I Was a Teenage Grave Robber
Two days later, Danny and Rankin visit the Crestwood Cemetery at night, where they dig up the body of the recently deceased Daniel Wheatherby and take it to Weinbaum's laboratory.Leaving Vicki in his car, Danny finds the laboratory ransacked, with broken glass tank, green liquid on the floor, and a blood trail leading into the garage.[16] The original version of the story as published in Comics Review is held in the Murray Collection of Duke University Libraries.[1] Rocky Wood describes "I Was a Teenage Grave Robber" as "juvenilia" and "derivative of 1950s B-grade science fiction/horror movies" and as having "both structural and internal logic problems".[18] Tyson Blue further notes "...one of the story's biggest problems is the very thing which many people see as a real selling point to King's current work - the element of humor".