Welcome

Welcome to my ever-evolving blog. It started out as a blog on Beachbody workouts and products, mainly when I was a Beachbody coach. I no longer coach, not because I don't believe in Beachbody's programs (I subscribe to Beachbody on Demand and use their workouts every day), I am just not a salesperson and hated that aspect of it. I am more than willing to answer questions about my experiences with their products and the various workouts, and I feel freer to do so without the appearance of giving a biased review of something.

I have also started adding reviews for various things I have purchased like movies, books, CDs, and other products. This was brought about by a fight with Amazon in which all of my reviews were removed over a completely bullshit allegation that I posted a review that violated their terms of service. After going back and forth with the morons in the community-reviews department (even after they admitted that my posts did not violate their guidelines) they restored my account (which took them six months to do), but I have been posting my reviews on my blog to have them preserved in case something like that happens again. And here, I will post uncensored reviews so I will swear from time to time and post reviews that may be longer than Amazon's character limit. Everything I post here on any topic or product is my personal opinion, and I take no compensation for any product reviews I post. I am a member of Amazon's vine program and because I get those products for free, I keep those reviews on Amazon only, but everything I have purchased with my own money, whether from Amazon or some other store/website/outlet, I will post here.  

I also plan to do some longer blog posts on various topics, such as how to learn physics, how to get through calculus, and longer reviews of workout programs as I do them. Basically, whatever strikes me as interesting at the time.  As you can see if you navigate around the blog, I had many years in between postings. During that time I was going back to school to get an engineering degree, and learning material that I avoided my first time through college was a different experience and one that gave me a lot of insight into how to do well in those classes, which I will try to impart here for those who are looking to get a science or engineering degree. 

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

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Path of Deceit

 


Path of Deceit is another young-adult Star Wars novel set during the early High Republic era. It is set sometime before the events depicted in the book, Battle of Jedha. In the early chapters, it seems like the book is just going to be another ancillary side story, with a bunch of new characters that are pretty uninteresting. However, by the end of the book, a lot is revealed, including exactly what the monster is that the Path of the Open Hand, and later the Nihil, use to kill Jedi (and how it actually kills them). 

The story is set on the planet Dalna, in the Outer Rim where the Path has their compound. A Jedi named Zalla Marci and her Padawan named Kevmo Zink travel to Dalna to find stolen force artifacts that they suspect the Path is hoarding. During the mission, Kevmo falls for one of the Path members, Marda Ro. They each try to convince each other that their respective views of The Force are correct while falling in love. Over the course of the book, we learn more about the Path's leader, The Mother, and get a bit more insight into her plans.

Overall, the story is good, but it takes a long time to get to the good parts. For the first 2/3 of the book it seems like it is just going to be a love story between Kevmo and Marda, and then in the last handful of chapters, the story picks up a lot, and unexpectedly. It ends up being one of my must-read canon novels, but I do only give it 4-stars because it takes such a long time to get to the good part. The book is just under 350 pages. If you read quickly, it can be finished in a day or two, even though you do have to slog through the first part of the book to get to the really good stuff. If you are tempted to stop reading it in the beginning, definitely keep going because it is worth it.

Thursday, June 8, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Quest for Planet X

 


Quest for Planet X is another junior novel set during the early High Republic era, telling another ancillary story set between the adult novels. This book is set after the events of The Battle of Jedha and is centered around Silandra's padawan, Rooper, getting involved in a race to find a mysterious planet called Planet X. Rooper has been on Batuu, and essentially gets sucked into a race to find the mysterious planet, and agrees to participate in order to find Silandra. Unlike some of the other junior novels, this one does advance the main storyline as we learn that the mysterious creatures that can kill the Jedi, which have appeared in multiple novels are called Levelers, and we learn that Planet X may be the origin of the species. 

Overall, the book is okay, but not great. The few plot points from the main story arc of the other novels that get fleshed out are nice, and the main storyline is okay, but not necessarily something that is worth reading multiple times. 

Friday, June 2, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Quest for the Hidden City

 


Quest for the Hidden City is a junior novel set during the early High Republic (which is the second phase of the High Republic era novels) set between the "main"/adult novels Convergence and The Battle of Jedha. The main character of this book is Silandra Sho, who along with her Padawan, Rooper, responds to a distress signal from Jedi Master Rok Buran, whose pathfinder team was attacked on a strange remote planet called Aubadas.

