![Darth Vader & Son / Vader's Little Princess Deluxe Box Set (Includes Two Art Prints) (Star Wars)](/uploads/profile_image/515/4ca2793d-773c-48d3-b22e-038e566d7515.jpg?m=1522329954)
Darth Vader & Son / Vader's Little Princess Deluxe Box Set (Includes Two Art Prints) (Star Wars)
Book
Jeffrey Brown's beloved reimagining of the Star Wars universe featuring Darth Vader as a devoted dad...
![Star Wars Omnibus: At War with the Empire Volume 1](/uploads/profile_image/406/974c5702-3191-4844-8a0b-3c55578ad406.jpg?m=1565228890)
Star Wars Omnibus: At War with the Empire Volume 1
Book
Collected here are stories of the early days of the Rebel Alliance and the beginnings of its war...
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David McK (3485 KP) rated Tatooine Ghost (Star Wars) in Books
Jan 30, 2019
Troy Denning's answer to that question is simple: by having his main characters (Leia, Hand, Chewbacca and C-3PO) return to the Skywlaker home planet of Tattoine, on the trail of a stolen Alderaanian painting; a painting that holds secrets that the New Republic don't want discovered by the Empire. As the novel is set on Tatooine, that then allows Denning to continue the story of some of the minor (and major) characters from "The Phantom Menace": what happened to them after Anakin left the planet in the company of Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon Jinn? How had his leaving affected their lives?
As in all official Star Wars novels, the events of this one also ties into voth previous and sebsequent novels: although he himself never really plays a main role within, we also have an early (chronologically speaking) appearance of Grand Admiral Thrawn, and some clues to future events in the Star Wars mythos.
Definitely worth reading.
![Planet of Twilight (Star Wars: The Callista Trilogy #3)](/uploads/profile_image/ca3/42c2b16b-8e84-48d0-a700-f2c0e74e1ca3.jpg?m=1527978261)
Planet of Twilight (Star Wars: The Callista Trilogy #3)
Book
Nam Chorios is a barren backwater world—once a dreaded prison colony, now home to a fanatic...
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Star Wars, Vol. 11: The Scourging of Shu-Torun
Book
Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa, Han Solo and the heroic Rebel Alliance have suffered one of their...
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/7c7/f94a3ce4-bca2-45ea-b89a-7dae6d5087c7.jpg?m=1559848344)
Lee KM Pallatina (951 KP) rated Obi-Wan Kenobi in TV
Sep 30, 2022
Set 10 years after the events of Episode3, Kenobi now living under an alias and working a regular job and avoiding the force almost entirely, is slowly pulled back in when the last of the jedi (untrained) are basically wiped out and a very young Princess leia is kidnapped... And after being asked repeatedly to rescue her and saying no, Kenobi succumbs to his old ways.
From a rescue mission to a cat and mouse chase with Darth Vader... This is one epic tie-in to the saga.
DO NOT MISS IT!
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Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977)
Movie Watch
Nineteen years after the formation of the Empire, Luke Skywalker is thrust into the struggle of the...
Star Wars
![Star Wars Omnibus: Early Victories](/uploads/profile_image/344/a7afd70a-ce50-45a6-ba7a-172392a3d344.jpg?m=1565130215)
Star Wars Omnibus: Early Victories
Louise Simonson and Darko Macan
Book
Following the destruction of the first Death Star, Luke Skywalker is the new, unexpected hero of the...
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Kristy H (1252 KP) rated The Almost Sisters in Books
Jan 23, 2018
This is one of those ARCs that I don't remember requesting, but I'm really glad I did. It was a pleasant surprise - just a fun, warm novel, even with its serious (and extremely timely) subject matter. I warmed to nerdy Leia immediately (and not just because I have a cat named after said Princess): she's real and flawed and quite relatable. All of the women in Leia's life are well-written and their own people: sweet Lavender, trying to figure out her way in the world as her parents' marriage implodes; Rachel, Lavender's mom, a perfectionist struggling with a lot of imperfection; Wattie, Birchie's best friend, an African American woman living with her in Alabama; and then the amazing Birchie herself, written so impeccably that I could just see her stubborn, regal face pour vibrantly from every page. I fell hard for each of these women and their struggles became mine.
Sure, a lot of this book is a little predictable, but the racial tensions and struggles that Jackson writes about are not: they are real and true. Jackson captures the racial divisions so well - the sweet, kind sweet tea side of the South versus the dark, racist, segregated aspects. I could just picture Birchville and its townsfolk. The novel is excellent in that so much of the story is humorous, yet the serious side is very well-done, too.
Leia is a graphic novelist and portions of the book describe a graphic novel she'd written -- I'm not a huge graphic novel fan, so I wasn't completely into those pieces, but I was able to slide past them. The parallels in Leia's novel to the South didn't elude me, so I appreciated why that was included, even if I didn't always want to read a summary of a supposedly graphic novel. Some of the symbolism and metaphors may be a little too forced/spelled out for us at times, but I still enjoyed the novel very much. Pieces of it made me laugh out loud - Leia's sense of humor and her predicaments, Birchie's tough sensibility. Birchie and Wattie's dynamic was wonderful, and I really cared for those two.
In the end, I really enjoyed this one. There's a great story here as well a plot that doesn't gloss over racial discord. I appreciated both. The cast of characters is great -- real, funny, humorous, and heartbreaking. Certainly recommend.
I received a copy of this novel from the publisher and Librarything (thank you!) in return for an unbiased review.
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tapestry100 (306 KP) rated The Princess Diarist in Books
Aug 2, 2017
It was a little surreal reading this so soon after both her death and her mother's, as she talks frequently about her mother in the book, as well as mentioning a couple of times, in an offhand manner, how she would like to be remembered for certain events. Perhaps it was too soon for me after her death. Not that I was ever necessarily a huge Carrie Fisher fan, but I've certainly been a Star Wars fan my whole life (I saw the original Star Wars when it was released - I was 3), so while there was never necessarily a Carrie Fisher in a my life, there has always been a Princess Leia, and it seemed to hit home a little for me. It also made me unreasonably angry that Carrie Fisher died; in a year of so many celebrity deaths, it seemed like just another death to some, but it made me angry because she overcame so much, and still had so much to do and offer to the world. So, yeah - maybe I should have put a little time in between her death and reading this book, knowing it was her last, but it seemed like the thing to do at the time. It is typically funny in that Carrie Fisher way, but equally sad given the circumstances. I fairly certain, however, that again, in that typically funny Carrie Fisher way, she would have found some way to turn her death into an appropriate epilogue to this book.