I'm worried my opinion of these Young Jedi Knight books are dependant on what I read around the same time. The first ones I read after The Crystal Star and some other pretty bad books, and I rated them fairly high. This one I read after a string of 5-star reads and I don't have much positive to say about it.
The main thrust of the story is that Lowbacca's sister is coming of age, so the titular Young Jedi Knights, accompanied by Chewbacca, go to the Wookiee homeworld of Kashyyyk to participate in whatever cultural ritual is involved.
For a 25 year old YA book, Darkest Knight is serviceable at best. What really bothers me is how uninspired Kashyyyk is. It is not what we've seen in the Holiday Special—I understand that piece of media was taboo at the time—nor is it what we see in the yet unreleased Episode III. Instead, it's Coruscant, but trees, but also not. It has that Coruscant deep levels with no sunlight (not entirely unlike the Holiday Special) but the top floor where everyone lives is like big ol pollution belching factories just kind of set on top of the trees. Everything is giant laser batteries and metal facilities (all of which must've been flown in since I don't imagine they do any mining on a planet where they can't get to the ground).
And how do they travel from factory to factory? Not by vine, or a Kashyyyk native beast of burden, or even speeders. No, instead they travel on Bantas (a creature from a desert planet) that are driven by Sullustans (beings from a volcano planet). And they use this mode of transport like three or four times. They could've used something unique and interesting, really used their imagination, but at every chance chose not to.
Also, despite this being a book about Chewbacca's family, this novel doesn't mention any of his family that existed before this series, and instead gives him a sister that's brand new. Itchy and Lumpy and Malla erasure.
Last novel I talked about how these literal children murdered people with Lightsaber without hesitation or second thought. In this book we do a full 180 on that. Lightsabers are referred to once as laser machetes, and that's all they're ever used for. Despite the novel opening with a Lightsaber training session, the YJK never fight with the weapons the whole book through. Not when faced with Stormtroopers, or Night Sisters, or even when the eponymous Darkest Knight shows up and ignites his red saber, no one ever swings at anyone else. It's a real whiplash of a change. There is a moment where a Night Sister gets covered in lube then falls to her death. She cracks her head on a tree branch and it's easily as brutal as if she had simply been cut down.
Some things I do like: the Second Imperium is very intriguing. Qorl is always a fan favorite. Brakiss is very Saturday cartoon villain. Sensory Deprivation Emperor is super interesting. Can't wait to see what hatches from that chrysalis. Zekk is by far the best concept, but sadly the worst execution.
The idea that these literally royal children with magical powers had a street orphan friend that their rich family that controls the Galactic government never supports or rehomes or does anything for this kid, is so wild. Then, when the royal babies leave to go to magic school, the urchin finds out he also has magic powers yet he isn't invited to the good kids school, he has to go to the evil school. That's so compelling. He has more reason to be evil than almost every villain in all of Star Wars, yet he's so conflicted. The worst thing he does is be all like "my friends are gonna shoot up your school next week. You better not be there."
I hope these pick up after this little slump. I like the ideas, I love the characters, I'm just not enthused by the books themselves. I think the strongest bits are the parts at the school itself, and its surroundings.
Anyway, that's my essay on this children's novel from 1996.