User:NatureBoyMD/sandbox5

Original run
Shock SuspenStories originated in February 1952 as a "sampler" featuring stories of various genres. EC Comics publisher Bill Gaines and his editor, Al Feldstein, explained the comic's origin and the source of its title in the first issue:

"We've tried to satisfy every one of you readers who have written us insisting that EC increase its output! Many of you wanted another science-fiction mag... you horror fans wanted another horror book... and you suspense readers wanted a companion mag to Crime SuspenStories! We decided, therefore, to make this new mag an 'EC Sampler' ...and to include in it an S-F yarn, a horror tale, a Crime SuspenStory, and... for you readers of Frontline Combat and Two-Fisted Tales... a war story! Although there was a wide variance in the types of mags requested, all of you fans seemed to agree on one thing: all of you wanted the stories to have the usual EC shock endings!  So what could be more natural than to call the magazine Shock SuspenStories?"

The war story would be immediately phased out with the second issue, replaced with a message story—the "Shock SuspenStory". Bhob Stewart discussed the "Shock SuspenStory" in his notes for the EC Library, which reprinted all 18 issues of this title:

"It was evident from the cover of #2 that Gaines had conceived this title for matters of deeper concern. With 'The Patriots', the 'Shock SuspenStory' was born. And far from being just a label of meaningless hype, the concept proved to be a major step for EC, providing Gaines and Feldstein with a forum for expressing their views on the human condition just as Two-Fisted Tales and Frontline Combat were for Harvey Kurtzman. The Shock SuspenStory was characterized by a running theme of mob violence and an art style best described as Heightened Realism. A similarity can be noted between Wood's dramatically effective Shock renderings and the caricatures of corruption in the acclaimed fine art of Jack Levine.

Over the next three years, Shock SuspenStories tackled many controversial issues, including racism ('The Guilty' in #3, 'In Gratitude' in #11), mob hysteria ('The Patriots' in #2), police corruption ('Confession' in #4), vigilantism ('Under Cover' in #6), drug addiction ('The Monkey' in #12), and rape ('The Assault' in #8, 'A Kind of Justice' in #16). The sampler format remained for the remaining three stories in the title until the end of 1953. With #12, the horror and science fiction stories were phased out, and the comic then focused primarily on shock and crime stories for the remainder of its run."

Issue #14 (April/May 1954) contained two of the title's most controversial stories, "The Orphan", which featured a ten-year-old girl murdering her father and framing her mother, and "The Whipping", in which a bigoted father mistakenly beats his daughter to death under the impression that she was her Hispanic boyfriend. Gaines was questioned extensively about both stories by the United States Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency in April 1954.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, comic books came under attack from parents, clergymen, schoolteachers, and others who believed the magazines contributed to illiteracy and juvenile delinquency. In April and June 1954, highly publicized congressional subcommittee hearings on the effects of comic books upon children left the industry shaken. With the subsequent imposition of a highly restrictive Comics Code, which placed severe restrictions on violent comic book genres, including forbidding publishers from using the words "terror" and "horror" in titles and from depicting zombies, werewolves, gruesome characters, and outrè horror fiction trappings, 'Shock SuspenStories'' was one of five comics voluntarily discontinued by EC Comics publisher Bill Gaines.