(NOTE: At the time of this review, this is the eleventh "STAR WARS Legends" book I have read that takes place post-Return of the Jedi, with the others being the "Heir to the Empire" trilogy, "Darksaber" and the six books that introduce the Yuuzhan Vong, "The New Jedi Order". This review will only focus on this book; should I complete the series, the final review of the overarching series will be found in the nineteenth book.)
"Danger is everywhere. The Yuuzhan Vong have extended a truce to the galaxy, promising to end their invasion by living in the territories they have already conquered.
On one condition: The galaxy must turn over their Jedi, especially Jacen Solo, on whom the warmaster, Tsavong Lah has sworn revenge.
Unable to see through the Yuuzhan Vong's lie, the very people they had sworn to protect now turn on the Jedi. Luke Skywalker attempts to put in motion a plan to help the scattered Order, but his nephew, Anakin Solo, fears his uncle may already be too late. For, upon arrival to the Jedi Praxeum at Yavin IV, Anakin is thrust into danger.
Though he is aware of the risks and enemies he may encounter, little does Anakin realize the consequences of his actions upon those he wants to save...and that the very future he seeks to prevent may still come to pass..."
-----SPOILERS------
Even though I didn't like much about the last half of this book, I think that this book is a hinge-point of the series. In fact, I think this book is more of a "Balance Point" than than the previous book of the same name was. True, the stakes for Anakin are more personal than Jacen's cosmic vision for the galaxy, but it felt right.
But I'm getting distracted. Let's start with the prologue.
- So, to those who remember my "Night Hammer" review, remember Dorsk 81? Well...somehow, he returned.
I'm kidding.
Dorsk 82 though....I wasn't expecting him to be here. In fact, last I remember, he had been left alone on a planet (or at least a civilization on a planet) that was destroyed by Admiral Daala. So, if he did survive because the planet wasn't ravaged as much as I remember "Night Hammer" describing it....meh, whatever.
Anyways, all I could think about with the cops and other people turning on the Jedi was how similar it was to Order 66, save that Jedi need to be captured and turned over to the Vong instead of killed (which is interesting to see as a comparison, considering this was released in 2001 whereas "Revenge of the Sith" released in 2005). And even if I didn't like Dorsk 82 being a Jedi (or his appearance at all actually), I did like how he defended the droids from being smashed by people who want to show their loyalty to the Vong.
And so we enter the real story starting with "PART 1: PRAXEUM":
— It starts with a large Jedi Council on Coruscant, with Kyp Durron and Luke Skywalker being the main heads of the meeting. Kyp confronts Luke about his actions towards the Vong and the Jedi ideals of defending the galaxy.
As much as I hated this character personally in the past, Kyp is right on the money regarding Luke and his passive actions toward the invasion. It's not that Luke has done nothing to help others, but that Luke has done nothing AGAINST others.
Yes, dark side aggression is not the Jedi way, but the line of defense and attack was crossed since the Vong destroyed Sernpidal (not because of Chewie's death, but the fact it shows what measures the Vong will take to have what they want, no different than the Empire before it; not at their own expense, but at the expense of others). Yes, it is possible that not everyone in the Empire or the Vong are evil-evil and so a window of redemption may be a possibility, but THEY ARE INVADERS.
The only thing Luke would need to worry about is that the Jedi don't lose their focus as they attack; they are trying to save lives of others the Vong would kill, which is no different than why the Death Star needed to be destroyed; to keep other planets from suffering the fate of Alderaan. (And how many planets has the New Republic lost so far?)
It's the most simple argument Kyp and Luke should have resolved within minutes of thinking, but Luke also calls the meeting to a recess because the tensions get high.
And, more importantly, where Luke called this meeting was the stupidest decision he could have made. He knows the Jedi are not supposed to be an arm of the New Republic government. He knows that Jedi are being turned over to the Yuuzhan Vong by people who don't like the Jedi. He knows the Praxeum was being hidden through the Jedi. And yet, he called most of them to Coruscant, leaving only a handful of students on a planet that is no longer masked without the Jedi presence?
No offense to Luke, but the moment I learned some powerful invaders could not be sensed in the Force, I'd consider moving my students immediately from a planet everyone knows has "JEDI" written all over it.
But he didn't (at least, not immediately) and thus, Anakin Solo, haunted by a vision of the future, goes to Yavin IV.
— Meanwhile, Talon Kardde (from the "Heir to the Empire" trilogy) is tasked by Luke to retrieve the students. Even though this book does better at making sure it's reader knows this is an Anakin book, I really liked Kardde's role...even though it later brings back the vornskyrs and the yslamari (not literally, thank goodness, but it is implied by the end that the Vong are seeking them out).
— Speaking strictly honestly, aside from Tahiri, Anakin's Jedi girlfriend, being a little whiner in the beginning, everything with the Peace Brigade up until halfway through "PART II: The Shamed and The Shapers", was a really good read, even if I thought the concept of the Shapers themselves was EXTREMELY horrific, especially when Nen Yim lost a hand (though why she did, I will not say).
—On another note, after Tahiri was being slowly controlled, the narration had me worried: I thought the whole point of the Vong invasion (and yes, I will still call them the Vong, no matter what that Vua Rapuung said) was to recover one of their kind that had been hidden in plain sight in Luke's galaxy (the idea that Tahiri was actually a Yuuzhan Vong had me thinking there was going to be this whole "Romeo-Juliet/Rival Families" best moving forward was both a mind-tickle and an eye-roller "I am your father" reveal). Fortunately, that wasn't the case.
