Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Book Review: Star Wars: From a Certain Point of View: The Empire Strikes Back

From a Certain Point of View: The Empire Strikes Back (From a Certain Point of View, #2)From a Certain Point of View: The Empire Strikes Back by Elizabeth Schaefer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Not nearly as good as the first one. I found myself not caring about most of the characters that were created for this book. There wasn't any "WOW, So that's what was going on during the movie!" in most of the stories as there was during the first book.

That being said here are a few of the stories that stood out to me:
The Willrow Hood story - interesting to have some of his (and the camtono's) backstory.
The Man Who Built Cloud City story - I knew what was going on with him pretty much from the start, but it was still a cute story.
The Wampa story was interesting/sad.
The tauntaun stories made me mad at the Rebels...


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Monday, June 15, 2015

Book Review: Dark Disciple (Star Wars)

Dark Disciple: Star WarsDark Disciple: Star Wars by Christie Golden
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Dark Disciple is, I think, probably the best Star Wars novel I have read. It may also be worst Star Wars novel I have ever read, darn it.

First, let's just get this out of the way: if Obi-Wan ever says he has an idea, or might know someone for a part in a plan, you say NO! And get away quickly. Kenobi's plans never end well.

The story has some predictable elements, but they're executed well and in a Star Wars way that makes sense. It's also fun getting there, and also heart wrenching.

Not to spoil too much: I expected someone to die within these pages. I understand why the choice was for that character within the story, throughout the whole of Star Wars - I still didn't want it to happen.

If you are a fan of Star Wars, especially The Clone Wars series, you must read Dark Disciple!

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Monday, April 6, 2015

Book Review: Lords of the Sith

Lords of the Sith (Star Wars)Lords of the Sith by Paul S. Kemp
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Darth Vader? Scary awesome when he was younger.

I need more Star Wars fiction like this that features Vader in his prime: piloting the heck out of his starfighter, using the Force to do crazy things without thought of failure, plowing through enemies with his lightsaber; you know, still doing the things Anakin Skywalker was doing during the Clone Wars, but blatantly evil.

I really enjoyed the introspection Vader had in his quiet moments, the seeming omniscience Palpatine showed of Vader's thoughts, and Vader's responses to his master questioning and testing him. There need to be more Vader/Palpatine stories!

Also? Palpatine unleashed! He and Vader become stranded together on a planet, and as they make their way to civilization they encounter wildlife and terrorists (freedom fighters) that are trying to kill them. Since they're pretty much alone, Sheev can use the Force without witnesses. I'm just glad it wasn't Jedi facing them when he and Vader both ignited their lightsabers. The lords of the Sith tore through the jungles and caves (and citizens) of Ryloth with a controlled fury.

Darth Sidious expertly manipulated the fledgling rebellion on Ryloth to his own ends, as always. And the sad Imperial presence there suffered as well under an inattentive Moff and a traitorous second-in-command. I really didn't care much about the Imperial characters beyond the Darths, though they served their parts well in the story. There are rumors Moff Mors may be a recurring character. If so, she had better stop being lazy and start serving her Emperor!

It would have been nice to get to meet a young Hera, the daughter of the leader of the rebels on Ryloth. She's mentioned briefly, but we know she becomes the leader of a rebel cell years later in the Star Wars cartoon Rebels.

Many characters die within these pages, and the Emperor achieves his goal; but an ember still remains for the rebellion.

Great space combat, awesome Vader scenes, and the Emperor being cunning. What's not to love?



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I received my review copy from the publisher through Netgalley.


Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Book Review: Heir to the Jedi

Heir to the Jedi (Star Wars: Empire and Rebellion, #3)Heir to the Jedi by Kevin Hearne
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Heir to the Jedi, by Kevin Hearne, is the third Star Wars book in the "rebooted" expanded universe; where everything going forward now is approved by a story group and will all be official stories.

Heir is set shortly after the original Star Wars movie and is told in first-person from Luke's point of view. I normally don't enjoy first-person POV stories, but this one didn't bother me. I found Luke to be much better at putting his thoughts to paper than trying to express himself verbally to his uncle.

Luke and R2 are given a mission, with a few side missions, and along the way he learns a little bit about himself and a little bit more about using the Force.

If you want to get to know Luke Skywalker when he was fresh from destroying the Death Star, give Heir to the Jedi a read.



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Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Star Wars: Tarkin

Tarkin (Star Wars)Tarkin by James Luceno
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Tarkin is the second novel in the new Star Wars unified canon. The novel tells a story featuring Wilhuff Tarkin, shortly before he's promoted from Moff to Grand Moff. It also tells a coming-of-age story for a younger Tarkin back on his home planet, depicting the events that shapes him into the man we know from the film and the cartoons.

