The Spirit (December 8, 1940) “The Haunted House”
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Will Eisner (editor, script, pencils, inks)

Joe Kubert (colors)

Sam Rosen (letters)

For a relatively simple strip—the Spirit and Ebony go to investigate a supposedly haunted house—there’s a lot of exposition involved. We get a history of the haunted house—owned by a guy who has disappeared, the bank is about to foreclose, and it’ll go to a gangster who wants to use it as a gambling den (and general purpose hideout), but the Spirit wants the state old folks’ home to get it.

About halfway through the strip, we’ll get some more exposition about the house, explaining what happened to it before the foreclosure rumblings. A few pages later, we’ll get even more. For all that exposition, however, there are still several unanswered questions in the strip… including why the gangster wanted the house (other than its remote location) and why he never took a look at it.

The “haunting” elements seem to be permanent installations, so any estate agent and prospective buyer would see them.

But, no, it’s just Spirit and Ebony bantering on the way there, then Ebony getting scared by everything and Spirit realizing there’s something else going on. Even as there end up being multiple fisticuffs opponents, and a handful of gags related to haunting the house, the strip finishes feeling more than a little slight. The stakes at the beginning—Spirit wanting to keep the house from the gangster—change in the middle, then change before the end, then are different once again in the last few panels. It’s like Eisner and studio had the idea for a setting, but not really what would go on in it.

Especially considering they reuse actual (and somewhat nonsensical) set pieces.

It’s still a perfectly okay strip, with Ebony around for the banter and some slapstick. The haunted house stuff proves fake reasonably quickly, so not a lot of Spirit in “supernatural” situations, but some nice, shadowy panels for sure. Even if the art’s never quite as tight as it could be.

Again, Spirit has raised the bar so much technically, even slighter strips are fine outings.

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