"Light Carries On" is Poignant and Highly Sentimental Ghost Story [Review]
[This Review Originally Appeared at Multiversity Comics on May 16th, 2023]
What if death wasn’t the end? What if we got another shot at living, a second chance to find happiness and meaning? Ray Nadine’s supernatural drama “Light Carries On” explores queer romance and the meaning of life and legacy with tenderness and warmth. The Chicago set story is a moving dive into the emotional roils of a life unfulfilled, and a death unresolved. It’s a slow-moving but engaging walk through the life of one person and the afterlife of another. “Light Carries On” is a poignant and highly sentimental graphic novel.
Leon is an aspiring photographer and Chicagoan, a veteran of America’s foreign wars, and someone just trying to make ends meet. A haunted camera brings him Cody, a ghostly rocker whose life was cut mysteriously short. Alternating chapters tell of Leon adjusting to having the ghost of Cody in his life, and the story Cody’s last days in
the 1970s. Cody doesn’t know how he died, only that he is dead, and with Leon’s help he hopes to obtain some closure and finally move on from his ghostly existence.
That’s the basic plot of “Light Carries On”, but the deathly mystery isn’t the driver of the story in the way that Cody’s thirst for a second chance is. Most of us never get to live our life a second time, but Cody gets to experience the Chicago of the 2020s through Leon and his camera. It’s moving and thought provoking watching
Cody explore his legacy and the world he left behind. We may never get to find out how we’re remembered, or what we leave behind, but what if we did?
Nadine is interested in the philosophical questions of life and death, but doesn’t lose sight of the individual human element. Cody and Leon are richly written characters, with depth and grace. Nadine is really interested in the minutia of our lives, and how we interact with the people around us, and small things such as 7-11 slurpee flavor preference become important character signifiers. It’s this rich attention to detail that made me love these
characters and care about them.
Leon is easy to root for, he’s a scrappy artist with a traumatic past, but it took more time for Cody to grow on me. At first we don’t know who he is or why he’s haunting Leon, but as I got more into his story and Nadine fed me more details, I started to care. Cody’s backstory unfolds at a well paced rate, giving us more and more about him.
Despite initially seeming like a stereotype of a seventies punk rocker, Nadine lovingly shapes Cody throughout the book into someone that’s easy to really be invested in. By the end of the book I was rooting for Cody and Leon really hard, more than I thought I would be when I first got into “Light Carries On”.
I’ve never been to Chicago, but after reading “Light Carries On” I feel like I’ve taken a lovely trip. Ray Nadine has a very clear affection not only for the city, but its people and its history. There’s some comics that could be set in any city, but “Light Carries On” couldn’t be set anywhere else. From the trains to the restaurants, to the museums,
parks, and shops, almost every scene is set in a specific, tangible part of Chicago. The art lovingly renders these locations, adding small details such as specific station stops or store names to give specificity and realism. Besides just serving as a love letter to the city, it grounds the more supernatural elements of the story, making it more impactful and tethering it to something real.
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