There were two casts of characters set during the main story: Tarkin, Vader, and the Imperials; and a group of rebels that steal Tarkin's personal ship and set about attacking Imperial installations. I would have liked to have spent more time getting to know the rebels, and maybe see them turn up in previous or later stories (we might, I don't know). Vader's characterization... interests me. More on the that after I tell what I thought of the book. One little tidbit I found interesting that Luceno tells us in the narrative: Tarkin suspects and all but knows outright that Darth Vader used to be Anakin Skywalker.

I was excited to read Tarkin. The promotional material said Luceno was giving Tarkin the "Plagueis" treatment - the book he wrote about Palpatine's rise to power. I found Plagueis a fascinating read. Tarkin kept me entertained. It was enjoyable, but for the new canon books, New Dawn was better. I found myself wishing to spend more time with the rebels on Tarkin's ship, and with the Emperor on Coruscant (I wish he'd get rid of Mas Ameeda though, that overgrown horned smurf is just a Bib Fortuna wannna-be).

If you're a fan of the original Star Wars movie (Episode IV: A New Hope), Tarkin gives some insight and backstory into one of the main villains. If you're a Star Wars fan in-general, you will pick up Tarkin and happily devour it. It's a good Star Wars book and, so far, the first two novels in the new Star Wars canon are much better than the much of the later Legends novels.


Now, back to Darth Vader's portrayal within the pages of Tarkin. I think Vader must be a difficult persona to put into prose in-general, not just in this book; he's had several different portrayals on-screen that all must agree. There was the Vader in the original Star Wars that was practically screaming at his troopers to tear Leia's ship apart to find the plans, and almost demurred to Tarkin (which is a topic that kind of comes up in this book); there's the Vader from Empire Strikes Back and Return of The Jedi which was quiet, foreboding, and almost terrifying, and an old man that seemed barely able to fight; then there was Anakin from the prequels, a whiny, bratty, Jedi with an overpowerful sense of entitlement and attachment; and finally there was Anakin from the Clone Wars cartoon, a hero, sometimes quiet sometimes bratty, powerful in the Force with an underlying tension, emotional and caring; and finally Darth Vader from Episode III, which was just Anakin from the previous movie turned completely to the Dark Side. How can an author successfully write a character that combines that combines all those differing characterizations. What we see on screen is just a few minutes out of a day, a few days out of a lifetime, for that character. From little Annie's "Yippee!" to Old Vader rasping "tell your sister you were right," we've seen the highlights of Vader's life, with many missing segments.

I can't put my finger on it, but Vader's portrayal felt slightly off. I'm not sure what I expected though. Maybe it's because we don't know him yet in this time period. We don't know how he's handled adapting to his new life, his new master, his new job description, his lack of friends and family. We haven't yet had a book about his new life in this era. The more I think about it, the more I see that maybe his characterization was a combination of all those influences I mentioned above. He was often quiet and foreboding, then explosively angry, at one point genuinely curious (I would love to see that scene on screen!). Darth Vader must be a complex character to pin down and write.

Star Wars: Tarkin is due to be published November 4, 2014. I received an eARC from the publisher through NetGalley for review.



I think I wrote more about Vader than I did about the book itself...



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Sunday, September 14, 2014

Book Review: Star Wars A New Dawn

A New Dawn: Star WarsA New Dawn: Star Wars by John Jackson Miller
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A refreshing change from previous Star Wars novels, Star Wars: A New Dawn has launched the new Star Wars universe that will include the new novels, the new and existing movies, the new cartoons and The Clone Wars cartoon, some new fiction from Star Wars insider, new comics, and anything else coming out henceforth. It essentially excommunicates almost all previous fiction to the realm of Legend.

A New Dawn does not rely on the bloated universe that existed in all that legendary material before, and while the author had written in that sandbox, this new novel - this new world is fresher. It's still Star Wars. It still expects you, as a fan, to know know what certain races, ships, weapons, and armor look like, it doesn't bother to describe them in much or any detail. The story itself is clearly meant as a setup for the new Rebels cartoon coming out in October 2015 and serves to introduce two of the main characters to each other before the show starts. It's a standalone story though, no need to have any knowledge, or interest, of the Rebels show.

The two main characters are a former Jedi student now grown into adulthood and hiding in the bottle between shifts at a mining operation, and a Twilek pilot looking for civil unrest she can potentially exploit at some point in the future to undermine the Empire. A strong cast of secondary characters also have interesting stories that all intertwine with the main cast and each other. Really, it's more of an ensemble cast that shares the spotlight than focusing mostly on the two mains, though the Jedi Kanan is pretty much the primary character.

