Cover Artist Story Story Artist Story Writer
1 Feb 1956 Bud Parke I Joined A Teen-Age Gang Jack Kamen Daniel Keyes
I Can Never Marry Joe Orlando Daniel Keyes
My Tragic Affair Wally Wood Daniel Keyes
I Took My Sister's Husband Jack Kamen Daniel Keyes
Passion Made Me A Thief Johnny Craig Daniel Keyes
2 May 1956 Rudy Nappi I Sold My Baby Jack Kamen Daniel Keyes
Unfaithful Wife Reed Crandall Daniel Keyes
They Ran Me Out of Town Jack Kamen Daniel Keyes
I Destroyed My Marriage Joe Orlando Daniel Keyes
Man-Crazy Johnny Craig Daniel Keyes
3 July 1956 Rudy Nappi High School Bride Jack Kamen
Teen-Age Temptress Jack Kamen
Love Cheat Johnny Craig
The Alcoholic Jack Kamen
My Two Husbands Joe Orlando

References edit

  1. ^ Schelly, William (2013). American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1950s. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 137. ISBN 9781605490540.