We Will Buy Your Dreams!... And then sell them back to you.
I actually was wondering just how much they were paying, then as I was reading the issue, I came across the ad at the bottom of page 23. Twenty-five dollars! Not a bad sum for 1952!
All kidding aside, all I can say is, what a concept for a comic book! Leave it to S&K to attempt to come up with some novel way to cash-in on both the horror and romance trends of the day I suppose. I mean, this is what I think we have here at its core... an odd amalgam of "light horror" and romance.
Imo, it's sorta like reading a bunch of "Dear Abby" columns written by a mystical fortuneteller/astrologer, whose focus is on dreams... albeit with some marvelously surreal Kirby art sprinkled throughout. But perhaps it's that very artwork (which I find so compelling as a Kirby fan) that might've limited the audience for this book and contributed to its brief run. For aside from "A Dream Saved His Life," the rest of the stories (along with the host character Richard Temple) can, in my opinion, easily fit-in as backup features in a romance title.
Love that cover with all its foreshadowing of what's to come later in Kirby's work... both stylistically in the physically rendered line, and in the imaginative creation of all those odd shaped creatures (any of which immediately bringing to my mind his 60s Thor and FF work). Very appealing in my opinion, and so is his work on our featured story "Girl In The Grave," which I thought rather well written and amusing. But this is an opinion of an adult, and a Kirby fan at that. Not exactly the one of a young boy, who in seeing this cover on the newsstand might expect more horror than romance... and certainly not one of a young girl, who might be looking for a romance comic and seeing this as a horror comic (based on the surreal cover).
I also thought this of most of the "You Sent Us This Dream" shorts... that is, well written with nice Kirby art.
Found "I Lived 200 Years Ago" weak but tolerable, with a "twist ending" that in retrospect seems hardly worth wading through the seven pages to get to. "A Dream Saved His Life" is the real oddball among oddballs here... certainly not romance story, that's for sure... it's only the opening panels on the first two pages with their surreal Kirby(?) touches that lend an air of supernatural to the story... otherwise it's a straight war story imo.
The text story "The Bronze Goddess" was passible, "The Laughing Corpse" not so much... I found it somewhat muddled by the end for some reason (even by one-pager text fuller standards).
In brief... love the cover and enjoyed reading the featured story. Overall, a nice, but weird, attempted "spin" on the romance genre imo.
Dunno why, but for some reason this makes me feel like reading an issue of Briefer's Frankenstein next.