Avatar Last Airbender Reading Letter in Show

Water. Earth. Burn. Air. Long agone, the adventures of Avatars Aang and Korra were told in 2 amazing animated shows. And in 2020, when the world needed them near, they arrived on Netflix and became more popular than always.

All the same, rare is the fan of Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra who has followed the story's official continuation at Dark Equus caballus. And who could blame them? Both television series have articulate, satisfying endings that don't demand beingness revisited in a new, unlike class (looking at you, live-action remake). So what could comic books possibly have to add that the two shows didn't already do during their run on tv set?

Well, for starters, well-nigh of the Avatar comics are graphic novel trilogies that serve as sequels to both shows, almost like a secret supplementary flavour that shows Team Avatar discovering what this post-Hundred Twelvemonth State of war earth looks like. For the near part, the books are spearheaded by the shows' two creators, Bryan Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino, and written and fatigued past talented comic book creators Gene Luen Yang and Gurihiru (Superman Smashes the Klan.) All the characters are extremely accurate in how they speak and act in the ii shows, and the transition from screen to page is absolutely seamless.

Even the few short stories and other standalone graphic novels that take identify during the shows' events are worth reading. Some of the new stories serve almost as deleted episodes, while others prove dissimilar creators' takes on Avatar'due south globe and characters.

This guide is meant to help you find which comics volition be the most appealing to you, depending on what yous're looking for. Do you desire to read stories well-nigh a specific graphic symbol? Are you curious almost what happened to Korra and Asami later the end of The Fable of Korra? Proceed reading to discover the comic you're looking for! (No promises if you've always dreamt of a Cabbage Merchant ongoing serial.)

Support For Comic Volume Herald:

Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate committee.

Comic Book Herald's reading orders and guides are also made possible by reader support on Patreon, and generous reader donations.

Any size contribution will help continue CBH live and total of new comics guides and content. Support CBH on Patreon for sectional rewards , or Donate here! Cheers for reading!

Become a Patron!

Avatar: The Last Airbender: Tales of the Hundred Year War

The Final Airbender Prequel: Zuko's Story

The commencement to exist published and currently out of print, this black-and-white manga-style comic is the earliest story in Avatar'southward timeline, depicting the firsthand backwash of Zuko's banishment and the start of his quest to discover the Avatar. Although it is actually a prequel to Thou. Night Shyamalan'southward awful 2010 adaptation, and if you ignore some specifics (like Zuko and Iroh's appearance), information technology seems information technology can also be read equally a prequel to the bear witness.

The Last Airbender Prequel: Zuko's Story (out of impress)

The Lost Adventures

This album collects brusque stories, first published between 2005 and 2011 beyond Free Comic Volume Day bug, Nickelodeon Magazine, and DVDs of the testify. Most stories are brief and humor-based, and see the show'southward main characters getting into various hijinks. Special mention to "Relics," which is set somewhere during the show'southward start season, and offers an answer equally to why no Air Nomad survived the Fire Nation'south genocide ("Relics" first appeared in FCBD 2011: Avatar: The Terminal Airbender, which is bachelor on the Dark Equus caballus Digital website with a gratis account). As well of note are "Going Habitation Again," which shows Zuko and Mai's first date, and "The Bridge," in which Team Avatar and the Water Tribe warriors capture a Fire Nation ship betwixt seasons two and iii.

Avatar: The Final Airbender – The Lost Adventures

FCBD Avatar: The Terminal Airbender 2011

Katara and the Pirate'due south Silverish

Although it is the about recent Avatar graphic novel (having come out in October 2020, afterwards the testify's huge resurgence in popularity), Katara and the Pirate's Silver takes place before the terminate of the prove, between the episodes "Biting Work" and "The Library" (flavour ii). This one-shot shows Katara struggling with her place in the new grouping dynamics of Team Avatar, as she realizes the others think she's not as tough as Toph is. So when she is separated from the remainder of the squad and has to find her way back by embarking on a pirate transport, she takes the opportunity to show to her new allies and herself simply how Toph she can be.

Katara and the Pirate's Silver definitely feels like a deleted episode of the show, in the all-time fashion. In fact, Faith Erin Hicks's story is set between ii episodes in flavor ii! Hick writes an excellent Katara, sending the character on a journey that's a perfect fit for that character at that moment!