The book is just under 300 pages, and like the other junior novels, is written well enough for adults to enjoy. This is most definitely a side story that is not really tied into the larger main story of the early High Republic novels. It reads fairly quickly and is something that most adults will likely be able to read in a day or two. I would not call it one of the must-read books, but it is enjoyable if you decide to read it.



Friday, May 26, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars Mission to Disaster

 


This is one of the junior novels set during the High Republic era (the second/latter portion of the High Republic) between the events of the young-adult novel "Out of the Shadows" and the Adult Novel, "The Fallen Star". The main characters in this book are the young Jedi knight, Vernestra Rwoh, her padawan Imri, and Avon Starros, who was introduced in the book Out of the Shadows. The plot involves a Nihil attack on a peaceful outpost at which they abduct a bunch of children, including Avon, and force them to join their ranks. The Jedi have to both save the children and figure out how to get the people off of the planet because of an attack by yet another, new, Nihil weapon.

The book is just under 300 pages, and because it is a junior novel reads very quickly. It is written well enough that adults can enjoy it, yet it is age-appropriate for younger kids. If you are a fast reader (and are an adult) you can easily finish the book in a day or two. As is the case with all of the junior and young-adult novels, it fills in the main storyline from the adult novels and thus includes characters that the adult novels do not. I would not say that the plot is essential to the larger story, but it is still an enjoyable book and definitely worth checking out if you have read the other High-Republic-era books.

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Skywalker: A Family at War

 


This is a novel that basically summarizes the Skywalker Saga, from Anakin's birth to the end of The Rise of Skywalker with Rey taking the Skywalker name. The book includes elements from all of the movies and fills that in with content from the animated series like Rebels and The Clone Wars, the canon comic books and graphic novels, as well as some of the other novels, such as Leia, Princess of Alderaan, and Bloodlines.  The big exception is that it was written before the Obi-Wan Kenobi series was made, so it does not include any of those events and basically time jumps over that period. So, the book does conflict a little with what was shown in the Kenobi series. 

The book provides a way for someone who has only seen the movies to get a deeper version of the events that occurred from The Phantom Menace to the Rise of Skywalker. If you have seen the animated series and read most of the novels almost nothing in the book will be new to you (with a couple of small exceptions), but if you have only watched the movies you will get a lot of detail that flesh out those stories. 

The book is not very long (just a little under 300 pages) and it reads pretty quickly, especially if you are well-versed in the Star Wars lore. So, if you are a fast reader you can easily finish it in a day or two. So, I would not call this book a must-read, but I do think it is worth reading. 

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars Stories of Jedi and Sith

 


Tales of Jedi and Sith are a collection of short stories that span the bulk of the Star Wars timeline, with the first story set during the High Republic era and the last story set between The Last Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker. The stories involve a Jedi (or a padawan) or a Sith. Sometimes the story is told from the point of view of the Jedi or Sith, and sometimes the story is told from the point of view of someone interacting with the Jedi or Sith. And, one of the stories shifts the point of view between Luke and one of the "regular" rebels in a story set on Hoth. 

Some of the stories involve characters that only people who have read the other novels or have seen the Clone Wars animated series will be familiar with, and other stories involve characters like Yoda, Maul, Luke, Anakin, Obi-Wan, Vader, Rey, and Palpatine. One of the best stories involves Palpatine during the events of Return of the Jedi in which we find out he still goes over his duel with Yoda, and wishes he could have killed Yoda.

Overall, the book is a good collection of side stories. The book is an intermediate length at just around 350 pages, but it reads very quickly. If you are a fast reader you will probably be able to finish it in a day or less. I would not necessarily say it is a must-read, but it is worth checking out if you are more than just a casual Star Wars fan. 