Phew.
—My only problems with this book came later when Anakin had to hide his presence on Yuuzhan Vong overrun Yavin IV as a coral-slave.
Aside from the fact he was hiding amongst these slaves for days, I couldn't help but notice how this seemed to contradict Jacen's earlier experience in "DARK TIDE I: Onslaught", in which he approached slaves and told them to come to him, but none of them had the power, much less the will, to think, question, or talk. They might as well have been drones.
So it surprised me that Anakin could ask so many questions to a Shamed One without them realizing what was going on.
I get that it was necessary to help the reader understand the lambent, but even with what we have, what happens next is very confusing:
In order to fix his lightsaber, Anakin had removed the crystal and replaced it with a lambent he had connected to. Unfortunately, as he tries to put it in the saber, the lambent reacts as a magnet would to another magnet of opposite charge: it refuses to work.
But somehow, Anakin realizes because he is connected to both the lambent and the lightsaber (one through the Force, one through mental connection), he can make them work together. And somehow, it works?
It's very obscure why, but it gets weirder. Now that he is connected to the lambent and the Force, Anakin is able to sense Yuuzhan Vong as though he were an ordinary Force user. Granted, the book mentions they are more fuzzy to depict in his mind, but they are still able to be sensed.
Around this time, Anakin, thinking about the Force in connection to the Vong comes to a conclusion: The Vong, being invaders, had left their galaxy and therefore abandoned whatever form of the light side they had within them. As such, they are of the dark side.
I liked this concept, even if I am still bothered by the Force not being an all-encompassing energy. However, it also bothers me because it implies the Vong are like the Jedi of their galaxy. As such, their connection with lambents (like Anakin had done) means their abilities to sense each other should be more evident, even if they do not feel each other's pain.
It would make more sense with why they are great warriors; they can sense where warriors fall, but they are not emotionally connected enough to feel what feelings the other Vong are going through. Aside from being conquerors, the Vong are almost in the perfect stasis of what an ideal Jedi should be: connected through the Force, but not emotionally capable enough to feel.
- Finally, we get to the conflict where three conflicting parties meet: Anakin and Vua, Tahiri and her captors the Shapers, and Commander Vootah (who found out about Mezhan's heresies because Nen Yim, after one little test, decided to tell everything to some "follower" she didn't know).
Vua gets his confession from Mezhan (that she had created his disease that made him a Shamed One, not the gods of the Vong) and so doubt begins to enter the Vong society as to what other factors may have made loyal Vong into Shapers; perhaps their leaders were following their own wills, not those of the gods.
Before she can be taken though, Mezhan kills all of her captors, and threatens the rest of crowd that she will release a toxic-gas if she is not allowed to leave. Anakin drops his lightsaber, but Tahiri manages to use the Force to grab his lightsaber to decapitate Mezhan Kwaad (reminding me of Kylo Ren killing Snoke in "The Last Jedi"; my thoughts are because Tahiri focused on her hatred for Mezhan, she was able to use the Force without triggering her memory-pain, even as Kylo focused on his actions to misdirect Snoke).
Then, Tahiri tries to kill Anakin. He says "I love you" to her three times, and suddenly, Tahiri, and all of her brainwashing, goes away. No, literally, that's all it took.
The Vong crowd are still a threat though and one of them challenges Anakin as he has proven himself a worthy opponent. However, Vua intercedes for him, taking Anakin's place so he and Tahiri can escape.
It was lucky that the brainwashing happened, because if Tahiri had not had those memories, Anakin never would have escaped Yavin by piloting a Vong ship.
They get rescued.
As for Nen Yim?
She is told by Tsavong Lah (who notices that it was another Solo who interfered with their plans) to go back to the worldships, and to name the Vong that believed Anakin had redeemed Vua of being a Shamed One so that the new heresy can die.
That's the end of the book, but I should mention that Anakin's vision of Tahiri being a Vong still hasn't been fully understood, particularly when she said "Last of my kind. Last of your kind."
I wonder if future events will have the hybrid Tahiri be overrun by her implants again and she will kill the last Yuuzhan Vong (most likely Nen Yim) at the end of the war...
Guess we'll see.
OVERALL, I give this book a 5/10;
it seems more necessary than the five books that came before, and feels more like the turning point of the story, especially in regards to Vong society and the Solo brothers being a larger reason for the Vong to continue their conquest.
MY NOTES:
PROLOGUE
- Dorsk 82 (Jedi?)
- Droids and Cops (Order 66)
PART 1: PRAXEUM
- Anakin still haunted by Chewie's death? (pg 32)
- Yavin IV: How would they NOT know about it?? (pg 35)
PART 2: THE SHAMED AND THE SHAPERS
- Anakin flies to Yavin IV (Luke's an idiot); Peace Brigade; Tahiri annoying.
- Talon Karde, yslamari, vornskyrs (not again)
- Anakin's vision (Palpa-clone "Dark Empire")
- Shapers want to turn Jedi into Vong (I'll call them Vong).
PART 3: CONQUEST
- Trash compactor referenced (pg 193)
- Anakin's new philosophy (pg 239)
- Anakin playing the part of a slave (contradicts Jacen's experience).
- The two philosophies (lightsaber)
- Anakin senses Yuuzhan Vong through another force.
- Tahiri kills Mehzan Kwaad with the lightsaber (Ren and Snoke).
- "will never be solved"
- Vong dark siders for abandoning their galaxy?