This book was not what I was hoping for and sadly I can boil it down to a list of why:
1. There was no meaningful character development for Han Solo, Lando, or Chewie throughout the whole story. Essentially all of these characters end the book being exactly the same people they were at the beginning which, in my opinion, is the definition of poor writing. With the possible exception of giving Solo a reason to return to the Rebel Alliance (this book takes place between Episode IV & V)there is really no reason for anyone to ever know about this story.
2. Way too many characters. Han's team of scoundrels alone contains eleven characters and they are only one side of a three sided plot. Given the 400 plus pages this books runs most of these characters are just outlines holding places in the narrative until it's their turn to do their one cool thing in order for Han and his team to successfully completely their mission. Which is too bad because some of them, like Winter the childhood friend of Princess Leia who is now an undercover operative of the Alliance posing as a criminal and who is grappling with both the recent loss of her home world Alderaan and the unknown whereabouts of Leia, could have been cool. However, they all get lost in the story and really go nowhere.
3. The story is WAY too complicated. Okay, at first the plot seems simple. Han gets approached to steal back some credit tabs (i.e. $) that were originally stolen from this seemingly hapless guy. It's a LOT of money, enough to pay off his debt to Jabba the Hutt, but because it's credit tabs only this guy can enter the code that will turn them into credits. The problem is that they've been stolen by an agent of this interstellar criminal organization The Black Sun who are currently locked in a battle with The Hutts for control of crime in the Star Wars universe. What's worse is that the member of the Black Sun who took them is a Sector Chief with a huge compound, tons of men, and a ridiculous vault that no one can get into. That would be a great story. However, Zahn feels the need to make it even more complicated by adding in two Imperial spies who have designs on perhaps bringing down the Black Sun for Lord Vader.... or not, and the additional intrigue of internal conflict within The Black Sun wherein the Sector Chief is concerned he is about to be deposed by a visiting Prince of the Black Sun.... or not. Suffice to say, this adds even more characters to a book that already has way too many and needlessly complicates everything.
4. The payoff is weak. Of course Han and the gang succeed. Of course Han, for a variety of reasons, doesn't get the money he needs to pay off Jabba the Hutt. We know this from the start because of where he lands in Episode V. The problem is that even given all of these disposable characters there is never any real sense of threat anywhere in this book. I never once felt like any of theses characters would do anything other than march right through the plan Han puts together for them at the beginning. The whole book felt like and exercise in execution. Everyone, all of the characters and the author himself, are just ticking off the things they need to in order to move ahead and complete their task. Frankly, at times, this book was a chore to read for this very reason.
5. Han, Lando, and Chewie are wasted. You get a few glimpses of how cool these characters could be, like when they discuss the way Wookiees are treated in the empire this makes Chewie seem kind of atypical and it makes you wonder why he is the way he is, but in general Zahn adds almost no new information to these characters that doesn't appear in the films. This book was a golden opportunity for him to give the fans a deeper dive into who these people are, where they are coming from, where they want to go, and how they change given the story they are involved in. Instead, Zahn treats them like cardboard cut outs and it adds a pervasively empty feel to the book.
Finally, there is the twist. MASSIVE SPOILER ALERT.
I love twists. I do. I know some people don't but when they work they are just the best thing ever. So, when I got to the end of the book and suddenly things seemed to be a little off, I was excited to find out what the twist was going to be. Unfortunately it's kind of lame. It turns out that the hapless guy who set this whole story in motion was actually killed six weeks before Han and his crew arrived. He was killed, and then his identity was assumed by,.... duh, duh, daaaa, Boba Fett. That's right. On the last page it's revealed that this whole thing was a con by Boba Fett to capture Han and, I assume, take him to Jabba. Really? Why would he go through all of that to catch him? Also, there were countless times he was alone, or could have been alone, with Han and just knocked him out, taken him to a ship, and gotten away. There was just no need to put all of this in place. Also, despite all of this mess he fails anyway. It just makes no sense.
I really wanted to love this book. I did. Sadly I can't recommend it. I wish the editor and the author had taken more risks, treated me as a reader more intelligently, and not just sloughed off this soulless novel. What a waste.