If you're a Star Wars fan: read this and get ready for Rebels. If you're looking to jump in to the world of Star Wars novels, this is a good place to start - though I'd suggest you'd have at least seen Star Wars Episode III to share a frame of reference with Kanan's character.


Disclosure: I received an eARC of this novel for review from the publisher through Netgalley.


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Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Star Wars Book Review: Honor Among Thieves

Honor Among Thieves (Star Wars: Empire and Rebellion, #2)Honor Among Thieves by James S.A. Corey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book has revived my faith in fun Star Wars books. It's a light-hearted, fun story starring Han Solo, set between A New Hope and Empire Strikes back. All the characters are their young selves: Leia is feisty, Han is questioning why he's still involved with the rebels, Luke is naive and carefree. Chewy is alive. And the poor Falcon takes beating after beating.

There's a really interesting macguffin as well; but telling anymore would be spoilery.

I've been disappointed by Star Wars books lately: the books set later in the timeline just seem to be trying too hard, and the Leia story that came out before this book just didn't keep me interested. But younger Han in all his scruffy, scoundrel-y, money-grubbing glory works really well.

Star Wars fans rejoice, Han still has it! If you're new to Star Wars novels, this is a fun Han Solo story.

The author, James S. A. Corey, is new to writing Star Wars fiction. I was excited when I heard he'd (they'd) be writing in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, because I absolutely love his own fiction - the Expanse Series.

Honor Among Thieves is due to be published on March 4, 2014, and was provided to me for review through Netgalley.



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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Holy Smokes: Disney Bought LucasFilm!

New Star Wars movies! Maybe a theme park? Maybe a TV show?
News Release here!

This will be a day long remembered!


Friday, February 3, 2012

Book Review: Darth Plagueis

Darth Plagueis, by James Luceno, tells the story of Emperor Palpatine's Sith master and his rise to power. It also details Palpatine's own initiation into the Sith rule-of-two and his own rise to power. We also briefly meet Darth Tenebrous, Plagueis' own master.

Plagueis, a prominent member of the Muun banking clan under his alter ego Hego Damask (which sounds like a character name Isaac Asimov would use). As Damask, Plagueis manipulates anyone and everyone in order to move the galaxy towards being ruled by the Sith and the extermination of the Jedi Order.

Plagueis takes on a young Naboo politician-in-training and eventually lures him into becoming a Sith Lord. As Palpatine executes more and more missions for him, Plagueis becomes almost a recluse. He spends his time in a secret laboratory with a medical droid experimenting on different force-sensitive creatures trying to learn how manipulate midi-chlorians to bring back the dead, extend life indefinitely, or even to create life.

This was an fun book. Taking us from more than 60 years before the events of Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace all the way through to the events at the end of that movie. I've seen several reviews that mention there are a bunch of references to other Star Wars Extended Universe stuff but, even though I've read most of the novels, I didn't catch any on my first read through it. So if this is your first Star Wars book and you read it because Chancellor Palpatine mentioned Darth Plagueis the Wise in Revenge of the Sith, you won't be lost by all the references.

It's interesting to see all the back-room wheeling and dealing going on between Plagueis and people and groups on both sides of galactic events. Most of the time he doesn't even need the Force do make them do what he wants. In addition, it's nice to see the Sith side of the events of the first prequel movie, and their maneuverings of the Jedi into a role that will lead to Order 66 in the third prequel movie.

Darth Plagueis was a quick read, as most Star Wars novels. If the Sith and their rise to power in the current era interests you, definitely grab this one.

My copy of Darth Plagueis came from my local library. No one sent me a copy for review. /sadface

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Catching up.

I haven't had time or motivation to sit down and write thorough reviews of books I've read recently. All the books I've been reading lately have been specifically for my own personal enjoyment and not requested for a review.

Here's a few of the books I've read recently.




Not bad. I'd give it a 3 out of 5. The follow up to the Borg Finale now begins rebuilding the Trek-universe and reshaping the political landscape.




Again: Not bad with a 3 out of 5. A follow up the previous book but takes place before and during the previous book. The build up to the Trek-universe events in this series is taking for ever!




Pretty good action/adventure story. I'd give it a 3.5 out of 5.




Interesting book. Archaeological/Medical adventure book. 3 out of 5.




Most recent entry in the Star Wars Expanded Universe 40+ years after the movie events. This one is ...boring. 2 out of 5. (and I'm a big fan of the Star Wars novels).



