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Satan has a plan, you see. It involves using drugs, Ouija boards, astrology, and the TV show Bewitched to establish a one world government, overthrow Christianity, and force everyone to join a one-world satanic super church. The only thing standing in his way: a 16 year old girl named Debbie, a promiscuous, drug using, occult worshipper. Will Satan’s minions, in their black cloaks and badly drawn faces with fangs, be able to salvage their master’s plan by killing Debbie with an LSD Flashback (!) before Debbie’s grandmother’s prayers are successful and Debbie get’s saved? Read on to find out…

Read Bewitched?

Satan has a plan, you see. It involves using drugs, Ouija boards, astrology, and the TV show Bewitched to establish a one world government, overthrow Christianity, and force everyone to join a one-world satanic super church. The only thing standing in his way: a 16 year old girl named Debbie, a promiscuous, drug using, occult worshipper. Will Satan’s minions, in their black cloaks and badly drawn faces with fangs, be able to salvage their master’s plan by killing Debbie with an LSD Flashback (!) before Debbie’s grandmother’s prayers are successful and Debbie get’s saved? Read on to find out…

Read Bewitched?

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This is my desert island Chick Tract. The one I’d keep if I have to give up all my others. Never one to pass up a trend, Chick wrote “Soul Story” to cash in on the Blaxploitation film craze of the Seventies. (Think Shaft or Super Fly). No blaxploitation cliche is left unplundered. How can it miss when the protagonists’s name is “Leroy Brown” and the dialogue includes such pithy phrases as “You stupid jive turkey!” and “Right on!” This tract contains Fred Carter’s best art, in my opinion. And given that Fred Carter is a black pastor, why did he let Chick get away with the stereotyping? I guess when you’re tying to save souls, you can’t worry about a little racial insensitivity.

Read or Download Soul Story

This is my desert island Chick Tract. The one I’d keep if I have to give up all my others. Never one to pass up a trend, Chick wrote “Soul Story” to cash in on the Blaxploitation film craze of the Seventies. (Think Shaft or Super Fly). No blaxploitation cliche is left unplundered. How can it miss when the protagonists’s name is “Leroy Brown” and the dialogue includes such pithy phrases as “You stupid jive turkey!” and “Right on!” This tract contains Fred Carter’s best art, in my opinion. And given that Fred Carter is a black pastor, why did he let Chick get away with the stereotyping? I guess when you’re tying to save souls, you can’t worry about a little racial insensitivity.

Read or Download Soul Story