House of Secrets
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| House of Secrets | |
The cover for House of Secrets #92 (July 1971), introducing Swamp Thing. Cover art by Bernie Wrightson. |
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| Publication information | |
|---|---|
| Publisher | DC Comics |
| Schedule | monthly and bi-monthly (varied) |
| Format | Ongoing series |
| Genre | Horror |
| Publication date | Nov./Dec. 1956-Sept./Oct. 1966 Sept./Oct. 1969-Oct./Nov. 1978 Oct. 1996–Feb. 1999 |
| Number of issues | 179 |
The House of Secrets is the name of several mystery-suspense, anthology comic book series published by DC Comics. It had a companion series titled House of Mystery.
Contents |
[edit] First series
The original Silver Age series ran 80 issues, from November/December 1956 to September/October 1966. In addition to short, 'one-off' stories, several issues beginning with No. 23, August, 1959 featured the adventures of modern-dress sorcerer Mark Merlin. The dual-personality Eclipso ("Hero and Villain in One Man!") was introduced in issue #61 (Aug. 1963), continuing to the series' end. Prince Ra-Man the Mind-Master bowed in #73 (Oct. 1965) (later retconned into being the same person as Mark Merlin). Other, lesser continuing features included "Peter Puptent, Explorer"; "Dolly and the Professor"; "Doctor Rocket"; and "Moolah the Mystic". The title was cancelled after #80, dated September-October 1966.
[edit] Second series
The series was revived three years later with a definite article as The House of Secrets, beginning with issue #81 (Aug.-Sept. 1969). Now its horror and suspense tales were introduced by a host named Abel, who would also host the satirical comic Plop!. His brother Cain hosted House of Mystery.
This revival, sporting many covers by Neal Adams, Bernie Wrightson and Mike Kaluta, ran through issue #154 (Nov. 1978), with three months passing between #140 (April 1976) and #141 (July 1976), a victim of the DC Implosion. It was then 'merged' into The Unexpected with issue #189.
The House of Secrets also came to be the name of the actual edifice in which Abel lives. Mike Friedrich (writer) and Jerry Grandenetti (artist) introduced the house and explained its origins. The Sandman series revealed it exists both in the real world of the DC Universe and in the Dreaming, as a repository for secrets of all kinds.
The building itself was constructed for a Senator Sanderson using only materials from Kentucky, and went under the enchantment that only pure-blood Kentuckians would be able to live there. Later, Sanderson's wife went insane in the upper floors, leading the Senator to sell the house. The next four owners, none of them pure Kentuckians, found themselves driven away for various reasons. The following owner attempted to move the home from its original location, but the house tore itself free from its trailer, ran its owner over a cliff to his death, and settled less than 200 yards from the Kentucky state line in a graveyard. Whether by fate or some mystical alignment, the companion House of Mystery stands at the other end of the graveyard. Shortly after this, Abel was driven to the house and entrusted as its caretaker by a man who revealed himself to be an aspect of the House's existence, but making vague references to an employer. Abel was showing living in the House of Mystery in the quarterly DC Special #4, published one month earlier (July-Sept. 1969).
The character of Abel would later, in the 1980s and 1990s, become a recurring character in The Sandman (and related series such as The Dreaming)
[edit] Third series
DC's Vertigo imprint revived the name House of Secrets as a new title and concept. Here the House of Secrets was a mobile manor, appearing in different places. The building itself is haunted by the Juris, a group of ghosts who summon those with secrets in order to judge them and pass sentence. To the Juris, all offenses carry the same weight, from rape and murder to simply lying at a crucial moment. A runaway named Rain Harper stumbled upon the House of Secrets and took up a position as an unwilling witness to the Juris trials, validating the judgments and either condemning the tried souls to imprisonment in the basement, or setting them free to live their life purged of their secret.
Starting afresh with a new #1 (October 1996), this book ran 25 issues, plus a two-part House of Secrets: Facade special.
This House of Secrets series was creator-owned (except for its title which was kind of "licensed" by DC to the series' creators) and therefore is not part of the DC Universe continuity. Indeed, the letters column in issue #6 indicates that they could not, for legal reasons, include Cain and Abel in the stories.
[edit] Secret Six headquarters
In the mid-2000s, the Secret Six made their headquarters in the House of Secrets. Scandal stated in issue five of Villains United that the House would not show up on technological scans or mystical surveillance. She also said that Mockingbird claimed the House was a "house of victims."
[edit] References
- House of Secrets (original series) at the Comic Book DB
- House of Secrets (Vertigo) at the Comic Book DB
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