HomeBooksReview: IDW's Lost Light #16

Review: IDW’s Lost Light #16

They’re all dead! Dead I say! DEAD!

That is what we are led to believe in the first pages of issue 16. A beloved character meets a noble end while the rest of the crew attempt to figure out if this is real or a fantasy. There is no escape from this reality.

They’re just a poor crew, not needing no sympathy. But they soon realize that their lives easy come and easy go, and the clutches of death won’t let them go.

The artwork brings out the best of our Lost Light roster. Everyone gets a little time to shine. Interesting predicaments unfold, and the ship’s captain goes a little off the rails.

Imagine you have a belief, and suddenly, without explanation or time to prepare, an event unfolds so quickly and abruptly, by the time you gain your bearings, things you knew and believed are not what they seem. This issue challenges concepts of faith and devotion to one’s beliefs. Throughout the history of Transformers, the universal constant is the existence of a god. Primus. The existence of his heralds and giving life to Cybertronians. Like us simple humans, we question the existence of a higher power, and challenge the validity in the belief in a deity.

The final moments of the issue answers some of those questions, with the promise of a few answers next issue.

Lost Light #16 gets a 4 out of 5

Michael Dworkis
Michael Dworkis
Michael Dworkis has been a writer for The Pop Break since 2010. For over a decade he has contributed columns featuring Anime, Comics, Transformers, Television, Movies, and most notably, Professional Wrestling. Additionally, one of the key players in the original Angry Nerds column and a guest on one of Bill's various podcasts. When he is not grinding away at his next feature, or shouting expletives at the television while playing video games or watching wrestling, Michael actually has a full-time job,as a Mental Health Professional, working at a medical practice in New Jersey, and runs his own telehealth private practice. A family man through-and-through, requiring his three children to memorize all the Autobots and Decepticons on the collection shelves while also educating them in all things Marvel and Star Wars. You know, the stuff Disney owns.
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