#this is specifically for matthew stover who wrote the revenge of the sith novelization
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I think the worst part of reading a book written by a man is reading a wonderful portrayal of a male character- you know the author just understands him and writes him perfectly- and then you read his female character đĄ
#um actually not all me- I KNOW#this is specifically for matthew stover who wrote the revenge of the sith novelization#tell me why Anakin and Obi Wan are written so beautifully and perfectly and then you murder padmes characterization??????#thats not my padme! describing her as at her core just Anakin Skywalkers wife???? just glossing over the other shit shes done?#i will just be mad about this like come one man#whiskey rambles
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hi! i really want to get into the EU stuff, but i have absolutely no idea where to start. can you point towards a few good books, maybe? thank you, and i absolutely love your account btw!
Hi! Thank you for the kind words, Iâm glad youâre enjoying the blog. âĽÂ Recommendations for EU stuff often depends on what youâre interested in, because there are a lot of books I really enjoyed, so Iâll organize them by era, since thatâs how fans are often divided. Iâll also include comics, because often times the comics are some of the absolute best stuff!If you havenât watched The Clone Wars and Rebels yet, those are absolutely the places to start as theyâre key to the fabric of the bigger story, imo. Not that you canât understand the movies without them or anything, but TCW is especially important for understanding just how grueling the clone wars really were. And Rebels is important for showing the fates of a lot of the TCW characters and seeing the Empire vs the Rebellion (it does a lot to flesh that out, too).PREQUELS:
Any of the Star Wars Adventures comics that contain the prequels characters are great. Well, ALL of the Adventures comics are great, but the prequels ones are adorable, funny, and yet really well-told. Theyâre light-hearted and largely oneshots, but the IDW comics have been incredible for still being some of the absolute best SW content out there. Especially a not-miss is #12-13 and the 2019 Annual for the Padme&Leia&Breha story.
Obi-Wan & Anakin comic by Charles Soule. A five-issue mini series that has the most stunning art of all the comics Iâve ever seen pretty much, itâs also a really good look at the time of Anakinâs apprenticeship and provides some interesting glimpses into their early days together.
Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith comic by Charles Soule. This comic was an absolute phenomenon to read month to month and one of the comic series that Iâve spent the most time analyzing and felt itâs really held up to scrutiny, which shows just how much thought went into it. Itâs 25 issues of Vader fresh off Revenge of the Sith, over the span of a couple years, and really does an AMAZING job of exploring Anakin Skywalker as Darth Vader, all the choices he made and the themes of the comic are all about showing he canât admit to the HUGE mistakes heâs made. It was incredible.
Choose Your Destiny: An Obi-Wan & Anakin Adventure by book Cavan Scott. Iâm not usually a fan of Choose Your Own Adventure style stories, but this one was worth it to me to get an absolutely DELIGHTFUL book with Obi-Wan and Anakin, who are cranky with each other, but ultimately show that they can come back together and obviously care about each other. Sprinkle in some other cool stuff (Jedi details, Bant Eerin being recanonized) and it was lovely.
Dooku: Jedi Lost audiodrama by Cavan Scott. If youâre interested in Dooku, Asajj Ventress, or the Jedi at all, this drama was pretty amazing, it gave a ton of worldbuilding detail, but also did a lot to fill in the backstory of Dooku and gave us a long look inside Asajjâs head as well. Qui-Gon makes some appearances, he has an amazing dynamic with Dooku, and my heart as always skips a beat for how much I love the Jedi.
Age of the Republic comics by Jodie Houser. Holy shit, these comics were SO GOOD. Theyâre a series of oneshots about the various heroes and villains of the time, a glimpse into the lives of all of them, and Houser really nailed it here. My favorite is the Obi-Wan one, because the conversation he has with Anakin about Qui-Gon is a must and delves deepest into the charactersâ stuff, but all of them are worth reading.
Jedi of the Republic - Mace Windu comic by Matt Owens. A five-issue mini series that, okay, the art is Like That but the storyline really worked for me because itâs a really good look at Maceâs character and his belief in the Jedi Order and how he came to master himself and how the galaxy looks at Jedi. Itâs woven around a fairly typical action plot, but one of the things that always strikes me is the compassion the Jedi show one of their own, even when theyâre falling into darkness, as well as this is a comic about Mace Winduâs faith and his work to master himself and itâs SO GOOD.
