A lot has happened since the last Avatar The Last Airbender novel release. When The Shadow of Kyoshi released, ATLA was hitting its newfound popularity on Netflix. Now, two years later, we find ourselves with a book that a person like myself thought was never going to happen. When the announcement came out for this book, I was surprised and elated. Yangchen is a character I've always wanted to be explored more. This book had a tall task however. The Kyoshi duology was received with universal praise. At the time of writing book 1 has a 4.47 and book 2 has a 4.39 rating on Goodreads. Not an easy feat at all as both books have over 12k ratings. As I said, tall task indeed, one that FC Yee dutifully undertook. So, how does this book stand?
Well, to be honest, my feelings about this book are thoroughly mixed. Yangchen as a character is fascinating. She is an air nomad, similar in some respects to Aang, but also wildly different. She has no problem twisting the truth or even lying for the greater good of people, something she constantly has to deal with. It makes for a really fascinating character. Kyoshi and Yangchen deal in two different worlds, but it is interesting seeing all these Avatars that we know, and how unique they are, as given one situation in the book, they probably would have all thought about the problem differently and came up with different solutions. Where Yangchen deals with secrets, spying, and information, Kyoshi might just go running in forcefully to deal with the problem. Yangchen, the character, is probably the best part of this book.
Unfortunately, everything else about this book lags a bit. First off, the prose. Yee's prose can be difficult at times. That is something I experience with all of his books (and I have read and loved every single one of his books). Typically its easier to swallow upon rereading it, but here it seems especially...chaotic I guess would be the best word? It's like an editor didn't comb through this, or didn't do a good job. I'm sure things will be more clear to others, and to myself upon rereading it, but it is a complaint I have. Another thing I felt mixed on was the plot. Much like the prose, it had its moments but also needed a few beats of clarity. The characters here seem to lack the depth that characters had in the previous Kyoshi books. It seemed that only two characters, Yangchen and Kavik, were more than two dimensional characters. Even the antagonist creates a scenario that I cannot see him escape, and yet he sees it and all he wants to do is become...rich? Maybe that is just how he is, but it also seemed quite shallow, and didn't make me feel well anything towards him. Again, this could just be a me thing. I also feel like it could have been better explained about her past with General Old Iron. You get bits and pieces here and there, but without reading The Rift it is easy to get lost or not fully understand what occurred. Just a paragraph or two really would have helped.
Overall, maybe it is not fair for me to compare it to its two predecessors. Even if I didn't though, I don't think it would impact my rating one way or another.
In the end, I'm giving this book 3.5 stars, which will be rounded up to 4 here. This is a book about Yangchen, and that is where this book perpetually shines. Yee did a great job at expanding on her character and making me love her even more. That is most important to me, even if the rest of the book falters along the way. Regardless, I'm still extremely excited for the sequel!