Star Wars: Clone Wars Adventures is an ongoing series from Dark Horse comics that takes its inspiration from the extremely successful Clone Wars cartoon series. This inspiration is visible in both the short, action-packed nature of the stories as well as in the art style itself. Volume Three contains four stories as follows:
1) "Rogues Gallery" - Asajj Ventress and Durge jointly face off against General Grievous and do not fare well. Grievous gains Dooku's confidence and is confirmed as leader of the Separatist droid armies. Much of the battle takes place in Dooku's highly creepy trophy room (including a gallery of art of himself!), which gets aggressively redecorated. It's hard to believe Grievous could dominate Durge and Asajj so handily, based on how Obi-Wan and Anakin fared in their various combats with each of the three villains. Still, it does establish him as a formidable presence, something some would argue Revenge of the Sith did not.
2) "The Package" - Two Republic commando teams head for the infamous Ord Mantell to retrieve a package of "extreme diplomatic importance" intended for Chancellor Palpatine. Much chaos and bloodshed ensues. It's always fun to roll along with the clone troops in a story and this one also has a nice Raiders of the Lost Ark nod in its closing.
3) "Stranger in Town" - Yoda defends a small village from a large Separatist army. Yoda maintains complete silence as he lugs a mysterious huge crate in, single-handedly wipes out the enemy, and walks off having saved the day once more. What's curious in this story is the means by which Yoda defends the village. Jedi and uber-machine guns don't really mix based on what the films and most of the Expanded Universe would tell us.
4) "One Battle" - Jedi Master Plo Koon swoops in to save a small squad of clones from certain doom and protect the entrance to a city. There's a great reveal on the title page as the camera pulls back to display just how dire of straits the clones are in. Plo Koon does the usual one-Jedi-against-heaps-of-droids bit and actually has a bit of dialogue as well.
The first three volumes of this series use lower-quality paper than volumes four and up and present ads for Dark Horse/Gentle Giant products between each of the stories. The choice to eliminate the ads and improve the book quality for subsequent volumes was a good one and makes the later books feel less disposable.
Clone Wars Adventures Volume Three gives us four slightly shorter stories than the ones in the first two books, giving them a little less time to develop a storyline, but it's still a fun read.