Friday, May 5, 2023

Video Game Review: Star Wars: Fallen Order

 


Fallen Order is a first-person combat game set five years after the fall of the Jedi (Revenge of the Sith). You play as Cal Kestis (voiced by Shameless and Gotham actor Cameron Monaghan), who was a padawan at the time the Jedi order fell. The game does not start out with Order 66, but it is not a major spoiler to say that you do see Order 66 from Cal's perspective during the video game. The game starts out as Cal is working in a scrapyard on the planet Bracca where he has to use The Force to save himself and a co-worker, which brought the main antagonist of the game, the inquisitor Second Sister to Bracca. Once Cal is outed as a Jedi he has to escape the Empire he is helped by Greez Dritus and former Jedi Cere Junda who has cut herself off from The Force. Cal joins the crew of their ship and embarks on a mission to find a Holocron that holds the names of a bunch of force-sensitive children, with designs to keep the names out of the hands of the Empire and to rebuild the Jedi order.

Throughout the game, you travel to a bunch of different planets, some of which are recognizable from the movies (e.g., the Wookie planet Kasyyyk) and others that you would only recognize if you have read the novels or seen some of the television series such as Rebels and Bad Batch. There are four different levels of difficulty you can play the game on, Padawan, Jedi Knight, Jedi Master, and Jedi Grandmaster. In the Padawan mode, Cal can more easily block enemies, and the enemies are not as aggressive (e.g., when there are groups of stormtroopers they attack in an "evil ninja" like fashion, mostly one at a time), but in the harder modes Cal is more vulnerable and the enemies attack you more aggressively. Basically, the Padawan mode allows you to finish the story/game easier, and the harder modes make the gameplay more challenging. But, even in the Padawan mode, you can be killed by a low-level stormtrooper. 

Overall, the game is a good blend of a puzzle or strategy game in which you have to find different things, figure out how to navigate past obstacles, and the like, and a combat game in which you have to battle stormtroopers and/or creatures. It is a lot like the Batman Arkham series of games for people who are familiar with those games. Cal is aided mostly by a droid named BD-1 who follows him throughout the game and can help him along the way and is aided by some of the other human and alien characters he encounters. There are a few different "boss fights" throughout the game that get progressively more challenging, and the game tells a very entertaining story, which is a part of the overall Star Wars canon. If you are a Star Wars fan and like playing video games, it is definitely worth checking out. 

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Cataclysm

 


Cataclysm is the third (in chronological order) main storyline, adult canon novel in the Star Wars canon material. It is set during the early High-Republic era and picks up shortly after the events of the previous book, Battle of Jedha. The story is still set around the warring neighboring planets of Eiram and E'ronoh. The Jedi discover that "The Path of the Open Hand", which is basically a cult that appears to be set up as the precursor to the Nihil who are the antagonists in the later High-Republic novels, sabotaged the peace talks on Jedha and are using the warring planets as a part of the larger plan to take out the Jedi. The climax of the story occurs on a planet called Dalna, where the Path has a stronghold, and a massive battle between the Jedi and the Path occurs.

This book finally does what I have been waiting for the High Republic novels to do, namely incorporate Yoda, the most recognizable Jedi alive at the time, into the larger storyline. In all of the other novels, be they the adult novels or the young adult novels, if Yoda is mentioned, it is in passing and amounts to a sentence or two. In this book, he actually appears and takes part in the story. Actually, he and Yaddle both appear, and Yaddle has an even larger role in the story.

The book is a good blend of action and suspense. It reveals more about the mysterious entity that can block the Jedi's use of The Force and turn people to ash (which introduces a bit of a plot hole in the later High Republic novels in which the Jedi seem totally clueless about what it is), and the author does a good job of making you care about and get invested in the new characters, having used the two previous books to establish those characters. The other big issue I had with the first batch of High Republic novels (which occur later in the chronology than this book) is that it seemed like every book introduced a bunch of new characters and it would take three books to return to the storylines of previously introduced characters. And by then, it was hard to keep them all straight. While this book does introduce some new characters, many of the characters that were introduced in the books Convergence and Battle of Jedha also appear in this book, so it feels like a cohesive story. 

In my opinion, this is the best of the High-Republic novels (at least so far), with the proviso that I have read all of the adult novels and most of the young-adult novels set in the High-Republic era. The story flows well, it wraps up the story told in the first two books and provides almost a blank slate from which future books can pick up. The book is just under 400 pages and can easily be read in a week or so, depending on how fast you read and how much time you have to read. It is definitely on my must-read list for die-hard Star Wars fans.

