Thank God for Timothy Zahn.
I don’t say that lightly, either, or ironically, as in “Thank God for burritos” or “Thank God for Internet porn”. It’s not a simple throw-away praise to the heavens. It’s heartfelt. And this from someone who doesn’t necessarily believe in the heavens or God or all that stuff.
I really mean it. Thank God for Timothy Zahn.
Because I’m not going to lie: when I decided several weeks ago to read all of the Star Wars Expanded Universe novels (post-”Return of the Jedi”), I did not expect that it would become so, well, tasking.
Not that the journey hasn’t been somewhat enjoyable. It’s been fun reading different authors’ interpretations and perspectives of the universe created in 1977 by George Lucas. He invented a vast playing field for some of the best science fiction and fantasy writers to run around in, and the results have been extraordinary.
It has also taken an unforeseen toll on my mental state. I have, in some ways, become so immersed in the SWEU that I have begun having SWEU-inspired dreams. I walk around in SWEU-filled daymares, wishing that I could use the Force to make traffic move faster or a Jedi mind trick to convince my boss that I should go home three hours early. When dealing with annoying customers or co-workers, I wish that I could raise my hand and Force-strangle them with a memorable Darth Vader-like statement: “Your lack of faith disturbs me.” I have basically become intoxicated on “Star Wars”, and not in a good way.
I also realize, however, that there are millions of fans out there who can relate to this feeling, and many of them, I’m sure, see absolutely nothing wrong with it.
I feel like Morgan Spurlock did half-way through his one-month experiment to eat nothing but McDonald’s food in his movie “Supersize Me”. Like him, I am, at this point, fearing for my sanity and well-being, but I will carry on, knowing that there is an eventual light at the end of the tunnel. For me, it is simply 45 more books in the series. (Holy shit, did I read that right?..)
Honestly, the last couple books in the series, while entertaining, were a wide range of mediocre to decent. Very few stood out for me as “above average” or even “excellent”. Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s “The New Rebellion” came damn close, and Roger MacBride Allen’s “Corellian Trilogy” had its moments, but I was beginning to feel the stirrings of something I never thought I’d feel while reading a Star Wars book: boredom.
Which brings me to: Thank God for Timothy Zahn.
I just finished reading (“devouring” is more appropriate) the first book in his “Hand of Thrawn” duology, “Specter of the Past”. (A duology, in case you didn’t know, is a two-book series, the way a three-book series is a trilogy. I know you probably knew this, smartypants, but I didn’t when I first picked the book up, and I love discovering new words.)
This book carries on some of the narrative threads started in Zahn’s legendary “Thrawn” trilogy, published in 1991, an excellent series that had the distinction of jump-starting the entire Expanded Universe series.
In this book, the villainous Admiral Thrawn, thought to have died in the third book, “The Last Command”, is rumored to have arisen from the dead and has plans to reunite the Empire, which is a shambles.
Thrawn’s original second-in-command, Admiral Gilad Pellaeon, is a grizzled, old Imperial officer who has done his best to hold the remnants of the once-great Empire together. After a lifetime of war, however, Pellaeon has decided that the only solution to keeping the Empire alive in any form is through peace with the New Republic. There is almost unanimous---albeit reluctant---agreement among the other officers in his Imperial Fleet.
One voice of dissent, however, comes from Moff Disra, who wants to continue the fighting and destroy the New Republic. Of course, he also has the lofty goal of becoming the new Emperor, eventually. In the meantime, he comes up with a pretty elaborate and clever scheme, along with the help of one of Emperor Palpatine’s elite Royal Guard, Grodin Tierce, and a con man named Flim.
The scheme involves a plot to foment unrest and hatred between alien nations within the New Republic. Princess Leia Organa, the President of the NR, is overwhelmed with negotiations and settling disputes between the member nations of the NR. Things are getting worse. Pockets of violence have erupted, and there is the faint rumors of civil war.
With the help of smuggler Talon Karrde and former Imperial assassin Mara Jade, the original “Star Wars” crew---Luke, Leia, Han, Lando, Chewie, C3-PO, and R2-D2---set out (in opposite directions, of course) to make things right. Along the way, Zahn introduces many new characters.
To say that “Specter of the Past” is deftly-plotted, suspenseful, and fast-paced is, of course, a given with Zahn. It also helps that he writes with a butter-smooth prose style that fits perfectly with the genre and the Star Wars Expanded Universe. Zahn clearly knows “Star Wars”, and he also clearly knows the formulaic conventions of science fiction without his book seeming formulaic.
Hands down, “Specter of the Past” is the best SWEU novel I have read thus far. And so far, book two,”Vision of the Future” is equally wonderful.