Kanan: The Last Padawan comics by Greg Weisman. Stunning art plus a look at some of the characters/relationships that I want so much more of (TELL ME EVERYTHING ABOUT DEPA BILLABA) and more glimpses into life at the Jedi Temple, as well as telling the story of how the character went from Caleb Dume to Kanan Jarrus, all of it heartbreaking and so, so good.
While the Revenge of the Sith novelization by Matthew Stover is no longer canon, but it does an absolutely phenomenal job of breaking your heart all over again for the characters and expanding on everything that was going on during that time and really, really gets into the headspace of Anakinâs character in a way that was line-edited by George Lucas himself, so I think of it as having a lot of emotional truths to it, rather than being part of canon (which itâs specifically said as not being).
ORIGINALS:
The ongoing Star Wars comic (by Jason Aaron, then Kieron Gillen) + the original Darth Vader comic (by Kieron Gillen) are the absolute best place to start, theyâre an incredible addition to the charactersâ journeys between ANH and ESB. The two comics are meant to be read concurrently, so I recommend them together, they often show the same scenes from different points of view, but you can roll with either of them if theyâre going well for you. Theyâre my favorite for what they add to the story.
Star Wars Battlefront IIâs storyline can be watched on YouTube like a movie, which is about two hours long, has some fantastic characters (Iden Versio and Del Meeko are amazing, but also the brief storylines the OT trio have in the game are fantastic) and it does a really great job of helping to bridge the gap between the OT and the ST, explaining a lot about Jakkuâs significance and how the First Order popped up.
From a Certain Point of View novel by various. MY FAVORITE BOOK IN THE EU, FULL STOP. A series of point of view stories from various supporting characters during A New Hope is exactly what it sounds like and, okay, not all of them worked out for me, some of them are very skippable if youâre not enjoying it, but the Obi-Wan one, the Qui-Gon one, and the Yoda one are all must-reads because they are HEARTBREAKING and fill in so much of whatâs going on with those characters in the OT with regards to the PT events. Also the Motti one is the single funniest thing Star Wars has ever put out.
Lords of the Sith novel by Paul S. Kemp. While Iâve only read about a third of this one so far, Iâve enjoyed it a lot, as itâs a look at some of the worst parts of SWâs timeline, where Vader and Palpatine are at their worst, where Ryloth is suffering, but itâs done with deftness and gravitas, imo. Possibly better after youâve seen TCW and Rebels because Cham Syndullaâs character will have more weight then.
Legends of Luke Skywalker novel by Ken Liu. This book came out around the time that The Last Jedi came out (or at least thatâs when I read it, iirc) and it was a balm for my soul that needed Jedi Master Luke Skywalker. Itâs an in-universe series of myths, so itâs not literal, itâs stories told about Luke Skywalker as he travels the galaxy trying to understand the Force and the Jedi. Itâs lovely!
Thrawn novel by Timothy Zahn. I still think the first Thrawn book was really good (even if the shine came off the apple after that) and it does a fantastic job of setting up the characterâs backstory, intro into the Empire, and creating the character of Eli Vanto, WHOM I LOVE. Itâs a great read and some of the best of Zahnâs Thrawn work.
ROGUE ONE + SOLO:
The Rogue One novelization by Alexander Freed. I had trouble connecting to Jyn Erso when I first watched the movie, but the way Freed wrote her as this messy, complicated, thorny person who was trying to do the right thing was perfect for making me fall in love with her. (Freed is really, really good at writing messy, complicated, worthwhile women, imo.)
Most Wanted novel by Rae Carson. I loved this book a lot, where itâs a young adult novel set before the events of Solo and helps tell Han and Qiâraâs backstory and is a great space adventure at the same time.
Catalyst novel by James Luceno. This does a really great job of bridging the Republic era with the Empire era, how the galaxy went from the Clone Wars to what we see in Rogue One, AND expanded a ton on Galen Ersoâs character, his relationship with Orson Krennic and Lyra Erso and Jyn, so it made the R1 experience just a ton more valuable for me.
SEQUELS:
Bloodline novel by Claudia Gray. This book still does the absolute most to bridge the gap between the OT and the ST, to explain the events of what happened in that time period. Grayâs writing is best when sheâs writing Leia as a character and this book works as a novel for her and as a story about the rise of the First Order and some of the problems of the New Republic.
Spark of the Resistance is a young adult novel (so about 200 pages) by Justina Ireland. I only recently read this one and I just thoroughly enjoyed it, it was Rey and Rose and Poe off on their own adventure, which was typical cute Star Wars stuff, but the chemistry and adorable banter between these three was so good I could have read an entire series for them! (I also liked her Landoâs Luck YA novel, if youâre interested in his character.)
