Star Wars Legends Fan Group discussion

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Light of the Jedi
Group Reads
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February 2021 Canon Group Read: Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule
Discussion Rules & Schedule:
Read at your own pace. Post your thoughts in this thread. If you're ahead of the schedule bellow, USE SPOILER TAGS FOR MAJOR PLOT POINTS AND TWISTS. Have fun!
Week 1: Feb 15th - Feb 21st: Part 1 - The Great Disaster
Week 2: Feb 22th - Feb 28th: Part 2 - The Paths
Week 3: Mar 1st - Mar 7th: Part 3 - The Storm
Week 4: ...
For discussion within schedule you don't need to use spoiler tags.
How to use spoiler tags
<*spoiler>your spoilery text<*/spoiler> - without asterisk *
Read at your own pace. Post your thoughts in this thread. If you're ahead of the schedule bellow, USE SPOILER TAGS FOR MAJOR PLOT POINTS AND TWISTS. Have fun!
Week 1: Feb 15th - Feb 21st: Part 1 - The Great Disaster
Week 2: Feb 22th - Feb 28th: Part 2 - The Paths
Week 3: Mar 1st - Mar 7th: Part 3 - The Storm
Week 4: ...
For discussion within schedule you don't need to use spoiler tags.
How to use spoiler tags
<*spoiler>your spoilery text<*/spoiler> - without asterisk *


Kim, glad you enjoyed it so much. So far I've heard only good things about this book.
I hope you'll join the discussion in February.
I hope you'll join the discussion in February.


I hope you'll join the discussion in February."
Yes, definitely! I can't wait to discuss this one :) I also read A Test of Courage...I was surprised to find it in the kid's section! I didn't realize it was a junior novel from the free sample they released. It's pretty good! A fun, quick read.
A week to go. I hope that you all will manage to get your copies in time for our Group read.
I posted the reading schedule - the book is divided into 3 parts - so let's try to read it in three weeks.
I posted the reading schedule - the book is divided into 3 parts - so let's try to read it in three weeks.

You can start on 15th, Hailey. I'm a bit ahead because I'm supposed to moderate the discussion. :)
Light of the Jedi introduces lots of new and interesting characters.
Sometimes it's hard to keep track who is who. Lucas Film was aware and made a lot of concept art for the new characters available for fans on Star Wars official website: https://www.starwars.com/the-high-rep...
Australian comic artist and illustrator Jake Bartok took all of the concept art and painted this picture with all the new Jedi characters, complete with names. I think it's really helpful.
Click image to view full size:
source: Jake Bartok's Twitter
Sometimes it's hard to keep track who is who. Lucas Film was aware and made a lot of concept art for the new characters available for fans on Star Wars official website: https://www.starwars.com/the-high-rep...
Australian comic artist and illustrator Jake Bartok took all of the concept art and painted this picture with all the new Jedi characters, complete with names. I think it's really helpful.
Click image to view full size:

source: Jake Bartok's Twitter
What do you think about the covers? And which one do you like more - standard edition or special edition?
standard edition - cover art by Joseph Meehan

[from left to right: Burryaga Agaburry, Avar Kriss, Elzar Mann, Loden Greatstorm, and above them the Starlight Beacon]
Joseph Meehan: "Cover for Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule, part of the new Star Wars the High Republic series of novels and comics. Getting this job was very exciting for me, I've loved Star Wars since before I can remember and I credit it for giving me the desire to get into this field of art. The cover ended up being a lot trickier than it may seem and there were many other versions with the characters moved all around and holding their lightsabers differently. I did the roughs not knowing who the characters were and what their costumes would be which made things more complicated once I got those details."
source: Joseph Meehan's ArtStation page
special edition - cover art by Jama Jurabaev

[this one's not entirely accurate - on the left side are the Nihil - on the right side: from front to back: Ember (the charhound), Indeera Stokes, Bell Zettifar, Porter Engle and Loden GreatStorm]
source: See the special edition cover for Star Wars: Light of the Jedi
standard edition - cover art by Joseph Meehan

[from left to right: Burryaga Agaburry, Avar Kriss, Elzar Mann, Loden Greatstorm, and above them the Starlight Beacon]
Joseph Meehan: "Cover for Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule, part of the new Star Wars the High Republic series of novels and comics. Getting this job was very exciting for me, I've loved Star Wars since before I can remember and I credit it for giving me the desire to get into this field of art. The cover ended up being a lot trickier than it may seem and there were many other versions with the characters moved all around and holding their lightsabers differently. I did the roughs not knowing who the characters were and what their costumes would be which made things more complicated once I got those details."
source: Joseph Meehan's ArtStation page
special edition - cover art by Jama Jurabaev

