Avatar: The Last Airbender: Team Avatar Treasury: Katara and the Pirate's Silver / Toph Beifong's Metalbending Academy / Suki, Alone |
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Collection published: 2024 Contents originally published: 2020-21 Read: January 2026 |
Art: Peter Wartman
Colors: Adele Matera
Lettering: Richard Starkings & Jimmy Betancourt
Since Imbalance, Dark Horse's Avatar: The Last Airbender comics have moved away from continuing the ongoing story of the tv show (as begun by Gene Yang and Gurihiru) into shorter standalones, some set after the show, some not. I don't know why this is. The first three of these are collected in Team Avatar Treasury, which contains two stories set during the show and one afterwards.
The two set during the show are "Katara and the Pirate's Silver" and "Suki, Alone." The former is about Katara getting separated from the other members of Team Avatar and falling in with a band of pirates. The story is fine, but fairly inconsequential; I feel like a good during-the-show tie-in manages to reveal a new aspect of a familiar character, but this didn't really succeed in that. Some sloppy work here, as at one point, the dialogue contradicts the art. My favorite part was actually Aang arguing with an Air Nomad genocide conspiracy theorist.
The other during-the-show story has more of a clear purpose, filling in Suki's time in the Boiling Rock prison between when she gets captured by Azula and when Sokka and Zuko arrive to rescue her. This I thought was pretty good; I always like Suki a lot, and the flashbacks especially give her some nice material. It does manage to reveal a new aspect of a familiar character.
Lastly, we get a post-show story about Toph, building on what previous stories have shown us about her founding a metalbending academy. This was decent: Toph has always defined herself as a bit of a rogue, so how does she cope with being "the man"? This one has some good jokes and nice cameos; I particularly enjoyed the return appearances by Toph's three students from Yang and Gurihiru's run.
I did think both the Suki and Toph stories were brought down a bit by being heavy-handed thematically; the scripts seem to re-restate the purpose of everything for people who aren't paying attention. More subtlety would have been better.
We've been buying our Avatar comics in the oversized "library editions." I like getting the art at this scale, but since Gene Yang left the title, the marginal creator commentary hasn't been very insightful, and at its worse, re-re-restates points made clear in the story. And at least one marginal note is clearly in the wrong spot!

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