In many ways, this volume embodies everything that's wrong with modern Marvel. It's horribly fractured, with five different single issue stories, with almost no continuity between them, not even the same group of characters. The problem is Marvel's constant and obsessive crossing over between their titles. So issues 9 & 10 both crossover with the Secret Empire event, but I really only know that because of the title of the volume. There's no explanation of how Thor ended up on some weird alien planet (in #9) or how a group of evil Avengers replaced our protagonists (in #10) or what happened to them (afterward). And, the crossovers don't end there. It looks like a big, annoying reset button was hit over in Amazing Spider-Man, but again what it is, I don't know, nonetheless #11 is all about that.
Somehow, amidst this rubble, there are two good issues.
Trying-to-be-good Dr. Doom is one of the best things to come out of post-Secret Wars Marvel (really, one of the few good things that has happened in a universe that's been wildly reeling toward mediocrity since, as revealed by their plunging sales), and he's the heart of issue #7, along with his delightful interactions with the Avengers.
Then, in #11, we get interesting interactions between our various Avengers, which is the sort of thing that Waid excels at, but which just doesn't appear enough in this volume.
And between? Dull stories. Some fight against a super-Adaptoid like lady (#8), a mostly pointless Thor story (#9, and why does Waid keep using Avengers to tell solo Thor stories?), and a story about evil Avengers that should be delightful based on the cast, but somehow isn't (#10).
Yawn. I dunno why Waid's Avengers continues to be not great.