Avatar: The Terminal Airbender – Katara and the Pirate's Silver

Suki, Lone

To be published on June 22, 2021, Suki, Alone is a ane-shot graphic novel set during the testify's third season. This story is centered around Suki as a prisoner in the Humid Stone prison (a reference to the episodes Zuko Solitary and Korra Alone of Avatar and The Legend of Korra, respectively)

Avatar: The Terminal Airbender – Suki, Alone

Avatar: The Terminal Airbender: The Futurity Is At present

Published between 2012 and 2019, the Avatar sequel comics have mainly consisted of vi graphic novel trilogies, picking upward later the finish of the show and slowly paving the manner towards The Legend of Korra. The first five trilogies are written by Factor Luen Yang, with Faith Erin Hicks providing the final, and all six were crafted in cooperation with Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, the ii creators of the show.

The Promise

Tin can the globe really go back to the way it was before the Hundred Yr War? That's the question as tensions rise between the newly crowned Fire Lord Zuko and the residuum of Squad Avatar over the fate of the Fire Nation's colonies.

Gene Luen Yang makes great employ of the secondary cast of Avatar to show how messy and complex this new world is and how none of the characters tin quite fit their lives into the old idea of iv clearly separated nations anymore. Gurihiru's youthful and dynamic art perfectly captures the testify'due south way, halfway between Japanese manga and American drawing. It also works very well in the book'southward more serious moments, such every bit the somber dream sequence at the get-go of issue #three.

This first Avatar graphic novel is a solid continuation of the show (although a fleck too brusk), tackling how much the globe has changed by the end of season three and how political progress is hindered past trying to go back to the way things were. The tension betwixt Zuko and Aang feels truthful to their characters, especially when a furious Aang expresses that the four Nations should stay completely carve up subsequently seeing his "fan club" culturally appropriating Air Nomad civilization.

Also, did this comic canonize Smellerbee being trans? Maybe non, merely it's hard for me to believe Yang didn't know what he was doing with that coincidental panel of Katara correcting Sokka after he misgendered her…

Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise

Collects: Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise #1-iii

The Search

Zuko tries to find the answer to one of the main questions still left after the end of the show: what happened to his mom? Struggling with the abusive mess that is his family, he takes a gamble on his sister Azula and asks for her and Squad Avatar's help on his quest.

The Search is a comic focused on family and the psychological price that Fire Lord Ozai's abuse has taken on Zuko, Azula, and their female parent, Ursa. Now that the war is over, Zuko's sister appears less like a terrifying villain and more like a securely traumatized teenager, convinced that the loving relationships she sees amongst the people she used to manipulate accept to be fake and the upshot of even greater manipulations from her missing mother. The story also picks up the thread of Zuko feeling insecure in his new role as Fire Lord, afraid that what he sees as his ain inability to keep his family together means that he volition fail to go on the nation together, which leaves him ready to carelessness the crown every bit before long every bit he sees a possible way out.

Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Search

Collects: Avatar: The Final Airbender – The Search #1-3

The Rift

Edifice upon the two previous graphic novels' themes of letting go of the by in order to move forward, The Rift shows the clash betwixt tradition and innovation, as embodied by Aang and Toph, respectively. Aang is holding on to the past, feeling that the industrial town that has grown on the site of an aboriginal Airbender festival is a expose of his culture (in a setup that is reminiscent of the episode "The Northern Air Temple" from season one). On the other paw, considering of how she was raised, Toph sees tradition merely as a burden of senseless rules, meant to have away people'southward freedom.

This graphic novel as well shows the showtime of the industrial revolution, which will lead to the more technologically advanced state of the earth as it is in The Legend of Korra. It begins to foreshadow the tensions between benders and non-benders that will be at the center of the sequel testify's first flavor (Katara watching the not-bough product line and saying "bending but seems so much more… elegant" feels very much like what someone unaware of their own privilege would say in that situation, seeing not-benders gain access to equal opportunities). Some fun moments include a reference to 1984'due south Marvel Superheroes Hugger-mugger Wars, the origin story of Cabbage Corp, and Avatar Land Aang using an earthbent Ben Grimm mecha suit. Yang also includes a few flashback scenes to Yangchen's time as Avatar, which were so skilful I now want to see him write an unabridged Yangchen prequel comic.

Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift

Collects: Avatar: The Concluding Airbender – The Rift #1-iii

("Rebound," first published in Gratuitous Comic Book Solar day 2013: Star Wars/Captain Midnight/Avatar and later collected in Team Avatar Tales, is best read hither. That specific FCBD outcome is sadly not on the Night Horse Digital website.)

