A review by macroscopicentric
The Sun and the Wayward Wind by Akshay B. Varaham, Ivan Kasof, Aglennco, Sunita Balsara, Paloma Hernando, Mickey Walls, Ann Xu, Hannah Schwartzkopf, Raven Warner, Celia Lowenthal, Madeline McGrane, Febi Sobowale, Emily Roberts, C.J. Walker, Vreni Stollberger, Jasmine Walls, Cynthia Cheng, Sunmi, Ashanti Fortson, Sarah Webb, E. Jackson, Haley Kasof, Megan Kelchner, Olivia Stephens, Sage Coffey, Iris Monahan, Caroline Dougherty, Soumya Dhulekakr

3.0

Comic anthologies are hard by nature. Since each story gets so little space, it’s often hard to feel like there’s any sort of conclusion or clear narrative. TSATWW’s material helped it in this instance, since stories about myths and legends by nature can often stand on their own without those two things. I also enjoyed the mixed media effect, where some stories were only a paragraph of explanation and then a single illustration.