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars Timelines

 


"Timelines" is what I would describe as a coffee table book. It is not a novel that people are likely to read word-for-word, cover-to-cover. It basically summarizes the Star Wars canon, incorporating material from the novels, comics, video games, animated series (e.g., Rebels, Clone Wars, and Bad Batch), live-action series (e.g., The Mandalorian, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and The Book of Boba Fett), and the movies. The book has multiple "main" timelines that set out events in relation to The Battle of Yavin when Luke blew up the first Death Star. The first timeline summarizes the early history, starting about 25,000 years before the Battle of Yavin (abbreviated BBY). Then the last timeline is the rise of the First Order, which ends with the battle of Exegol (basically the end of The Rise of Skywalker movie) 35 years after the Battle of Yavin (abbreviated ABY). 

Each of the main timelines has several "sub-timelines" that flesh out details of events that happened in the main timelines. For example, in the Fall of the Jedi timeline, events like Order 66, Obi-Wan and Anakin's battle on Mustafar, hiding Luke and Leia, etc., are all detailed. The sub-timelines for the High Republic timeline summarize the events in the various High Republic novels, such as the hyperspace disaster. The sub-timelines also provide short character profiles for the various characters, and the major characters like Anakin, Luke, Leia, Obi-Wan, etc., get their own dedicated timeline that summarizes the major events in their lives. 

Overall, the book is good. As I said above, it is not one that most people (aside from the most die-hard of die-hard fans) are likely to read in full, and definitely does not read like a novel. But, if you are one of those people who does not read all of the books or have not played the video games (like Fallen Order), it has some of the detail and information on some of the characters that you may not be familiar with. Also, it does not include the events of the most recent seasons of The Bad Batch and the Mandalorian, since it was written before those were completed. But otherwise, it is very comprehensive and is worth getting for anyone who is more than just a casual fan.


Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Convergence

 


Convergence is, for the moment, the first (chronologically) in-canon Star Wars novel. It is still set during the High Republic era, but a generation or so before the novel Light of the Jedi and the conflict with the Nihil. So, there is an entirely new crop of characters in this book, and again, the one character that everyone is familiar with, Yoda, is only referred to in passing but is not directly included in the storyline.

The plot of this book involves warring neighboring planets Eiram and the E'ronoh, and the Jedi being dispatched to help negotiate a peace treaty during a cease-fire between the two planets. As you would expect, things do not go smoothly, and the Jedi must stop an attack that threatens to plunge the planets back into war.

The book is good, but not one that I would call a must-read.  It is a moderate length at just over 350 pages, but it is a fairly quick read. If you are a fast reader you can probably finish it in a day or two. I think it suffers from what the other High Republic novels do, namely too many characters that have no real backstory or setup that fans are just supposed to be invested in. I think that the books would be a lot better if Yoda was a lead character and then introduce the other characters around him. The story does have a good blend of action and mystery/suspense and does set up some of the elements that are used in the later High Republic novels. It is one of those books that I would say is worth reading once, but it is not one that a lot of people are likely to read more than once. 

Saturday, March 25, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars - The Battle of Jedha

 


This is now the second book in the Star Wars canon, both in the High Republic era and overall (at least for the moment). It is set on the Jedha, which is the moon that was introduced during Rouge One. This book is another one of what has become fairly common for the adult canon books being released, in that it is written as a script. It follows the events of the novel Convergence, and the battle between the planets Eiram and E'ronoh depicted in that book. Jedha is preparing for a Festival of Balance in which different groups worshiping and/or studying The Force, including the Guardians of the Whills, are included. The festival will be used as a backdrop to peace negotiations between the Eiram and the E'ronoh, to be aided by two Jedi Masters. 

The book introduces a new group named Path of the Open Hand, who hate the Jedi's use and manipulation of The Force and sets up a clear precursor to the Nihil, who are the group of pirates that are the protagonists in the other High Republic books. There are tie-ins to the later novel, including introducing the monster that can sever the Jedi's connection to The Force, although what it is exactly, remains a mystery in this book. Of course, the negotiations go sideways and the Jedi must try to protect the citizens of Jedha, many of whom do not want them there at all. 

