Qui-Gon Jinn is beloved by a large portion of the Star Wars fandom for no reason I can understand, but he does manage, a year before the events in “The Phantom Menace”, to get the ossifying Jedi Council off their rumps and on the streets of Kwenn, a planet long neglected by many, including the Jedi. A formerly beautiful and inviting place, with an imposing Jedi Temple containing vital, ancient texts, the planet has been falling apart as years of corporations pulling funding for many services, a rise in criminal activity, has led to shuttered and shabby surroundings, and a consequent lack of hope in its citizenry,.
Jedi Master Depa Billaba has been on Kwenn for a while, working undercover as a body guard to a young thief. Billaba has been looking into stopping piracy in the Slice (the region Kwenn is in) and also for what happened to a former padawan, who was killed on-planet. When Billaba and the young thief Kylah are pulled in by Zilastra, head of the Riftwalkers, Billaba sees a terrific opportunity to learn more about the gangs on Kwenn and hopefully disrupt their activities. Things go wrong, of course, with Billaba's identity revealed, and her captured and tortured by Zilastra, who sees in Billaba a way to hit back against the Jedi, whom she bears tremendous animosity for an encounter she had during her childhood with a cold Jedi Master (whose identity is revealed near the end of this novel).
Meanwhile, the Jedi Masters are arriving on Kwenn, and discovering a number of people need all kinds of help. The Masters throw themselves into all sorts of activities, and though I had never given them a second look before, I found the time author John Jackson Miller spent on Oppo Rancisis and Yarael Poof provided much entertainment. Yaddle is just the best, of course, showing much good sense and kindness to the inhabitants, and becoming a bit of a celebrity, too.
I even didn't mind Mace Windu, who's still a hardass throughout the novel, but who manages to show that even he has a tiny bit of warmth in his dealings with his former padawan Billaba.
I found it interesting that once the Jedi got themselves organized on the planet, the great way they worked together echoed what will come in the Clone War, and saddened me, as no matter what successes they achieve on Kwenn during this novel, their downfall is coming fast.
So, I enjoyed this book a lot, especially the time spent with Masters I barely knew (Billaba, Poof, Rancisis). This was fun, but also sad, I could not keep thinking how in a little over ten years, Darth Siddious will be happily eradicating their bodies and the history of their activities.