That's it for now.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Star Wars: Outcast, by Aaron Allston - a review




The latest novel in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, starting a new NINE-book
hard back series sees Luke all but exiled from Coruscant and the Jedi order, by
his own decision. His son Ben goes with him on a quest to find out what happened
to Jacen Solo to make him embrace the Dark Side.


Han, Leia, and their adopted daughter have an adventure of their own that may
have repercussions in the series as Amelia here's a voice through the Force
coming from the moon of Kessel, and Lando finds Centerpoint Station technology
buried deep within Kessel itself.


The Jedi Order has to face political ramifications of their actions during
the Second Galactic Civil War. Jag and Jaina shippers get some satisfaction.
Tahiri loses her cool again. Some Jedi are starting to go crazy and think
everyone has been replaced by look-alikes. And someone is after the Sith
meditation sphere.


Hmm... did I cover it all? I think so.


Star Wars novels are like crack to Star Wars fans - we can't get enough! And
when we get them, we use them up quickly!


This novel, starting the new Fate of the Jedi series, is a nice start, but is
really just that. It's more of an introduction to the series, a set-up novel. It
was still enjoyable though. In fact, it was really nice to see Luke not as head
of the Jedi Order any more and just off on his own.


I enjoyed the book, and of course will be following up with the rest of the
nine-book series as it comes out.


Sunday, October 26, 2008

Book Review: Millennium Falcon

Star Wars: Millennium Falcon by James Luceno.
 
A much-anticipated novel about the fastest hunk of junk in the galaxy, this book did not live up to it's expectations in my opinion.  Star Wars fans love the Millennium Falcon, and this book gives us the history of the ship in an interesting story-telling method from two different main points-of-view going forward in time from an early owner and going back in time from the current owner, and the story lines meet at the end.
 
But first, the book opens with the initial construction of the ship causing mayhem on the production line and suffering damage that plagues the ship through it's long life and from owner to owner.  Then we start to follow the ship briefly from owner to owner until we get to a couple of low-end agents for some pro-Republic group shortly before Order 66 goes out in the final days of the Old Republic.  Dispatched on a mission, it is these agents that had hoped to one day own the ship for themselves, but instead are ordered to fly it to another agent and turn it over in a mission to restore honor to the Republic. And that is the start of the mystery that drives this particular story line. 
 
Finally, three or four chapters in, we finally to the current owner of the Falcon - Han Solo, hero of the Rebellion. His grand-daughter Allana convinces him and Leia to take her on an adventure to discover the history of the ship.  For some reason, Han has never found the time in some 40 years of ownership to actually discover anything about the history of his ship.  Wars and such always kept getting in his way.  Off they go to track down the previous owners of the Falcon, starting with Lando Calrissian and working backwards until they cross paths with one of the previous mentioned agents who has been tracking the Falcons owners since he had flown the ship some 60 years ago. Through the story, we learn of the different names the Falcon had been called, different modifications she had, who put in the hologame table and why, and even learn the origin of the name Millennium Falcon (which also was a let down).
 
As I mentioned, this was a much-anticipated book, because Star Wars fans love the Millennium Falcon.  It didn't pay off, and I don't like to report that because I usually enjoy James Luceno's Star Wars novels.  The Falcon was just a background element driving the plot and taking the characters from place to place.  Except for the opening where we see a problem during the production of the ship, she really doesn't have any character at all.  The ship should have had more character in the story, maybe even have some scenes actually told from the point-of-view of the ship. This book should have elevated the status of the Falcon from fan-favorite to something more.  Instead, the Millennium Falcon becomes just another ship in a galaxy full of ships.
 
Then there's the story featuring the agent from the Old Republic era.  It's supposed to be a mystery/treasure hunt. The ending of that is just a plain let down.  I'll tell you now - they don't find anything!  Well, they do - but it's a pointless find that does nothing for the story.  If they were really searching for something to "restore honor to the Republic", they should have found a lost nugget of Jedi lore that is crucial to Luke's New Jedi Order, or a hidden history of Palpatine with evidence of his manipulations, or something with significance to the current era or even the Legacy era.  Instead they find a fake piece of Republic Senate decoration.
 
As for the other Star Wars characters: Luke and the new Jedi, Daala and the Galactic Alliance, the Mandalorians...  They're only mentioned in passing.  The main story here focuses on Han, Leia, and Allana from the current era.  We only get glimpses into what is going on around the galaxy with other characters and the normal galactic politics that drive most Star Wars novels.  These glimpses hint at what's to come in future novels.
 
I'm sure those will be better books.
 
 
 
 
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