Offering new takes on classic tales from the Master of Macabre and other renowned literary figures, stories from the comic book anthology series Edgar Allan Poe's Snifter of Terror are being collected in a second trade paperback volume that's now available in bookstores from Ahoy Comics, and we've been provided with Mark Russell and Peter Snejbjerg's "The Leprechaun King" for Daily Dead readers to enjoy in its entirety.
You can read "The Leprechaun King" in the gallery below. Additionally, the anthology comic book series will return with a new issue on October 21st under the new title Edgar Allan Poe's Snifter of Blood.
To learn more, read the official press release below and visit Ahoy Comics and Amazon.
"Ahoy Comics, the independent, Syracuse-based publisher known for its comics stuffed with stories, poetry, prose fiction, and cartoons, is bringing back its snarkiest, booziest anthology under a new title: Edgar Allan Poe’S Snifter Of Blood.
You can read "The Leprechaun King" in the gallery below. Additionally, the anthology comic book series will return with a new issue on October 21st under the new title Edgar Allan Poe's Snifter of Blood.
To learn more, read the official press release below and visit Ahoy Comics and Amazon.
"Ahoy Comics, the independent, Syracuse-based publisher known for its comics stuffed with stories, poetry, prose fiction, and cartoons, is bringing back its snarkiest, booziest anthology under a new title: Edgar Allan Poe’S Snifter Of Blood.
- 10/6/2020
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
The legacy of Edgar Allen Poe is, no surprise, a weird one. The author of The Raven remains a household name almost 170 years after his mysterious death but somehow Poe’s most enduring literary innovation (he invented the detective story) is widely overlooked. The Boston-born writer’s lurid death at age 40 while passing through Baltimore remains an unsolved mystery but its local infamy led to the Baltimore Ravens, the only NFL squad named after a poem.
Poe’s legacy is only getting weirder these days with Ahoy Comics and its comics magazine series Edgar Allan Poe’s Snifter of Terror, an admirably bizarre concoction that is equal parts Tales from the Crypt and Drunk History. The boozy author retells his tales of horror and mystery and things get (you guessed it) pretty weird.
Today, Deadline has an exclusive first look at the cover for issue No 1 for upcoming Season Two...
Poe’s legacy is only getting weirder these days with Ahoy Comics and its comics magazine series Edgar Allan Poe’s Snifter of Terror, an admirably bizarre concoction that is equal parts Tales from the Crypt and Drunk History. The boozy author retells his tales of horror and mystery and things get (you guessed it) pretty weird.
Today, Deadline has an exclusive first look at the cover for issue No 1 for upcoming Season Two...
- 7/3/2019
- by Geoff Boucher
- Deadline Film + TV
A brief article about actor Benedict Cumberbatch in Tuesday's Washington Post included a quirky name change that looked more like an iPhone autocorrect fail.
A photo of what looked like a typo was tweeted by Afp photographer Alex Ogle, who seemed to come across the name change by Afp journalist Susan Stumme.
In both the print and online versions of an article about the PBS "Sherlock" star criticizing "Downton Abbey," Cumberbatch's name appeared drastically differently the second time it was mentioned in the article. Even though editors spelled his name correctly in the article's lede, Cumberbatch was later referred to as "Bandersnatch Cummerbund" in the third paragraph.
Print:
Online:
Update: The Washington Post clarified that the name change was in fact intentional and not a glaring error, as The Huffington Post originally reported.
According to Poynter, "Washington Post senior social media producer T. J. Ortenzi says it was intentional, and...
A photo of what looked like a typo was tweeted by Afp photographer Alex Ogle, who seemed to come across the name change by Afp journalist Susan Stumme.
In both the print and online versions of an article about the PBS "Sherlock" star criticizing "Downton Abbey," Cumberbatch's name appeared drastically differently the second time it was mentioned in the article. Even though editors spelled his name correctly in the article's lede, Cumberbatch was later referred to as "Bandersnatch Cummerbund" in the third paragraph.
Print:
Online:
Update: The Washington Post clarified that the name change was in fact intentional and not a glaring error, as The Huffington Post originally reported.
According to Poynter, "Washington Post senior social media producer T. J. Ortenzi says it was intentional, and...
- 5/8/2012
- by Rebecca Shapiro
- Huffington Post
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