[this one's not entirely accurate - on the left side are the Nihil - on the right side: from front to back: Ember (the charhound), Indeera Stokes, Bell Zettifar, Porter Engle and Loden GreatStorm]
source: See the special edition cover for Star Wars: Light of the Jedi

So I really like both of the covers, but I splurged and got the special edition version, and I love the little pin that came with it (the socks that also came with it are gigantic, they are like men's dress socks!).
I set up a little High Republic display area on my bookshelf, but I felt like I needed the regular edition of the book with Avar facing out...and so I bought that one too... The wheels are coming off over here with buying books, but at least my bookshelf looks nice haha. My pandemic hobby is fussing over my bookshelf.
That's funny, Kim. Just keep enough space for all the new High Republic books. XD
Who was your favorite character in Light of the Jedi?
I quite enjoyed the Jedi duo of Avar and Elzar. And the Master-Padawan relationship of Loden Greatstorm and Bell Zettifar was both funny and heart-warming.
Who was your favorite character in Light of the Jedi?
I quite enjoyed the Jedi duo of Avar and Elzar. And the Master-Padawan relationship of Loden Greatstorm and Bell Zettifar was both funny and heart-warming.

The disasters though...it was almost heart-wrenching to read the first few chapters. But at the same time the vectors and the Jedi, and even Hetzel Prime, were so vividly written as golden and bright, and just really pretty imagery. I feel like that those elements haven't been captured like this before (although I haven't read a ton of SW books yet!).
I loved the first third of the book. It was like watching an old disaster movie - fast-paced, gripping with an ensemble cast of characters, something like 1974 The Towering Inferno.


I also really liked the character Mari San Tekka, and how she fits into the story -- just felt so bad for her.
I liked that the book delved more into hyperspace and why the hyperlanes were important. We were buddyreading The Clone Wars (novelization) last month and were wondering why Jabba giving the Republic access to "his" hyperlanes was such a big deal. It makes more sense now.
Justin wrote: "I also really liked the character Mari San Tekka, and how she fits into the story -- just felt so bad for her."
I'm sure we'll learn more about her backstory in other HR books.
Justin wrote: "I also really liked the character Mari San Tekka, and how she fits into the story -- just felt so bad for her."
I'm sure we'll learn more about her backstory in other HR books.

In the Stars Wars Rebels animated series, they had two animals, the Lothwolfs and the Pergil which were able to travel through hyperspace. When they were on Lothal they described the space they were traveling through as the "world between worlds" which made me think that hyperspace had a force 'magic' element to it.
Prior to watching SW Rebels, I guess I just thought of hyperspace as "warp drive" from start trek.. Just substitute dilithium crystal with coaxium.
I definitely hope they delve deeper into Mari San Tekka in future books. I am really interested to see if they explain how she has her abilities. I am also interested in figuring out how she ended up in her current situation, and if she is ever going to get rescued.

I haven't read anything in Legends related to Hyperspace wars, so I can't tell. I can only say that the way hyperspace was explained in Light of the Jedi made sense to me.


Melina, on Wookieepedia there is a picture of the Galaxy showing the 5 major hyperspace routes.
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Hype...
It's Legends though. They might decide to make some changes in Canon.
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Hype...
It's Legends though. They might decide to make some changes in Canon.

I was thinking of the same Han Solo quote as well! Thanks for reaffirming my interpretation. Looking at picking up one of the atlas books or maps for ongoing reference.
From Wookieepedia:
Hyperlanes were routes through space in which a spaceship could safely travel without colliding with a body in space, or some other phenomenon such as a black hole. There were five major routes in the galaxy, with hundreds of secondary routes and thousands of minor ones. Scouting new hyperspace routes was an incredibly dangerous task for an explorer.
In many parts of the galaxy, hyperlanes required periodic re-entry into realspace to manually maneuver the ship towards the next hyper-point. Pirate raids were common in these spots.The Galactic Empire and other governments often sought to lessen this threat by constructing deep-space platforms at hyper-points. Mine fields and probe droids were also deployed.
It fits nicely with what we found out about "hyperspace prospectors" in this book.
Hyperlanes were routes through space in which a spaceship could safely travel without colliding with a body in space, or some other phenomenon such as a black hole. There were five major routes in the galaxy, with hundreds of secondary routes and thousands of minor ones. Scouting new hyperspace routes was an incredibly dangerous task for an explorer.
In many parts of the galaxy, hyperlanes required periodic re-entry into realspace to manually maneuver the ship towards the next hyper-point. Pirate raids were common in these spots.The Galactic Empire and other governments often sought to lessen this threat by constructing deep-space platforms at hyper-points. Mine fields and probe droids were also deployed.
It fits nicely with what we found out about "hyperspace prospectors" in this book.
BTW Just found out that they published a children's fully illustrated book adapting the first part of Light of the Jedi.
The Great Jedi Rescue by Cavan Scott
[Avar]
[Bell and Loden]
[Te'Ami, Mikkel, Burryaga and Nib]
I think that the illustrations are cute. :)
The Great Jedi Rescue by Cavan Scott