The book introduces even more characters (at least if you read this before Convergence as I did) and still does not utilize Yoda (which has been my big issue with all of the High Republic books to this point), just casually mentioning him at the very end. The book is one of the longer ones at just under 500 pages, but it is a fairly quick read. If you are a fast reader it can easily be finished in a couple of days. I think the story is good, but not great. It is not one of the canon books I would classify as a must-read, but I do think it is worth reading at least once for those who are keeping up with the stories outside of the movies and tv series. 

Friday, March 17, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars Jedi: Battle Scars

 


This novel is a continuation of the video game Fallen Order which was set five years after the events of Revenge of the Sith and introduced the various characters, including Cal Kestis, who was a Jedi Padawan who survived Order 66. The book assumes that the readers know the various characters from the video game. Chances are if you have played the game you are probably more invested in the characters than a reader who picks up this book for the first time, especially since there is not a ton of character development in this story. 

The story is basically set around a stormtrooper who is looking for the crew of the Mantis to help her defect, promising to help the crew locate a shroud that can mask force-sensitive beings and protect them from the Empire. Of course, things go sideways and the mission puts the group in the crosshairs of one of the Inquisitors, the Fifth Brother (who was played by Sung Kang in the Obi-Wan Kenobi series).

The book is set right around the time of the Solo movie, and the cover makes it clear that the character's story will continue in the video game Jedi Survivor (or Fallen Order 2). So, you can read between the lines about what the outcome of this book is going to be, but even so, it does tell a pretty good story. The only complaint I have about it is that it does get a bit soap-opera-ish with the romance plot(s) and could have done a little bit more character development for those who have not played the video game. It is a fairly short book, under 300 pages, and can be read pretty quickly. If you are a fast reader, it can easily be read in a day or two. Overall, I think it is a good, but not a great story, and while I would not say that it is one of the must-read canon novels, I do think that it is worth reading once. 

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Book Review: Thrawn Ascendancy: Lesser Evil (Ascendancy Trilogy Volume III)

 


This is the third book in what is now the third overall (and second in official Star Wars canon) Thrawn Trilogy. This book concludes the events of the attack on the Chiss Ascendancy (the group of worlds in the unknown regions controlled by the Chiss and their ruling families) with the intent of starting a civil war between the ruling families. Probably more important to Star Wars fans is that it details the lead-up to how Thrawn ultimately became a member of the Empire after being exiled from the Ascendancy (which was hinted at in the first canon trilogy).  In this book, we find out that there is more to that story, and we get a hint of where Thrawn's actual loyalties lie. The book ends just after the events of the Revenge of the Sith and the fall of the Republic and the corresponding rise of the Empire.

I think the book was a good end to the storyline and is definitely better than the second book in the trilogy (Greater Good). Although this one does suffer from a couple of long stretches in which Thrawn is totally absent so if you are not really invested in the ancillary characters, the book may drag a bit. That said, there are some good action sequences, one of which is the final battle at the end of the book, that really displays Thrawn's ability at battle strategy, which is mostly what made the character so popular in the original Thrawn trilogy of novels that were written in the 1990s. While I still think that trilogy was the best one, this book is definitely worth reading for fans of the character to get his entire backstory.

Monday, February 20, 2023

Book Review: Thrawn Ascendancy: Greater Good (Ascendancy Trilogy Volume II)

 


This is the second in the backstory trilogy of the character of Thrawn in the new Star Wars canon material. Specifically, during the time when he was an officer in the Chiss Ascendancy before he joined the Empire. This is set a short time after the events of the first novel, Chaos Rising, and in the Star Wars timeline occurs between Episodes II and II, during the Clone Wars. The basic plot of the book is that the Chiss Ascendancy (which consists of multiple planets in the Unknown Regions) is being attacked by enemies who seek to divide the nine ruling families and start a civil war within the Chiss Ascendancy. Thrawn's ship is one of two that are mopping up the remnants of the Nikardun military (from the first book) only to uncover the larger plot. 

There is definitely less action in this book than in the first and a lot more political maneuvering. Thrawn is also not in the book as much, and the memories chapters really have nothing to do with him, focusing on some of the ancillary characters. There is another big battle at the end in which Thrawn uses his enhanced strategic and observation skills, which is what most people who are reading the books are likely to be interested in. So, while I do not think the book is bad, it is not as good as the first and definitely feels like the middle part of the story. 

