The deuteragonist of The Walking Dead, Carl Grimes, was one of the most central figures to the book, but it seems that the young man missed out on a key development. During the series' final issue, a now-grown Carl is shown killing a loose walker, followed by him killing an entire swath of them. A moment of reflection for the adult Carl shows that he never stopped living in the world that tormented his father so.

When Carl was first introduced in The Walking Dead, the first line he has is "Dad!" upon seeing his father is alive. The relationship between Rick and his son was one of the comic's foundations and a driving force for many of the book's plots. So much so, that the last issue would come full circle and sum up Carl's idolization of Rick in the saddest way.

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In The Walking Dead's unexpected ending with issue #193 by Robert Kirkman, Charlie Adlard, and Cliff Rathburn, the series flashes forward several decades to a world mostly returned to normalcy. On Carl's homestead, a walker es through and Carl kills it with no hesitation. The walker actually belonged to Maggie and Glen's son, Herschel, who is enraged that Carl killed a valuable piece of property. Despite the troubles that come with destruction of property, Carl takes it upon himself to kill Herschel's entire collection. Thankfully, he does evade legal ramifications thanks to the judge being old family friend, Michonne. The Walking Dead comes to a close with Carl reading his daughter a story of The Trials, telling her "He did all those things, my father, your grandfather. Rick Grimes. This book is about him.".

Carl Grimes Final Words Walking Dead Image Comics

The juxtaposition of Carl's first and last lines shows that he hasn't grown as much as one would think. Despite how Carl even names his daughter Andrea after his stepmother, showing that he can't let go of his past.

Carl could do a lot worse than idolizing the man who helped rebuild humanity. But being unable to move on from the past may be one of the bigger tragedies of The Walking Dead.

Next: The Walking Dead's World Expands in Image Comics' Clementine Book One