was created by Bob Haney and Lee Elias and was introduced in issue #61 (August 1963)[4][5] and continued to the series' end.
[10] Other, lesser continuing features included "Peter Puptent, Explorer"; "Dolly and the Professor"; "Doctor Rocket"; and "Moolah the Mystic".
The title had an early breakthrough for the mainstream part of the medium: issue #83 had a story, "The Stuff that Dreams are Made of", written by Marv Wolfman.
Upon examination, the censor bureau, the Comics Code Authority refused to give the issue its seal of approval since it mentions a wolfman, which was specifically forbidden along with other classic monsters.
Editor Gerry Conway explained that the term referred to Marv Wolfman, and the CCA conceded on the condition that the distinction be made obvious with a writer's credit in the story.
That directive was complied with and suddenly the editorship of DC was inundated with complaints from other writers because of Wolfman's special consideration of a printed credit.
[12] Swamp Thing first appeared in The House of Secrets #92 (July 1971) in a stand-alone story written by Len Wein and drawn by Bernie Wrightson.
Abel was showing living in the House of Mystery in the quarterly DC Special #4, published one month earlier (July - Sept. 1969).
Starting fresh with a new #1 (October 1996), this series ran 25 issues, plus a two-part special House of Secrets: Facade.
2), The Dreaming, John Constantine, Hellblazer, The Invisibles, The Books of Magic, The Minx, Sandman Mystery Theatre and Nevada.