Interesting backstory for Han and Qi'ra. They're both part of the White Worms gang, and Lady Proxima, the leader, pits the youngest members of the gang, of which our main characters are part, against each other as a way of picking her second in command. Things go wrong for both Qi'ra and Han almost immediately, who, coincidentally, are on the same job but meeting different buyers for a datacube. When a droid consortium wins, violence ensues, and the two end up on the run together, desperately trying to find out why there's such interest in the datacube. A friend of Han's gets dragged in, a Rhodian named Suolo (I have no idea how his name is actually spelled as I listened to this book), a brilliant fellow who has dreams of being an engineer.
Qi'ra struggles to trust the other two, having no experience in her life with anyone whom she can rely on. Han, meanwhile, has been quietly cultivating relationships with a disparate bunch of individuals, and this comes in handy as the three try to stay alive. Because this is a prequel to the Solo story, we know Han and Qi'ra make it through this situation, so there was no tension there, but what I did like was seeing the droids slowly working towards their freedom (we know that there's no real progression with this storyline as droids are still slaves years later during Rey's time.) While Han has a droid friend, he doesn't really have any empathy for the droids' predicament, though he's shown to have a softer, more open character, unlike the guy we first see in Mos Eisley years later. We also get to see Han's ability to improvise under great tension, which was great.
The biggest pleasure for me was getting to know Qi'ra better. While Star Wars has never been particularly good to its women (and yes, it's changing, but too slowly,) from what I've read about the Solo movie, women, as usual, don't fare well (big surprise!) Qi'ra is terrific at planning. In fact, without her ability to think through all sorts of possibilities, the three would not have survived a number of situations. Working together, with Han improvising what Qi'ra's plans didn't cover, the three manage to get themselves into a position of some strength.
The adventure ends probably shortly before the movie picks up, and there's plenty of adventure, danger, some humour, and the beginnings of a friendship by the end of the novel. Enjoyable, light, and actually kind of fun.