(NOTE: At the time of this review, this is the tenth "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 first five 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.)
"With the merciless Yuuzhan Vong close to achieving their plan to reach the Core worlds, many planets have been abandoned by fleeing refugees. In desperation, the refugees are sent to the toxic planet Duro, with the hope that they can restore the planet to its former state.
Among the refugees is Leia Organa Solo, her husband Han, and the two Solos, Jaina and Jacen. Unfortunately, the family are not together, let alone aware of each other being on the same planet amidst the reclamation.
Jacen has sworn off the Force, Jaina has been injured, and Han continues to stand with the Ryn. Meanwhile, Luke Skywalker, his wife Mara, and their nephew, Anakin Solo begin to unravel a conspiracy, all of which will lead to the very planet his sister is on...and the unveiling of a plot headed by the Yuuzhan Vong themselves..."
-------SPOILERS-----
Even though this story was supposed to center around Jacen, my first impressions of it is that it is more about Luke's wife, Mara Jade.
Don't get me wrong, Jacen's struggle with his philosophy to be more Jedi-like without using the Force is not something to be ignored, but when you consider the scale of everything, if Jacen falls, there is always Jaina or Anakin to pick up where he left off.
Even his vision of Luke as an embodiment of light fighting the Yuuzhan Vong as an embodiment of darkness, didn't really raise the stakes or the feeling of urgency for me. Sure, it implied that Jacen not catching the saber would mean the galaxy would fall to darkness, but the vision was rather obvious in what it meant.
- The Solo family members actions in this book can be simplified:
JAINA SOLO: Blind, but not Helpless
An incident during a battle leaves her half-blind, but her eyes are able to slowly recover (it only now occurs to me that this ailment had happened to her father after he was freed from the carbonite...). As her sight slowly recovers though, she also has a slight tension with her mother Leia. Heck, even later when Jacen (due to his resolve to not use the Force) she calls him a deserter. I get that she's the older twin sister, but that seemed a little harsh.
ANAKIN SOLO: The Following Duckling
Mostly trails after Mara and Luke. It was his (stupid) idea to distract the Duro with a lightsaber display. Worst part was Luke thought it was a good plan, if a hastily conceived one.
HAN SOLO: Lawyer for the Ryn
Helping Droma the Ryn again. He's basically become their advocate at this point. He does aid the refugees when they are fleeing their refuge, which was overwhelmed by some moths, thus forcing everyone that was part of the event into a quarantine.
LEIA ORGANA SOLO: Victim
Most interesting story of the Solos. She's trying to help the planet Duro recover, but she's getting frustrated with the slow progress because of all the scientists and engineer's squabbling since supporting one team influences how the other projects will be shaped. She doesn't realize she is being slowly sabotaged by Nom Anor (whom she never sees face to face.
The bit I started losing her was a little after the quarantine. Again, her tension with Jaina seemed off, especially since Jaina and Jacen were the ones who were trying to help their parents get over their arguments with each other.
Aside from her attempt at getting a laser drill, she is also used as bait to get Jacen back into action.
Maybe it was just my misunderstanding of the tone, but the part where Leia is stalling Tsavong Lah doesn't come off as the defiant Princess who could spit in Governor Tarkin's face, hoping for rescue.
Instead, she sounds like a coward, desperately seeking for some way to live as her captors sentence her to die.
I hated that, even if I appreciated her attempts to tackle the Vongs' beliefs about life and suffering.
In a way, it reminded me of the many damsels in distress from Edgar Rice Burroughs' "Tarzan and the Apes" books: captured by some foreigners, offered as sacrifice, rescued after some endurance of humiliation or otherwise.
Also, how many Nogri bodyguards does "Lady Vader" have? I am pretty sure I have stated that the Nogri being her constant bodyguards is annoying, specifically because it makes Leia seem utterly helpless without them. And they almost always die for her in some heroic sacrifice, so if the one Nogri was killed, he wasn't someone I could be emotionally attached to anyway.
Interesting about her "ruby-red saber" though; while it is disappointing it was destroyed in the end, I am curious about the origins...
Brutal torture with being whipped on the legs, but the way the book made it sound, Leia should have died from bleeding to death. The book more or less ends with a cliff hanger regarding her fate...
