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Notes: The second of two stories Crandell did for Timely in 1953, before joining EC.
A man is hit by an
ambulance and is brought to the hospital. Everything is prepared for surgery. The hidious
looking Dr. Feeney warns that the patient will die unless the other doctors use his method
of operating. They don't listen and the patient does die. A reporter who witnessed the
exchange between Dr. Feeney and his collegues, asks him what his new method is. He
explains that he has perfected a method to cut the head from a patient, so it can be
operated on without any risk to the rest of the body. He demonstrates his technique on a
chicken, but the reporter doesn't believe him. Disappointed Feeney throws away his
formula that keeps alive a headless body... and takes his head in his hands... literally.
This story is not signed by Lee, but reads like one of his. The clues are – the length of the
story – the way it starts with a gruesome action not directly related to the main characters,
the pacing of the dialogue and the sequence on top of page two, where three panels are
used to describe an action – each with only one line of text over it. The numbering is not
consecutive with any other known Lee numbers, though. This also seems like a story Stan
Lee especially taylored for Crandell.
- Ger A. |