[Avar]

[Bell and Loden]

[Te'Ami, Mikkel, Burryaga and Nib]
I think that the illustrations are cute. :)
Hailey, I felt like they tried to stuff all of the Hight republic era exposition into this one book.
I truly felt connection to only about 4 of the characters. And by connection I mean after reading the book I feel like I learned something about them and began to "know" them to the point I am interested in what happens to them next. While I liked the story I would have loved it much more if the author chose some of the characters and focused on them more.
I didn't mind the number of characters in the first part of the book that was fast-paced and focused on the imminent disaster but it started to slightly annoy me in parts 2&3. Especially when some of the new characters that appeared in part 3 were clearly just name-drops (for other HR projects).
I truly felt connection to only about 4 of the characters. And by connection I mean after reading the book I feel like I learned something about them and began to "know" them to the point I am interested in what happens to them next. While I liked the story I would have loved it much more if the author chose some of the characters and focused on them more.
I didn't mind the number of characters in the first part of the book that was fast-paced and focused on the imminent disaster but it started to slightly annoy me in parts 2&3. Especially when some of the new characters that appeared in part 3 were clearly just name-drops (for other HR projects).


Yeah really! I think he did a good job with all those characters!
I had read the free sampler that came out at the end of last year where a lot of the characters were introduced, and then re-read all those chapters again and that kind of helped to keep them all straight for me!


and reading all your comments, I thought the same thing, too many characters all at once, and felt at some point kinda overwhelmed, but when Bell and Loden came up everything change. I can say they are my favorite characters! Hope to learn more about them in Part II & III.
Also, something that caught my attention was Avar way of connecting with the Force as listening to the song of the Force, I think it is beautiful.


Wow! sounds super cool!
I remember this mind exercise, where you answer random math problems and at the end, the last question is which color do you associate with the number one? (view spoiler)
So far the book mentions this kind of connection with Avar and how she deepens in and navigates around the force. I think is the way she feels it and maybe has something to do with her rare skill: "She could detect the natural bonds between Force-users and strengthen them, use them as almost a sort of communications network."
Besides Avar, another interpretation of the Force that I really like is Elzar Mann's. He perceives it as a bottomless sea.
I really hope to know Loden's perception soon!
Montserrat wrote: "Besides Avar, another interpretation of the Force that I really like is Elzar Mann's. He perceives it as a bottomless sea. I really hope to know Loden's perception soon!"
Monserrat, there is a really lovely passage that shows how perception of the Force difers from Jedi to Jedi. It's really a very personal experience.
"What she [Avar] heard as a song, Elzar Mann saw as a deep, endless, storm-tossed sea. The Wookiee Burryaga was a single leaf on a gigantic tree with deep-dug roots and sky-high limbs. Douglas Sunvale saw the Force as a huge, interlocked set of gears, made of an endless variety of materials from crystal to bone. Bell Zettifar danced with fire. Loden Greatstorm danced with wind."
I still love Elzar's interpretation the best.
"To Mann, the Force was a bottomless sea, never ending, in which all things swam. Brightly lit in its upper reaches, fading to darkness below, but all one great ocean. He reached out to it, letting himself race along its currents, going deeper than ever before, seeing and sensing things he had never before known. The sea never ended, and there was so much of it he hadn’t seen."
Monserrat, there is a really lovely passage that shows how perception of the Force difers from Jedi to Jedi. It's really a very personal experience.
"What she [Avar] heard as a song, Elzar Mann saw as a deep, endless, storm-tossed sea. The Wookiee Burryaga was a single leaf on a gigantic tree with deep-dug roots and sky-high limbs. Douglas Sunvale saw the Force as a huge, interlocked set of gears, made of an endless variety of materials from crystal to bone. Bell Zettifar danced with fire. Loden Greatstorm danced with wind."
I still love Elzar's interpretation the best.
"To Mann, the Force was a bottomless sea, never ending, in which all things swam. Brightly lit in its upper reaches, fading to darkness below, but all one great ocean. He reached out to it, letting himself race along its currents, going deeper than ever before, seeing and sensing things he had never before known. The sea never ended, and there was so much of it he hadn’t seen."

TAMRA wrote: "I'm also reading the comic books and in them Master Sskeer only has one arm but in here he has both. It'll be interesting to see how and when he receives this injury."
You'll find out. ;)
TAMRA, are the High Republic comicbooks any good? Do you enjoy them?
You'll find out. ;)
TAMRA, are the High Republic comicbooks any good? Do you enjoy them?