JACEN SOLO: The main character of the book feels like a side character.
One minute, he was sensing Jaina being injured through the Force, the next minute, he has cut himself completely off from it because of guilt. The exact moment he made that decision between those two moments is not specifically clear to me.
And, even though the Force is convenient for luck in Star Wars, the consequences of Jacen's actions for cutting himself off are rather lacking.
It's also frustrating: Jacen wants to find answers from the Force, but he tries to find answers by severing his connection to it?
And, while he's trying to decide what defend and attack really mean in terms of a Jedi, the INVADERS who have destroyed planets, MULTIPLE PLANETS, forcing THOUSANDS from their homes, LITERALLY ATTACKING SAID REFUGEES IN MULTIPLE SYSTEMS are STILL INVADING.
Like, hello? Force to Jacen: YOU ARE AN IDIOT.
He does finally reconnect to the Force, but it takes Leia being whipped before his eyes for him to finally come to his senses. In the couple of chapters right before the book ends.
Personally, I think Jacen's character would have benefited more had this moment happened HALFWAY in the book. Because of what happened next, I wanted to see a bit more of the Vong's desperate attempts to capture Jacen before he escaped Duro. But it felt so easy.
- Mara Jade's part in this story was more or less simplistic, but with the revelation of her being pregnant, the stakes have risen for her. When she and Luke both had the desire to win the war against the Yuuzhan Vong for the sake of their child, it reminded me of an old comic (unsure if it was "Legends" canon or not, but it was before the Disney buyout) where Leia was writing in her diary: she missed Alderaan and she was considering where the Jedi path would have lead her. In this supposition, she had shoulder length hair, an outfit slightly similar to Padme's on "Attack of the Clones" (save for a smaller white cape) and a blue lightsaber. She had been walking with her two children when she was attacked. Fearing for her children's lives, Leia swears that they will not harm her children, and dispatches the attackers, but after cutting the arm off and having the lead attacker at the point of her blade, Leia connected her anger to Vader. I think the comic ended with Leia exiting out of her imagination fearful of her power if her anger went out of control, but reassured by Han.
With that going through my head, Mara and Luke's fears for their child raise the stakes for me. I also liked how Mara was thinking about how Luke was approaching the future: was he trying to reach for it or was it slapping him on the head?
I also loved the part where she finally learned that Nom Anor was not only alive, but was also the Yuuzhan Vong that poisoned her.
With all that being said though, I still find myself frustrated with Mara and her relationship with Luke. I have so much trouble reading through her romantic relationship with Luke, especially when it effects the tone of the book.
One part in particular:
Mara, Luke, and Anakin head for Duro to try to track down a missing Jedi apprentice. There are political tensions though, and people on Duro don't like the Jedi much.
At one point, realizing that Jacen is about to basically be sold out to the Vong, Luke, Anakin, and Mara need a distraction so that Jaina can reach Jacen.
The moments that really bothered me the most in this book starts with Luke confronting this anti-Jedi soap-boxer Ducilla in front of the building Jacen is in. Luke's confrontation with Ducilla was good, but when it escalated into Luke and Anakin deciding a quick spar in front of the audience would keep them impressed since very few had seen a lightsaber duel, let alone a lightsaber, I was reluctant to continue.
I hated that part because while Luke was trying to distract the audience using Jedi skill, it's also the skills of the Jedi that have people fear them/hate them (their ability to "control minds", their skills with a lightsaber, etc). Therefore, it also came off as arrogance on Luke's part, portraying him as a show-off, regardless of his intentions.
It got worse when the crowd attacked anyway, and so Luke, Mara, and Anakin still provide a distraction, even if it stupidly puts them at risk of killing people in the crowd and being hated even more.
After Anakin, Mara, and Luke manage to escape an angry mob of angry people (or aliens; this is "Star Wars" after all), allowing Jaina the distraction needed to reach Jacen to provide a message of warning, Mara and Luke are back in their retreat. And Luke offers to..."Force refresh"...her.
Now, their relationship as husband and wife is not the issue. It's merely the timing that feels off.
