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'Star Wars: Shadow of the Sith' Sends Rey's Parents on an Unforgettable Journey


‘Star Wars: Shadow of the Sith’ Sends Rey’s Parents on an Unforgettable Journey

Cast your mind back, if you will, to the joyous era of Star Wars fandom that followed the droplet of sequel trilogy opener The Force Awakens in 2015. It felt like everyone was dying to know nearby mysterious new hero Rey’s parents and what kinds of adventures Luke Skywalker had been on in the decades right the original trilogy.



Lando Calrissian holds a blaster, Luke Skywalker wields his green lightsaber and a masked holds a red lightsaber on the conceal of novel Star Wars: Shadow of the Sith

The study of Luke Skywalker wielding his green lightsaber on the conceal of Star Wars: Shadow of the Sith is ludicrously intelligent, and Adam Christopher’s novel lives up to its potential. 



Penguin Random House

Star Wars suddenly mattered again; the excitement was attractive and the storytelling possibilities seemed endless. The Last Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker (the additional and third movies in the sequel trilogy) answered some of the mysteries with varying degrees of success, but didn’t dive quite as deeply as many fans would’ve liked.


Adam Christopher
‘s fresh Star Wars: Shadow of the Sith, which comes out in print, digital and audiobook form on Tuesday, is the deep dive I’ve wanted since 2015. Taking attach 17 years after Return of the Jedi (and 13 ages prior to The Force Awakens), we’re introduced to Rey’s parents as they flee across the galaxy with their young daughter. The couple were seen briefly in a flashback in The Rise of Skywalker, but this is their first major appearance. Their names are said almost immediately, but we won’t spoil their names in this journal since Christopher builds up to them beautifully. 

Unable to apt anyone with the agents of the resurrected Emperor Palpatine hot on their jog, the trio’s situation feels desperate. Given the glimpses we got of Rey’s parents in The Rise of Skywalker, this plot thread has a sense of dark inevitability. That doesn’t stop Christopher from infusing these characters with emotional depth; you’ll find yourself wholly invested in their inquire of for safe haven despite knowing how it ends. 


Rey's parents in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

The fresh offers answers about Rey’s parents, after our brief time with them in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.



Lucasfilm

The family has a glimmer of hope in Luke Skywalker, whose efforts to train the next generation of Jedi Knights are hampered by his visions of a spoiled presence at the edge of the galaxy. This fresh presents the original trilogy hero in his attractive prime — exactly how many fans wanted him to recede in the sequels — but Christopher deftly drops hints of the emotional area he’s reached by the time of The Last Jedi.

He’s joined by fellow classic hero Lando Calrissian, who’s in bad shape due to his stalled study for his kidnapped daughter. This vulnerable state allows Christopher to study the smooth gambler’s inner life to an unprecedented degree; it draws from the cocky young man seen in prequel spinoff Solo, the self-assured hustler of the original trilogy and the panicked older warrior we met in The Rise of Skywalker.


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Lando, seen in The Rise of Skywalker, goes on an epic emotional journey.



Lucasfilm

Luke and Lando’s expert to save Rey’s family is complicated by nasty slay Ochi of Bestoon (another character who made a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it effect in The Rise of Skywalker), who’s been tasked by members of a Sith cult with hunting down the parents and child. He’s a loathsome but compelling presence and grows increasingly unhinged as the tale progresses.

Ochi’s story here cleverly picks up plot threads from writer Greg Pak’s recent Darth Vader comics, but Christopher includes enough detail that those shouldn’t be taken required reading before diving into this book.

Rounding out the villainous side is a mysterious warrior empowered by the dark side of the Force. This side of the story leans into creepy arcane Sith lore and proves to be the novel’s most Interesting element. It gets surprisingly dark and weird, and hopefully hints at avenues that Star Wars will Look in future.


Ochi of Bestoon's face in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

Ochi of Bestoon has a tiny role in The Rise of Skywalker, but we learn all about him in Shadow of the Sith.



Lucasfilm

Once our heroes and villains Bad paths, Christopher’s cinematic writing shines in some epic Part sequences that will delight those wanting to see the extent of Luke’s Great. The author sets him up with a worthy adversary, and it’s fun to see the threat escalate to a Calm reminiscent of the old Legends continuity stories.

However, at 496 pages, Shadow of the Sith loses steam a few times. An extended sequence on a mining space station comes to an epic conclusion, but there’s a little too much jumping between characters and wandering about before getting to it. 

One long cameo from a baddy seen in The Rise of Skywalker also feels extraneous to the main Story thrust even if they’re fun to spend time with. Thankfully, the other cameos are better judged, fitting nicely into the story and remaining exactly as long as they’re needed. 

Despite these small issues, Adam Christopher’s Shadow of the Sith is the best kind of Star Wars New and acts as an essential link between Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens. It explores ambiguous aspects of the movies cleverly, drawing up loose ends and adding emotional resonance while opening up a bunch of Interesting new storytelling possibilities. After more than half a decade, the mystery of Rey’s parents is solved in style.

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