With his wholesome approach, Jack Kamen stood out amongst the grandguignol grunge, gritty realism, or futuristic dazzle of his fellow EC cartoonists â?" but his brilliant editor/writer Al Feldstein found a way to exploit the surface innocence of his style with seemingly nice stories of romance gone horribly wrong, or future fantasies with an unexpectedly brutal twist. And nowhere did Kamenâ??s clean-but-lush graphics work better than in the stories he created for ECâ??s science-fiction comics. The title story, â?oZero Hourâ? (one of three in this book adapted from works by Ray Bradbury), set in a Spielbergian suburban idyll, is particularly well served by Kamenâ??s surface innocence; â?oA Lesson in Anatomyâ? works similar magic, with its Mayberry-esque setting veering into alien-invasion terror. If there was any devil in Kamen, it came out in his loving depiction of the female face and form, and you could see why his hapless heroes were often fatally entranced with them â?" as in â?oPunishment Without Crimeâ? (Bradbury again), â?oHe Who Waits!â? (a scientist finds an extreme way of rejoining his eight-inch-tall inamorata), and â?oMiscalculation!â? (the lucky recipient of a package from the future literally brews his own harem); even the supercomputer in â?oOnly Human!â? proves vulnerable to a beautiful womanâ??s charms. Zero Hour And Other Stories contains 22 classic EC yarns â?" plus the usual all-new biographical, historical, and critical essays that have made Fantagraphicsâ?? EC Library series the ultimate version of these classics.