This review has spoilers - read at your own risk!
“Legacy of Yangchen” by F.C. Yee is his 4th installment in the “Legacy of the Avatar” series. It follows the aftermath of the events of “Dawn of Yangchen”, using the full cast of characters we’ve been introduced to for a wonderful finale. With a few missteps here in there that matter little, I think Legacy is one of the strongest of the four books (ranked only slightly behind the first Kyoshi novel).
The intrigue and political machinations of the first book are turned up to 11 here. Unlike Dawn of Yangchen, Legacy will often throw massive wrenches into everyone’s plans. One example is the immediate dynamic shift regarding Unanimity, throwing the expected status quo of the book into shambles almost immediately. The multitude of these shifts made the story have a great pace that was fun to read, while still keeping its political intrigue.
In the last Yangchen book, I had felt the Kalyaan reveal was meh. I didn’t think the story had really needed it and it made things feel unnecessarily complicated. Surprise, surprise, my least favorite character was Kalyaan again. Maybe I missed something, but his characterization in this book was overtly cruel compared to the last one. Additionally, he’s just a little too good. Easily tricking the Avatar and out maneuvering the White Lotus + the Zongdus - Kalyaan comes off a bit “Mary Sue”.
However, what F.C Yee does with Kalyaan in the finale was amazing. Kavik’s weakness of family ties is inverted - he uses his own death to force Kalyaan to talk. Abusing the last drop of his brother’s compassion, Kavik overcomes Kalyaan’s presence in his mind as always better, always stronger.
In a mirror, Yangchen too finds an inversion with her eldest sibling. After searching for so long to find her elder sister, Jetsun, she is amazed to find her sister content in the Spirit World. Yangchen learns to let both her sister and her guilt go, the opposite of the rescue plan she began with.
Finally, F.C. Yee uses some really interesting story devices that make the intrigue of the book that much sweeter. Swirling timelines reveal deceits and subterfuge from before, with the book commonly ping-ponging between past and future. This is not easy to do as a writer, yet in both the Iwishi Sparrowbones scene and the Convocation finale, Yes sticks the landing perfectly.
Powerful pacing with captivating intrigue, strong metaphors about family and especially older siblings, as well as savvy time skips overcome the (in my opinion) weak portrayal of one of the villains (Chaisee is great though). Definitely read the first one just to get a chance to read the sequel. I’d give this book a 4.75/5 and would recommend it to Avatar fans, fans of intrigue or adventure novels.