Writing Comics
Creating Comics is just Awesome
Fusing AI images with Stories
I have always enjoyed reading comics. I still remember the cover of the first “Super boy” DC comic that my father bought me when I was six years old. Over the years I had a large collection of comics, from Adventure to superheroes, from DC, Marvel, to Independent published comics, as well as the Mandrake and Phantom collections.
Having grown up reading comics, it was just natural for me to want to write and illustrate my own comics. During the pandemic, I illustrated digitally and wrote my first comic, “Pandemic Blasters”, that was a fictional story based on it. Over the next few years and months, I wrote the stories and created digital art to match the stories that I had written. I have always loved watching A.I. art, and it inspires me to write stories based on those images.
There are so many stories waiting to be told and one of the best ways to make stories interesting as well as informative is to create comics, which are now an established form of literary work. I wrote the story, line by line and scene by scene and then generated the images as I moved forward and populated each panel, so that each one captured the power of the story being told.
Every comic starts with a beginning, a middle that continues the theme and ends with the main message of the story. As my father would always say, “Every story has a beginning, a middle and an end and it is up to the writer to keep the reader hooked from the first page to the last page.”
Over the past few years, I have created a total of six comics, that come under the “Warren Comics” banner. The comics are “Pandemic Blasters”, “Wild Ride”, “Humane Resources”, “The Halloween Zombie Train”, “The Father Christmas Factor”, and “Christmas Legacies”.