Poe Dameron comics by Charles Soule. Souleâs writing is some of the best stuff in SW so far and he does an absolutely phenomenal job of capturing the charisma of Poeâs character, while also giving him an actual character arc to work through. The comics just fly by, theyâre so good and so smoothly easy to read and so damn charming.
Cobalt Squadron novel by Elizabeth Wein. If you get the audiobook of this, itâs narrated by Kelly Marie Tran, who does a love job of reading it, and was a book that helped me just utterly FALL IN LOVE with Rose Tico. Itâs a book that does a lot to explain her back story and who she is and itâs just absolutely wonderful.
The Last Jedi novelization by Jason Fry. If you really, really hated TLJ, this might not be the book for you, but I found it to be a book that helped fill in some smaller details that made the movie work better for me and got inside the charactersâ heads just enough to help grease the wheels to put me in a better place with the movie, so I always really like it.
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A little more comprehensive version of the post I made yesterday: Â Iâve been reading some interviews with Matthew Stover, to get a sense of how in tune his Revenge of the Sith novelization is with G-level canon (aka, George Lucas-level canon) and a bunch of interesting things have popped up! The transcript of a Hyperspace Chat he did back in 2005 had some neat things to say (though, itâs cut off because of the forum moving truncated all posts over a certain word limit):
- he wrote Anakin with his understanding of Lucas' vision of what Anakin's psychological makeup is.
Stover also confirmed it himself on the Jedi Council Forums message board that George absolutely did a line edit of the book. Â (In the Hyperspace Chat transcript, itâs mentioned that there was some editing out of EU Sith history especially.) In a Random House interview, some more interesting things of note:
- âbut I've managed to weave in a significant amount of the Expanded Universe material in as well -- having started in the Star Wars realm as an EU author, after all. I was really trying to bring the whole Star Wars Universe together in this storyâ - âThe one place where I really had no freedom at all was in the characters' motivations: Mr. Lucas had an exceptionally clear idea of exactly why everyone was doing what, and he wasn't about to allow me to mess around with that even a little bit. After all, the "Why" is what this story is really about... and the funny thing was, there didn't turn out to be any gaps in motivation.â - âAnd, of course, we spent quite a bit of time talking about the specifics of Anakin's fall -- what, exactly, drives him over the edge, when it happens, and what has led him to it. And, of course, we had to talk a bit about the dark side...â
The two things I most took away from the interview were that 1) a lot of what was edited out seems to be EU-based stuff or things that Stover eventually agreed were better off being cut and 2) a lot of the focus in the book was definitely on Anakinâs character, that this was a book about the Dark and about the Sith and about Anakin. In an interview with Terry Brooks, who wrote the novelization for The Phantom Menace, he says that he met with George and talked with him for about four hours, that there was a fair amount of involvement from him, but it doesnât say anything about a line-edit, like there was with Stoverâs ROTS novelization. (Thereâs an interview at The Author Hour that had some extras that didnât make it into the main interview that basically say the same thing.) Iâve also Googled for any interviews with R. A. Salvatore, who said that he met George and got to see some of the movie and they had a long talk about how to approach the book, but again nothing about any kind of line-editing or anything like that. Why these things are of interest to me is in the trail of thought Iâve had about the book and its focus, that the thing that was most important that Stover get right/what was spent the most time on was Anakin and the Sith and the Dark. That the take on Anakin Skywalker, the psychology of his character, in this novel is given more weight that I might usually give to a novel. My point being that I love a lot of Star Wars official stuff, but Iâm not always wholly convinced that they really understand Anakin Skywalkerâs character. So, Iâm giving extra consideration to this novelâs characterization of him, because of the way it came about and how closely George Lucas was involved in it. Basically, I just wanted to know how much weight to give all those amazing ROTS novel quotes that leave me on the floor crying about my Anakin Skywalker feelings or how much weight to give that "more intimately than lovers" quote about Obi-Wan and Anakin, and the answer is:  APPARENTLY A WHOLE FUCKING LOT. And, of course, the hilarity of how, when George Lucas read those lines:
"Blade-to-blade, they were identical. Â After thousands of hours in lightsaber sparring, they knew each other better than brothers, more intimately than lovers; they were complementary halves of a single warrior." âPerhaps not. Â Perhaps it's simply a question of whether you love Obi-Wan Kenobi more than you love your wife." "She heard him stop. Â 'You love him, too, don't you?'"
And had gone over them line-by-line, just as he had everything else, and went, âYep, that sounds about right.â
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