Consider the gutter—the space between comic panels. In a standard superhero book, the gutter implies time passing. In a curse comic, the gutter is a threshold. It represents the wall separating the two homes. When an artist draws a panel of a neighbor whispering on page one, and a panel of a cockroach swarm on page two, the reader’s brain fills the gap with magic.
However, there is a satirical streak here. Many modern titles are actually dark comedies. Consider the viral webcomic HOA Necromancy , where a home-owners association president raises the dead to enforce lawn-height regulations. Or Cul-de-Sac of the Damned , where a curse intended to cause impotence accidentally gives the entire block the ability to speak Latin.
Do not start with a curse. Start with a violation: A basketball hitting a fence. A tree dropping leaves into a gutter. A parking spot stolen. These mundane aggressions are the soil in which magical thinking grows.
Because the funniest, scariest truth of the is this: by the time you see the hex, it has already been working for three weeks. Do you have a recommended neighbors curse comic? Have you cast a hex over a parking dispute? Contact the author at eldritch.press@substack.com.
Neighbors Curse Comic Work -
Consider the gutter—the space between comic panels. In a standard superhero book, the gutter implies time passing. In a curse comic, the gutter is a threshold. It represents the wall separating the two homes. When an artist draws a panel of a neighbor whispering on page one, and a panel of a cockroach swarm on page two, the reader’s brain fills the gap with magic.
However, there is a satirical streak here. Many modern titles are actually dark comedies. Consider the viral webcomic HOA Necromancy , where a home-owners association president raises the dead to enforce lawn-height regulations. Or Cul-de-Sac of the Damned , where a curse intended to cause impotence accidentally gives the entire block the ability to speak Latin.
Do not start with a curse. Start with a violation: A basketball hitting a fence. A tree dropping leaves into a gutter. A parking spot stolen. These mundane aggressions are the soil in which magical thinking grows.
Because the funniest, scariest truth of the is this: by the time you see the hex, it has already been working for three weeks. Do you have a recommended neighbors curse comic? Have you cast a hex over a parking dispute? Contact the author at eldritch.press@substack.com.