Smoke and Shadow

Back in the Fire Nation after the events of The Search, Zuko has to face the machinations of the New Ozai Society and the feelings of mistrust and insecurity they're sowing in the capital city's population. And it doesn't arrive easier that his ex-girlfriend'due south family is involved, as well as her new fellow… The comic is centered on both Zuko and Mai, as they face hard choices that could decide non only their future but the entire Burn Nation'southward too.

Smoke and Shadow sees its characters struggling with their self-identity: Zuko is afraid that his decisions every bit Fire Lord volition make him become like his father; Mai lies to her boyfriend Kei Lo, to Zuko, and herself until she doesn't quite know what she wants or who she is anymore; and Ursa especially has to deal with the rift between her present identity every bit female parent and wife in a loving family, and her past identity as a victim of Ozai's abuse, which is fabricated worse by her own girl non recognizing her anymore after the changes she went through in The Search. After having been by and large absent from the previous graphic novels, Iroh also returns for a wonderful scene with Ursa; plus some fun moments such as him channeling Zuko's angst through method interim.

Avatar: The Last Airbender – Fume and Shadow

Collects: Avatar: The Last Airbender – Smoke and Shadow #ane-3

North and South

Cistron Luen Yang and Gurihiru's terminal Avatar book! Katara and Sokka return to their home hamlet for the first time since the beginning of the show, just they find it completely unrecognizable, and whereas Sokka loves and embraces the change, Katara feels like her civilisation is being taken abroad from her. North and South put Katara and Sokka in a similar state of affairs Aang was in The Rift, except here, Katara is far from lone in thinking her home is being taken over. She finds herself at odds with the residue of her family.

Yang tackles here not but the slippery slope between patriotism and xenophobia with Gilak (the book's main antagonist) and his allies; just likewise the lie that colonization is somehow a noble means of bringing civilization to societies that are perceived as "primitive" past the colonizers, with the way Malina and Maliq from the Northern Water Tribe also every bit Globe King Kuei talk about the Due south as needing a lift to achieve a higher form of civilization before it tin can stride onto the international phase. And while the comic's message tin can get a fleck muddled by trying to handle both these subjects, Yang portrays the schism in the Southern Water Tribe's people and Katara's internal conflict between trusting her family and fearing that her culture is dying very well, allowing her to be fallible, saying things like "I guess I just never idea of non-benders every bit non equal," which is basically Avatar'southward metaphor for "I estimate I but don't see color."

Yang and Gurihiru's terminal entry in their run of Avatar: The Last Airbender comics concludes the characters' journey in finding their identify between tradition and modernity and establishes the general country of the earth after the war and the primary characters' place in information technology, planting the seeds for The Legend of Korra. The comic's final scene perfectly ties a bow on the whole run, with characters representing every nation sharing their cultures in a collective meal, symbolizing the peace and friendship that has risen from the ashes of the Hundred Year War.

Avatar: The Final Airbender – North and South

Collects: Avatar: The Final Airbender – Northward and South #one-iii

Imbalance

Republic Urban center is born! Squad Avatar returns to Cranefish Boondocks, the pocket-sized industrial settlement from The Rift… which is now a sprawling labyrinth of factories and dense habitations. This is the clearest prequel to The Legend of Korra, and equally a fan of the sequel show, I tin't deny that moments similar Aang and Katara taking a stroll across what volition become Air Temple Isle are very cool to see. Writer Faith Erin Hicks builds upon Yang's background thread of inequality between benders and non-benders (I guess you could telephone call it… the bender gap), clearly framing benders as an oppressive minority whose power is starting to dwindle with the rise of applied science (they're even called "bender supremacists" in the comic, which isn't very subtle, merely hey, subtext is for cowards).

The story uses bending as an obvious metaphor for racism, and while metaphors like this one can easily autumn flat on their face if they're not carefully idea out, Hicks manages to keep her point nuanced and grounded in specificities accurate to real-world discrimination. Benders as a whole are portrayed as privileged bullies, asking for higher salaries than non-benders for equal work, and lashing out when they start losing their privilege, ranting about how they should be in ability considering of "the natural order of things." At best, they claim to be confronting bender supremacists then run away when it comes time to really take a stand for not-benders; at worst, they commit terrorist acts to go back the privilege they already take (where have I seen that earlier ? Oh, right). Even the benders of Team Avatar have to reevaluate their perspective on the situation, which leads to some great discussions between Aang and Sokka especially, in which Hicks tin can testify how smart Sokka actually is; as he solves a crime in the span of three pages, all while helping Aang understand what information technology means to be a non-bender in a world where the people in power are near all benders. Detective Hat Sokka is absolutely my favorite Sokka.

