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Legion Lost #3 – Review

By: Fabian Nicieza (writer), Pete Woods (artist), Brad Anderson (colorist)

The Story: When Timber Wolf starts calling you savage, you really have a problem.

The Review: If you haven’t realized it already, let me just say: I am a Legion of Super-Heroes fan.  At the same time, it is never lost on me how irritatingly dense and confusing Legion continuity can be to new readers; that was certainly the case when I started getting into the series.  None of this was helped by the resurrection of the Silver Age Legion and all its incumbent baggage of history, which the new DCU disappointed me in not tidying up.

That said, Nicieza has taken some admirable pains to make his set of Legionnaires as accessible as possible.  Hence the constant emphasis on their major personality traits: Wildfire and his angst of not having a body, Dawnstar’s perfectionism, and most of all, Timber Wolf’s antsiness to get out there and maul something.

All that talk about wishing he could take out his anger on someone show how T. Wolf gets his reputation as a Wolverine analogue (or Wolverine inspiration, considering he predates the X-Man by ten years).  Unlike his teammates, who seem inclined to play it on the safe side and keep their activities on the down-low, Wolf takes the proactive route, tracking down Hypersapiens before they cause too much damage.

Maybe because he takes the trouble to actually get out into the real world, it explains why he’s the first of the team to begin adjusting to life on Earth 2011.  As he speeds off in a stolen cop car, he reflects, “…for the first time…a giant part of me feels free…”  That’s exactly what the rest of the Legionnaires need; instead of moping around in a telepathically hustled motel room, moaning about “this time—this filthy, backward place!” they need to put on some civvies and live a little.
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