Luke and Mara have basically figured out the planet Duro, the planet they are on, where Han and Leia are, is on the cusp of being invaded by the Vong...and THAT'S the first thing they think of when they have a quiet moment?
The good news is, at this point in the book, Jacen starts to feel more as the main character of the book. The bad news is, the book is nearly over when we get there.
OTHER
- Leia had found Han, Jacen, and Jaina, but rather than avoid quarantine since she wasn't part of the incident, she decided to go through with it so she could reunite with her family.
And so, she and Han have a talk, both blowing off steam and reconnecting to each other.
During their argument, Han says, "You know, sometimes I still amaze myself."
And I am Forced to roll my eyes: this line is basically a running joke at this point for the series, since it shows up at least once in every book with Han.
- There was also a little plot with Randa the Hutt, trying to play both sides, but not only does he fail miserably, but he is also killed in the end. He feared Leia for killing Jabba, but he also tried to help her escape the Vong (even if he failed miserably at that too, with his dead body being taken to the Vong kitchens(???) to be eaten ; admittedly, I have no idea how Hutts can move fast when they seem rather slow and sluggish. [SIDE NOTE: A Hutt Jedi was referenced; I only knew about the event prior to this story because of Wiki and Wookiepedia. That being said, a Hutt Jedi baffles me].)
Still, I like how it ended: Angered at Jacen Solo, and basically angry at the Jedi in general, warmaster Savong Lah (holding aloft Leia's ruby red saber over his head) broadcasts a message to the galaxy: if the Jedi are turned over to the Yuuzhan Vong, they will stop the invasion and live in peace, especially if they hand over Jacen Solo, who had injured the warmaster.
Again though, I wish that this book had shortened Jacen's return to the Force. Had that been done, we could have seen more of the consequences moving forward.
But no, rather than see the Jedi actually get killed by Order 66, we merely get the words (so to speak; that's merely a metaphor).
So you need to read the next book to see if it will have consequences or not.
- MON CAL BLINK CODE:
I am unsure why Leia thought she would reach someone through this pebblized Morse Code in an area completely made up of Vong. How lucky Jaina was there to get it. And then they talk to each other anyway.
- I think I'm figuring out why I don't like the Force as much in this book: it can't figure out what it is supposed to do. It's always a mix of Spider-Man's spider sense, warning of danger anytime it is near (Mara's "danger sense" warns her not to pursue Nom Anor), Andalite thought-speak from the Animorphs (Luke and Mara's connection, Luke and Leia's connection, Jaina and Jacen's connection), and sending a photo through texting, showing images of present moments, feelings, etc.
- Oh yeah, and remember Senator Sesh? Well...Jacen suspects her upon seeing her hologram on Duro, gets a bad feeling and is reminded of holo-vids he watched of Emperor Palpatine by looking at her.
And that really went nowhere.
Overall, with all the things I thought good and the things I thought bad, I think I'll give it a ....4/10, for now; it was okay, but I got lost on what was happening where, even if I knew the characters pretty well.
MY NOTES:
- Jaina gets hurt.
- wish page 10 had ended with (the sentence, "Six thousand more infidels would enhance the sacrifice, bringing him that much closer to the world he truly wanted to offer his) gods." instead of "Coruscant", since Mara's perspective implies where it will be.
- "pure Skywalker" (pg 41)
- The future: Methods (pg 46)
- Mara's pregnant. (pg 69)
- Jacen suspects Sesh [Palpatine videos] (pg 121)
- "Sometimes, I still amaze myself." (pg 148)
- Always looking ahead (pg 178)
- Force is almost equivalent to spider-sense and Animorph thought-speak (danger sense)
- Jacen is so frustrating.
- Nom Anor revealed.
- Luke and Anakin's (?)
- Jacen's datacard (did that go anywhere?)
- supervisor in Bburru
- Ducilla and the Jedi Display (WHAT THE—)
- Jedi vigilantes much?
- Force...refresh (oh gol)
- Deserter? (pg 293)
- Nom Anor's monologue (Leia sounds cowardly)
- Beldorian mentioned.
- Leia has a ruby-red lightsaber?
- Mon Cal Blink Code
- Randa dies