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Book Review: The Empire Strikes Back Novelization

 



This is the original novelization of The Empire Strikes Back, which was published around the time of the movie's release in 1980. The book was re-released in the 1990s, including a hardcover version, when Lucas was working on the special editions of the original trilogy and getting ready to finish writing and start filming the prequel trilogy. This has an introduction by Lucas in which he talks about the movie and some of the issues that surrounded getting it made after the success of Star Wars. 

This is a pretty straightforward novelization of the movie. It does not change the story at all but does have some dialogue changes here and there. Usually, what ended up in the movie is better than what was in the book, so the dialogue was changed for the better in the movie screenplay. The book is very short, much shorty than the novelizations of the prequel and sequel trilogy movies, and can easily be finished in a day or two. 

Friday, February 10, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: The Rebel Files

 


If you are considering this book, keep in mind it is not a novel. It is more like a combination of scrapbook and field guide that details the history of the rebellion against both the Empire and the First Order. It includes communications from characters like Mon Mothma and Bail Organa, news clippings and headlines from the Holonet, which was featured in the Clone Wars and Rebels animated series, and profiles on the various characters. It also has handwritten annotations from characters like Leia and Admiral Ackbar in the margins. 

Because of the format, and the fact that it is under 200 pages, it is a very quick read and can easily be finished in a day or two. My only complaint is that some of the margin notes can be very hard to read, especially if you are at the point in life where you need reading glasses as the text is very small, and because it is supposed to be handwriting, it is not always very legible. Aside from that, however, it is worth checking out but not something most people are likely to read more than once.

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Thrawn Ascendency - Chaos Rising

 


Chaos Rising is the first book in a new trilogy of novels (called the Ascendency Trilogy) based on the character of Thrawn, who is probably the most popular character outside of the legacy characters like Luke, Han, and Leia with people who have been reading the Star Wars novels for years. Thrawn was introduced back in the 1990s in a now non-canon or Legends trilogy of novels (widely called the Thrawn Trilogy) written by the same author Timothy Zahn. After Disney's takeover of Lucasfilm, the character of Thrawn was brought into the canon through a new trilogy of books and in the animated series, Rebels.

This book is set at the time of The Clone Wars but the story is mostly constrained to the unknown regions beyond the Outer Rim, where the Chiss Ascendancy rules on the Chiss homeworld. This book jumps in time between the present, in which Thrawn is a commander of a Chiss ship, and his time as a cadet, and establishes his role as a tactical and strategical genius (when it comes to battle and war tactics). He is investigating a threat to the Ascendancy by a race called the Nikardun. The novel basically serves as a backstory and origin story for Thrawn as well as the Chiss as a race. One of the interesting aspects of the story is that the Chiss travel through hyperspace (what they call the Chaos) using child navigators who are force sensitive (what the Chiss call the Third Sight) to get their ships safely through hyperspace. Much like Jedi younglings, the navigators, called sky-walkers, are taken from their families when they are young and act as navigators being raised by caretakers, until they are teenagers when they lose the Third Sight, at which point they are adopted into one of the ruling families of The Ascendency. 

The book has a good blend of action and suspense along with building the characters who will be the main characters in the trilogy. The author does a good job portraying Thrawn as a version of who he becomes when he is a Grand Admiral in the Empire, with traits that he shows later on, but not yet the fully developed character. We also get to see the lead-up to Thrawn's meeting with Anakin Skywalker in the story that was told in the second novel of the first canon Thrawn Trilogy, Thrawn: Alliances in which Thrawn helps Anakin find Padme when she is abducted. Basically, we get to see what Thrawn was doing when Anakin's ship showed up as he was looking for Padme.

Overall, the book tells a good story and does a good job of fleshing out Thrawn's backstory and establishing the new characters. While I am still partial to the original, Legends, Thrawn trilogy, I think this is the first of the new Thrawn novels that really showed that version of the character. It is definitely one of the must-read canon novels.



