No confirmation, bar mitzvah, or quinceañera is safe—not when every line dance is disrupted by a vengeful specter in overalls that sends the guests fleeing in terror!
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.
A fun jump back to my childhood due to all Scooby comics being free right now through DC Comics. The mash-ups were entertaining and intertwined the characters well.
First story was about a ghost, Rotten-Eye Joe, who appeared at a hall whenever the band played a line dance song. Yes, in this issue we had the gang dancing the Chicken Dance to conjure up the ghost who happened to be the band leader. He was a "real" musician and was loathe to play line dances.
The second story was no better. More ghosts, of course. The setting here was a Paris catwalk at a fashion show. Turns out the make-up artist was tired of working for the same woman. He felt creatively stifled. The most fun he had in years was making over Velma. Yeah, really.