I was quite looking forwards to this series. I loved KOTOR, so believe me I got excited at the prospect of seeing the Rakatan Infinite Empire at its height, and throughout the Expanded Universe there have always been these snippets of information – a line here, a paragraph there – of the origins of the Jedi on Tython. Whilst I loved the original trilogy, the Expanded Universe has been somewhat hit and miss – and I say that as someone who avidly collected the EU books as a teen. There were cool moments, but there were also poorly written messes as well. And, the prequels? Well, the less said, the better. And I can’t say I feel optimistic or positively predisposed towards the new Disney era, especially since it threw out the entire EU canon. It’s not often that I rate a game above a book, but KOTOR, for me, had one of the strongest storylines of the Expanded Universe. Possibly movie-worthy levels of epic. As I contemplate the future of my EU collection, which Disney now tells me no longer matters in any way, and I consider decimating it by getting rid of the chaff and hanging on to only the stories I liked best over the years, I have to say I find myself gravitating towards the earlier eras as keepers. So I decided to make a rare addition to my dwindling collection, by adding this series.
So was it worth it? Too soon to say. This first volume of three unmistakeably feels like the opening act of the story. There’s a fair bit of introductions going on, various scene setting, and by the end threads are most definitely left hanging. I don’t know if I should cut it some slack on this front because it is exactly what it is – the start of a story. Also, it felt too short. I wanted more, and the story didn’t feel long enough. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad. It depends on how the rest of the series goes. Either it was frustrating, or it has suitably whetted my appetite for the next part of the story. Other reviewers have commented that it’s frustrating that more time isn’t spent on how the Je’daii Order is set up – we’re given some background, but the narrative then skips ahead a few hundred years or so to when the original emigrants have pretty much colonised the rest of the Tython star system and the planet itself is home to the Je’daii alone – and then we’re dropped into a story that is somewhat familiar with what we already know in the Star Wars universe. Force users organised in a structured order, following a certain code, wielding blades (although it’s alloy blades in this case), fighting against the dark side of the Force. I agree a story set slightly earlier, focusing on a time before an order was in place, would be more interesting. However, I still found plenty to entertain and hold my interest.
The philosophy of the Je’daii is to keep balance between the light and dark sides of the Force – not to pursue the light side exclusively – which of course is deeply at odds with the Jedi of the movies era. It makes sense though. Who else was frustrated by the Jedi Council’s inability to see that Anakin Skywalker “bringing balance to the Force” was spelling their own culling in a galaxy populated by an order of light side users tens of thousands strong? Yeah, me too. So I kind of feel vindicated here in the suspicion I’ve harboured for years that the Jedi aren’t supposed to be viewing the Force in a “light side vs. dark side” simplistic, dualistic cosmic struggle, and that someday there’ll be a character that realises it’s more complex than black and white and takes the order back to its roots. Well, it seems I was right about those roots.
I know people have complained about the deus ex machina of the Tho Yor pyramids, and yes, they do raise far more questions than they answer. But on the other hand, I’m intrigued by this detail of the early Star Wars galaxy, and keen to know more. The Rakatan Empire appearing was a mixed bag. It was great to actually see the Empire in its heyday, but we don’t see too much at all here, and there’s a sense of clichéd, wholesale evil about the Empire. But until I read more it’s hard to say – it’s been established previously that the Infinite Empire was expansionistic so if we learn more about its culture and background I could maybe let that go. Also we haven’t met that many Rakatans yet, so… In KOTOR there was kind of an ancient, mystical sense of awe about this ancient Empire. They definitely come off creepier here. And much more sinister.
Shout out to Crystal Starr Light, who probably wants me to address the pressing issue of Shae Koda’s pocket-cut-out pantaloons. So… that’s in there. Seriously though it wasn’t a big deal for me. Yes, it’s silly and impractical, but at least it’s not too overtly sexual, and everyone else seems to be attired sensibly, which is something. I was paying more attention to whether or not the plot was satisfying. Speaking of Shae Koda… the characters. I’m not that keen on Shae. She’s okay, but comes off a bit too stereotypical “hard-woman”. Sek’nos Rath and Tasha Ryo were more interesting. Sure, Ostrander tries to play Sek’nos as the clichéd handsome brawn and Tasha as the spoilt princess, but enough was hinted at there being more to them that I was suitably interested – Tasha’s not a straight up spoilt princess, but heiress to a family crime clan, and caught between the Je’daii and defending her family’s interests… dubious interests... – whilst Sek’nos has spent time thinking about and experimenting with the nature of the Force. This at least suggests they have potential as characters, to me. And a Sith (species) character is rare enough for me to want to find out more. It’s hard to empathise with Xesh, or figure his motivations – but the past he hints at, being raised by the Rakatan Infinite Empire in some sort of communal pods where they breed their Force slaves – is creepy enough that I almost give him a free pass for being an unidentifiable, slightly psychotic weirdo. What does seem weird though is that Hawk Ryo and Rori Fenn refer to not being able to be with each other. I’m going to presume this is not for reasons of some sort of code. Because it would be weird that this far back, and having established this early order as a proponent of balance, not the light side, that there would be a dictat against relationships. I always figured that rule was voted in by the Jedi Council sometime after the KOTOR era, due to all the Exar Qun, Ulic Qel Droma nastiness.
Anyhoo. Other random observations. I’ve never been a big fan of “Force alchemy”. It’s just too deus ex machina for me. For me, the Force treads the line of mysticism and spirituality but doesn’t quite tip over into straight up magic. Force alchemy and the blending of beasts together and such is something I’ve never really liked because it just doesn’t seem to sit well within the pre-established laws and nature of the Force.
Interesting enough, entertaining enough, but the jury’s still out on this one. I need to read the rest of the series to see if this beginning pays off.
7 out of 10