Book Review: Burn My Shadow Issue #3 by Sebastiano Lanza

Book Details:

Author: Sebastiano Lanza
Release Date:
January 2, 2026
Series: Burn My Shadow (Book 3)
Genre: Graphic Novel
Format: E-book 
Pages: under 100 pages
Publisher: Markosia Enterprises
Blurb:
At long last, Tharmas manages to carve – out of sheer determination – a face to face meeting with Thomas Crowley. Unfortunately for him, Mr Crowley will not cooperate as readily as one might have imagined. Tharmas and young K will have to squeeze every wit at their disposal to live another day.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

The third issue of Burn My Shadow deepens the series’ dystopian intrigue by narrowing its focus: rather than attempting to widen the world too quickly, it invests in tension, movement, and uneasy alliance. This is a graphic novel that understands the value of escalation. From its opening pages, it becomes clear that the series is interested not only in oppression, but in the rhetoric that makes oppression sound reasonable. That tension between official language and reality gives the issue much of its bite.

What works particularly well here is the contrast between scale and intimacy. On the one hand, the world appears tightly controlled by faceless systems, drones, compliance codes, and behavioural technologies; on the other, the issue unfolds through a relatively small, immediate mission involving a guarded protagonist, a child in tow, and an unstable but gifted tech contact. That combination keeps the story readable and kinetic. The bearded central figure remains compelling because he is not overexplained. He moves with purpose, suspicion, and fatigue, and the graphic novel wisely resists turning him into a mouthpiece. The child, meanwhile, adds vulnerability without tipping into sentimentality, functioning as both emotional ballast and a quiet reminder of what is at stake.

Visually, the issue has a strong sense of atmosphere. The muted purples, greys, and blues create a world that feels drained yet hyper-controlled, while the rain-soaked exterior sequences and holographic overlays lend the city a cold, synthetic beauty. The novel’s visual language is arguably its greatest strength; even when dialogue grows exposition-heavy, the imagery continues telling a sharper, subtler story underneath.

That said, Issue 03 is not without rough edges. At times, the dialogue can feel slightly over-insistent in its delivery of concepts, as though the script is working hard to make sure the reader understands the mechanics of the world. In a medium as visually expressive as comics, a little more restraint would occasionally have made the issue even stronger. There are moments where subtext could have carried what the dialogue states outright. Similarly, because this is an issue built around setup, extraction, and escape, some readers may feel that characterization is still being assembled in fragments rather than fully embodied. But in fairness, that fragmentation also seems partly intentional: this is a world of partial truths, unstable trust, and identities kept under pressure.

Even so, Burn My Shadow – Issue 03 succeeds where many third issues falter: it builds momentum without losing atmosphere. It leaves the reader with sharper stakes, clearer threat vectors, and a strong sense that the larger architecture of this world is only beginning to show itself. More importantly, it makes you want to follow these characters further, not simply to see what happens, but to understand what kind of moral cost survival will demand from them.

Overall, it is a visually moody, conceptually intriguing third issue that strengthens the series’ dystopian foundations. While some exposition occasionally lands a touch heavily, the comic’s atmosphere, pacing, and central dynamic more than compensate. Burn My Shadow continues to feel like a world worth entering, as it continues to be uneasy, watchful, and increasingly dangerous.


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