Sunday, January 22, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Thrawn: Alliances

 


This is the second novel in what was, back in 2017, the new Thrawn trilogy which returned the book is a fine follow-up novel to the first book, just entitled Thrawn, but it is not as good as any of the novels in the very popular original Thrawn Trilogy of novels (Heir to the Empire, Dark Force Rising, and The Last Command) which were written by the same author back in the 1990s, which are now relegated to Legends, or non-canon status. 

This book is set in two time periods, one during the Clone Wars, between Episodes II and III, and the other between Episode III and a New Hope, during the events of the animated series Rebels. The novel is set mostly on the planet Batuu in each of the time periods. In the early time period, Anakin is trying to find Padme who was kidnapped on Batuu, and in the later time period, The Emporer tasks Thrawn and Darth Vader to investigate a disturbance in the Force the Emperor has felt. 

This book has a lot more action than the first Thrawn novel, and it shows off more of Thrawn's strategic planning and thinking ability than the first book did. Zahan is definitely setting up a larger plot, even though much of the storyline that is set in the "present" is resolved by the end. Vader and Thrawn actually work well together, even though neither particularly likes the arrangement, and Thrawn does have suspicions as to Vader's real identity although he agrees to never speak of the subject. 

While Thrawn is not written exactly the same way in the new canon as he was in the Legends books, some of the character traits do carry over to the new novels. I am guessing that Zahn has much less carte-blanch to do what he wants with the character than he did years ago when the only directive from LucasFilm is that he could not kill any of the legacy characters off and he could not set any of the stories before A New Hope. I find this to be one of the better novels in the new canon and definitely consider it one of the must-read novels. 

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

 


This is the second in what is likely to be a trilogy of books released in 2020 to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of The Empire Strikes Back. Like the first book, which had stories told during the events of A New Hope, this one has a collection of 40 short stories that are set during the events of The Empire Strikes Back. The twist is that most of the stores are told from the point of view of an ancillary or background character or creature, like that of the Space Slug, a Stormtrooper who decided to defect in the chaos of Cloud City during the evacuation, the Ugnauts on Cloud City, the Wampa on Hoth, one of the Tauntauns on Hoth, etc., There are a couple of stories that are told from a main character's point of view, such as from Yoda's point of view as he was sneaking up on Luke, or Obi-Wan's point of view when he and Yoda were trying to convince Luke to stay on Dagobah, and Palpatine's point of view just before he made Vader contact him during Vader's pursuit of the Millennium Falcon.

The stories are mostly very good, although like pretty much every book that has a collection of stories in it, some are better than others. The stories range in length from just a few pages to about 20 pages, give or take. The book is fairly long (at just under 550 pages), but it is a pretty quick read, especially because for most people, the story is not entirely new. The final "story" in the book is from the point of view of The Whills, who are writing the opening crawl to the movie and arguing about what to include, which is pretty humorous. So, if you are a fan of the original trilogy, this is definitely one of the must-read books. 

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Book Review: Star Wars: Canto Bight: Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi

 


This is a canon novel that, to me, should have been one of the young-adult ancillary novels. It is basically a collection of four short stories set on the gambling/gaming planet, Canto Bight. It is the planet that Finn and Rose go to in order to find the slicer in The Last Jedi, which was a part of the storyline that many people at the very least thought was stupid, and/or hated with a passion. 

None of the stories in the book involve any of the main characters, either the original, legacy characters, or the new sequel trilogy characters. They are set from the point of view of members of the various alien species that were seen in that part of the movie. The first story, written by Saladin Ahmed, involves a salesman who is taking a dream vacation on Canto Bight and gets mixed up with a criminal who causes him nothing but trouble. The second story, written by Mia Grant, involves a deal over a priceless bottle of wine. The fourth story, written by Rae Carson, involves a servant who is caught in a power struggle between members of the Canto Bight Elite, and the fourth story, written by Jonathan Jackson Miller, involves a deadbeat gambler trying to turn his luck around. 

For the most part, the stories are self-contained, although there is some slight overlap between a couple of them. I do think the lack of including any main character hurts the book a bit, and why I think it should have been released as a young adult novel as opposed to a main storyline novel, but I think the stories are entertaining enough. This is not what I would call a must-read canon novel and is probably not a book that I would read multiple times.