You'll find ou..."
You're right, I did find out and it was horrible and tragic (even though it'll grow back.)
Yes the comics are pretty good. I'm enjoying them anyway. It centers around Sskeer and his padawan. I recommend checking it out.
TAMRA wrote: "Yes the comics are pretty good. I'm enjoying them anyway. It centers around Sskeer and his padawan. I recommend checking it out."
..."
Thanks for the rec. I'll wait till they release them as a collection. I don't read comicbooks regularly but I enjoy to check out a good series now and then.
BTW I quite enjoyed Dark Horse's Clone Wars run.
..."
Thanks for the rec. I'll wait till they release them as a collection. I don't read comicbooks regularly but I enjoy to check out a good series now and then.
BTW I quite enjoyed Dark Horse's Clone Wars run.
I have to share a passage that made me smile:
"Avar was all quiet confidence and utter competence, and Elzar looked like someone out of a holodrama, with his olive skin and dark, wavy hair—just a beautiful man."
I love how Soule just oh so nonchalantly flips the cliche of describing a man by what he can do and a woman by how she looks. So what we learn is that Avar is competent and Elzar is beautiful. :D
"Avar was all quiet confidence and utter competence, and Elzar looked like someone out of a holodrama, with his olive skin and dark, wavy hair—just a beautiful man."
I love how Soule just oh so nonchalantly flips the cliche of describing a man by what he can do and a woman by how she looks. So what we learn is that Avar is competent and Elzar is beautiful. :D
Last day of the group read.
How did you like Light of the Jedi? Are you excited for the upcoming High Republic books?
Which characters do you want to know more about?
How did you like Light of the Jedi? Are you excited for the upcoming High Republic books?
Which characters do you want to know more about?

How did you like Light of the Jedi? Are you excited for the upcoming High Republic books?
Which characters do you want to know more about?"
Overall I like it as the pacing was steady and the conflict that kept unfolding was interesting. It was tedious to keep up with so many characters, but hopefully in the next book we get to see more of Avar Kriss, Bell Zettifar and Loden Greatstorm.

Can't wait for the rest of the books to come out! So excited for more of this adventure. I haven't read the comics yet, I'm waiting for Marvel's trade paperback of the first few comics to come out in August and I'll start on them then.
Although I read both Light of the Jedi and Into the Dark so fast I feel like I should re-read them before the next batch comes out!
I wonder if they plan to make a movie/show in this era.
Kim wrote: "I wonder if they plan to make a movie/show in this era."
This is supposed to a multi-platform project. So I guess we might get a TV show or a PC/console game out of it as well.
This is supposed to a multi-platform project. So I guess we might get a TV show or a PC/console game out of it as well.
I'm pretty sure that Bell and Loden are set up to appear in the sequel.
Bell is on the cover of The Rising Storm by Cavan Scott.
And I'm looking forward to learn more about Avar and Elzar. Have you noticed the hints at their previous relationship? Whether it was platonic or something more remains to be seen.
Bell is on the cover of The Rising Storm by Cavan Scott.

And I'm looking forward to learn more about Avar and Elzar. Have you noticed the hints at their previous relationship? Whether it was platonic or something more remains to be seen.
Books mentioned in this topic
Light of the Jedi (other topics)Deceived (other topics)
A Test of Courage (other topics)
Into the Dark (other topics)
The Rising Storm (other topics)
More...
February 2021 Canon Group Read
Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule
Group Read starts Feb 15th.
- Published in January 2021
- Set in the era of the High Republic - 232 BBY
Two hundred years before the events of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, in the era of the glorious High Republic, the noble and wise Jedi Knights must face a frightening threat to themselves, the galaxy, and the Force itself....
It is a golden age. Intrepid hyperspace scouts expand the reach of the Republic to the farthest stars, worlds flourish under the benevolent leadership of the Senate, and peace reigns, enforced by the wisdom and strength of the renowned order of Force users known as the Jedi. With the Jedi at the height of their power, the free citizens of the galaxy are confident in their ability to weather any storm. But even the brightest light can cast a shadow, and some storms defy any preparation.
When a shocking catastrophe in hyperspace tears a ship to pieces, the flurry of shrapnel emerging from the disaster threatens an entire system. No sooner does the call for help go out than the Jedi race to the scene. The scope of the emergence, however, is enough to push even Jedi to their limit. As the sky breaks open and destruction rains down upon the peaceful alliance they helped to build, the Jedi must trust in the Force to see them through a day in which a single mistake could cost billions of lives..
Note: This group read is a test. We'll see if we can run two group reads in a month.
One for Legends and a second one for Canon.
If enough people join in we'll try to make canon group reads a regular feature.
February 2021 Legends Group Read: Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn, starts Feb 1st.
February 2021 Canon Group Read: Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule, starts Feb 15th.
Both reads run for a month. So if you're really interested in both books you can manage to join both discussions.