Lou Reed | Jerry Reed | reed | Reed College | The Donna Reed Show | Oliver Reed | Stanley Forman Reed | Donna Reed | Walter Reed | Jimmy Reed | Walk on the Wild Side (Lou Reed song) | Reed Elsevier | Del Crandall | Carol Reed | Walter Reed Army Institute of Research | Robert Reed | Reed bed | Reed | Jeremy Reed | Andre Reed | Reed Smoot | Paul Reed Smith | Kasim Reed | Isaac Reed | Chad Reed | Butch Reed | Walter Reed Army Medical Center | Tanoai Reed | Stanley Reed | Rondi Reed |
Growing up Ken admired the work of such luminary comic book artists as Reed Crandall, Russ Heath, Sam Glanzman, Jim Steranko, and Wally Wood, among others.
All four editions include a preface by Henry Hardy Heins and twelve black and white illustrations, including four by Al Williamson and Reed Crandall, two by Crandall alone, and six by Frank Frazetta.
Artists featured in Shock Illustrated included Jack Kamen, Rudy Nappi, Reed Crandall, George Evans, Al Williamson, Angelo Torres and Graham Ingels.
Notable creators associated with Tower included Wood, Schwartz, Dan Adkins, Gil Kane, Reed Crandall, Steve Ditko, Richard Bassford, Len Brown, Steve Skeates, Larry Ivie, Bill Pearson, Russ Jones, Roger Brand, and Tim Battersby-Brent.
The artwork included at least two stories each by Dave Berg, Vic Carrabotta, Gene Colan, and Don Heck, and one story each from Reed Crandall, Russ Heath.
witzend debuted with Wood's "Animan" and "Bucky Ruckus" while Al Williamson contributed his science fiction adventure, "Savage World." Reed Crandall illustrated Edgar Rice Burroughs, along with a mixed bag of pages by Steve Ditko, Jack Gaughan, Gil Kane, Jack Kirby, Ralph Reese, Roy G. Krenkel and Angelo Torres.