His credits run the gamut from Superman to Star Wars to Scooby-Doo, and from Clive Barker’s Hellraiser to Looney Tunes. His comics for kids have won a Comics Buyer’s Guide Fan Award, and been nominated for an Eisner Award and two Diamond gem awards, while several of his stories for older readers were included in the #1 New York Times bestselling graphic novels Action Comics.
Unless we find missing issues in my son's room, this is the last Scooby-Doo comic I'll read. For children, these may hold attention better, but as an adult, these are quite thin. The one thing I noted, and it could be beneficial in my classroom, is the author uses "all right" properly and frequently. I stress this oft-misspelled term to my students.
First story took place at a renaissance faire. One of the partners, who was not a fan of the faire, was trying to sabotage it so he could start up a science fiction fair. His name? Sy Phye. Ugh.
Second story took place in London. The gang is on a bus tour of Londontown. A ghost bus is causing problems. Shaggy and Scooby get onto it mistakenly. After a wild ride through town, they leap off before the bus plunges into the Thames, presumably. Turns out a rival bus tour company could not compete so was trying to scare away this company's patrons.