Love Junkie: Comics

The Aesthetics of Vulnerability: Love Addiction, Autobiography, and the Gaze in Love Junkie Comics

MariNaomi identifies as queer, and Love Junkie chronicles relationships with men, women, and nonbinary people. This complicates the “love junkie” stereotype, which is often gendered female in popular culture (e.g., “crazy ex-girlfriend” tropes). By depicting the same addictive patterns across diverse genders of partners, the comic argues that the issue is structural to the self, not a product of heteropatriarchal romance. Furthermore, the confessional mode — “this happened to me” — reclaims agency: the act of drawing the humiliation transforms passive suffering into authored critique. love junkie comics

Love Junkie has been praised in alternative comics circles (e.g., The Comics Journal , Publishers Weekly ) for its unflinching portrayal of millennial/Gen X queer dating life, particularly in pre-dating-app San Francisco. Its influence can be seen in later webcomics like Hyperbole and a Half (for emotional rawness) and Fangs (for minimalist romance satire). However, Love Junkie remains distinct for its refusal of redemption: the final pages of collected editions often loop back to the first crush, suggesting the addiction is lifelong — a condition to be drawn, not cured. Furthermore, the confessional mode — “this happened to