Avatar the Last Airbender – The Rift Part 2 Review

Avatar the Last Airbender comic The Rift Part 2 cover

The Rift‘s predictability is actually refreshing. So far, this story is extremely simple, straightforward, and heavy-handed. Despite it’s attempt at discussing the dichotomy between old and new ways and the complicated abusive nature of dangerous jobs and the people who work them, this is still an environmental story. Unethical and non-environmentally conscious progress, especially progress powered by greed, will inevitably hurt nature and cause human-harming natural disasters. Having said that, The Rift did manage to to surprise me regarding the source of the pollution.

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Avatar the Last Airbender – The Rift Part 1 Review

Avatar the Last Airbender comic The Rift Part One cover

It’s been a while but I’ve finally returned to the Avatar comics. “The Search” left a bad taste in my mouth and “The Lost Adventures” took a lot out of me. Hopefully, “The Rift” will more like “The Promise” with better pacing, in that it’s full of interesting worldbuilding and discussions that get proper room to breathe across its three issues. So far, I’m just wondering where all of this is going.

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Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Lost Adventures Book One: Water Review

Avatar The Last Airbender The Lost Adventures comic cover with "Book One: Water" written underneath

In recent light of an anthology of Avatar comics set during the main show and my very-bad-no-good time reading The Search, I’ve decided to take a little detour and spend this month slowly reading through The Lost Adventures instead. Think of this as a palette cleanser that will (hopefully) allow me to go into The Rift with a much more positive attitude than last month’s graphic novel left me in. Who’s ready for something fun and light-hearted?

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Avatar: the Last Airbender — The Search Part 1 Review

Avatar: The Last Airbender "The Search Part 1" cover

It’s clear from the very beginning that this three-part comic is going to be about family. What’s unclear is what this comic will try to say about family.

Zuko wants to try and mend relations with his family by finding his mother. Maybe he thinks that if his family were whole again, all the wounds would start to heal. That’s a completely reasonable desire for someone from a dysfunctional home. Unfortunately, Zuko’s blood-born family consists of a dispossessed dictator for a father, a violent sister with an active psychosis, a missing mother, and one good, long-lasting role model in his uncle. The odds aren’t in his favor.

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