Imbalance is currently the concluding sequel comic book trilogy to Avatar: The Last Airbender and no other comic taking place betwixt Squad Avatar'south arrival to Cranefish Boondocks and the start of The Fable of Korra have been appear as of January 2021.

Avatar: The Concluding Airbender – Imbalance

Collects: Avatar: The Last Airbender – Imbalance #1-3

Squad Avatar Tales

Another anthology similar to The Lost Adventures, compiling v new short stories, plus three reprinted FCBD comics (including "Rebound," which takes identify right before Smoke and Shadow, likewise every bit "Shells" and "Sisters," which are bachelor for free on the Nighttime Horse Digital website). The short stories include Sokka writing a poem, Toph helping the Boulder with his cat problem, and a sugariness story nearly Team Avatar being invited to dinner by a family Katara saved from Fire Nation soldiers.

Avatar: The Concluding Airbender – Team Avatar Tales

FCBD Avatar: The Concluding Airbender 2014 ("Shells")

FCBD Avatar: The Concluding Airbender 2015 ("Sisters")

Toph Beifong's Metalbending Academy

To be published on February 16th, 2021, this Toph-centric standalone graphic novel takes place quondam later the cosmos of her Metalbending Academy in The Hope.

Avatar: The Last Airbender – Toph Beifong's Metalbending Academy

The Legend of Korra: Love and Peace

Although it has generated fewer comics than its parent series, the Legend of Korra's creators have spun the evidence off into two FCBD short stories and two sequel graphic novel trilogies. While the Avatar comics were slightly limited in the stories they could tell (in that nosotros already know where the globe and the characters will end up by the time of The Legend of Korra), Korra'south sequel comics can go wherever they want and are a welcome addition to the testify'southward story, especially equally they can explicitly tell sure stories that the show couldn't.

Friends for Life

Published for FCBD 2016, this short prequel story takes place in Korra's childhood, learning waterbending with Katara and coming together Naga for the first time.

FCBD The Legend of Korra 2016

Turf Wars

Written by co-creator of the show Michael Dante DiMartino, Turf Wars is a graphic novel picking upwardly immediately after the end of the show, expanding upon Korra and Asami's developing romance, and explicitly making them the first two queer characters in the world of Avatar (as well every bit confirming two other Avatar characters every bit being queer).

The end of Korra, although even so timid in its onscreen depiction of bi characters, is widely considered to be a defining moment for queer representation in animation, i that has paved the way for shows like Steven Universeastward or The Owl Firm to start telling stories about queer characters without having to resort to background hints or vaguely suggestive dialogue; and getting to actually see Korra and Asami's developing romantic relationship expanded upon in this graphic novel is great and makes the show's final episode all the more meaningful.

Turf Wars also explores the backwash of Kuvira'southward assault on Democracy Metropolis, the presence of the new Spirit Portal, a conflict betwixt the Triads, and presidential elections.

The Fable of Korra – Turf Wars

Collects: The Legend of Korra – Turf Wars #1-3

Lost Pets

This is a short story published for FCBD 2018 about Meelo rescuing lost pets in the abandoned area of Commonwealth City right afterwards the end of Turf Wars.

FCBD The Legend of Korra 2018

Ruins of the Empire

Later the events of season four, Kuvira is put on trial for her actions as leader of the Globe Empire. And while the graphic novel addressed the possibility of her redemption, she begins the story pleading non guilty, arguing that what she sees every bit her benevolent deportment during her time in the Earth Empire should also be taken into account.

The story takes place during the Earth Kingdom'southward transition from monarchy to democracy (as initiated by King Wu in season four), showing the ho-hum, frustrating process of elections within an unchanging political class… which is the perfect political situation for the remnants of the Globe Empire to endeavor and seize power, the legitimate way this fourth dimension. It'due south also the perfect setting for Kuvira to face upwards to her crimes and try to do better. Written again by DiMartino, Ruins of the Empire goes into some of Kuvira'due south backstory as a foster child raised by Suyin Beifong in Zaofu. While Kuvira does seem to become off the claw a chip too easily in the finish, it is an interesting continuation of her storyline from season 4 of The Legend of Korra.

The Legend of Korra – Ruins of the Empire

Collects: The Fable of Korra – Ruins of the Empire #1-iii

lewismixtiffinuel.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.comicbookherald.com/avatar-the-last-airbender-the-legend-of-korra-reading-order/

0 Response to "Avatar Last Airbender Reading Letter in Show"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel