It was scripted by Britton himself, from a scenario by Butterworth, the editor, and drawn by John Coulthart, also the book's designer. Before long, Britton would combine his energy with that of Michael Butterworth - not the Mike Butterworth who wrote Vampirella as "Flaxman Loew" in the '70s, but a contemporaneous author/editor/publisher - and, through several iterations of the Savoy legend, would release books, records, and comics, the most recent of which arrived in 2013: Lord Horror: Reverbstorm, a 344-page hardcover compilation of work dating back nearly 20 years. Specifically, the work was published by David Britton, a bookstore proprietor who'd been involved in small press magazine printing and editorial since 1969 one of the first works he'd released was a suppressed comic by Ken Reid, which had been passed along by Steve Moore, the future mentor of an unrelated Alan. The first publication released by Savoy Books, in 1976, is said to be Stormbringer, a "graphic version" of Michael Moorcock's early stories of Elric of Melniboné by the artist James Cawthorn. Features THIS WEEK IN COMICS! (7/9/14 – Hell Eternal)
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