
The back of this book has a section on animals, and the first section is about the Air Bison. After a few pages of the little text boxes telling me about the action that was going on in the screenshots, it got a little boring-no, a lot boring. There was more action in this episode than the first, and that didn’t transfer well into a book like this. I felt like half of this book was simply exposition. Some dialogue was also added in, such as Zuko’s line on page 35 of, “Just a teenager, eh?” That pulled me out more than anything, as I wasn’t expecting anything new. ‘…freeing Aang has alerted a Fire Navy warship…” Yes, Zuko did notice the light from Aang coming out of the iceberg, and that led him to poking around more, but Zuko didn’t really find the village until Aang set off the flare by accident.Īlso, knowing this show as well as I do, each time a piece of dialogue was missing, it pulled me out of the story a little. In ‘The Story so Far…’, I take some issue with how they say Prince Zuko found the Southern Water Tribe. However, I don’t think this book has any many problems as the last-but there were still problems. Just like the first book (and the rest of this series), this book is made up mostly of screenshots from the show coupled with lines of dialogue from the show.

Then I ended up having some time to kill, so I cracked this book open. I bought it for cheap, and more of because I try to collect everything Avatar than because of me wanting to read it. I feel as if this book was better than the last, but not by much.
The question is, will he arrive in time? And what if the Avatar is the one who needs saving? Only the Avatar, master of all four elements, can protect the village from Prince Zuko’s wrath. But the young Airbender is nowhere to be found, banished for his foolishness. The Fire Nation is on the Southern Water Tribe’s doorstep, all thanks to Aang.
