Legends: The Past Has Much to Teach

We left the Legends universe in a rather unique spot. Much of the timeline of the GFFA had been filled in, and though there were still spaces to tell new stories, more of the universe was defined than many of us had perhaps hoped. Now that we are seeing new Star Wars publishing, in an era that had largely been untouched by the previous Expanded Universe, we can’t forget about the existence of Legends or its relevance. It might not be the current canon of Star Wars, but it’s still a part of ValleyOfTheDarkLords-EGTFthe framework of the universe. Much like ancient ruins (abandoned Sith tombs, anyone?), Legends has a great many of the answers and ideas we need for the next generation of Star Wars literature. Maybe even a Force-ghost or two.

In short, where did we leave Legends? As one reasonably complete story, to be honest. There are many time gaps still that could easily be filled in by other stories. Some of the earliest works do not make sense in the larger timeline simply because we didn’t have important pieces of the story. Nonetheless, there is a story that flows well together and allows for many new stories to be formed. We have all of the information right in front of us, and we can trace the development of Legends from its earliest days right up to July of 2013. We can even see where Legends might have gone if it hadn’t been decanonized.

Read More

Everything Disney Needs to Know, It Can Learn from Young Jedi Knights

HeirsoftheForceDisney has a new generation in its hands. The youngest generation of Star Wars fans, brought in by The Clone Wars and Rebels and now the sequels, will be growing up with new heroes. There are definitely some Star Wars fans now who were introduced to the GFFA with Clone Wars, identified a lot with Ahsoka and her age. The equivalent, for many of us who were big EU fans as children, ran into a group of younger characters varied enough that all of us could identify with at least one of them. They were closely connected to the familiar characters of Star Wars, and made their own stories within the GFFA. As a series and for what it did for the SW universe, it would be worth it for Disney to learn from the Young Jedi Knights series.

Young Jedi Knights was a young-reader series devoted to the adventures of Jacen, Jaina, and their friends in the Jedi Academy on Yavin IV. It brought in the cast who later would become the Jedi of the New Jedi Order, gave the next generation of Solos a lot of life, and continued Star wars adventures for a younger crowd. Even though YJK was written for a teen audience, it still handled similar plot material to the rest of Star Wars, and retained the feeling of the universe, set up new characters, and gave a good jumping-off point for further adventures without feeling too much like a kids’ book.

Read More

Where Are We Now? The Settings of Star Wars

One of the defining things about old Star Wars content is the sheer number of places we go, the environments, the unique planets. The Legends-verse gives us a variety of excellent inspirations for Episode VII-and-beyond settings, and we’ve seen a possibly familiar place already in the teaser. The story of Star Wars might be set in space, but it very much has more elements of fantasy and space-opera rather than a straight science fiction tale. Abandoned temples, jungles, deserts, crime lords’ palaces, and bustling cities all bring life to an expansive universe, making it feel lived-in. A space-based world that keeps in mind the places that aren’t space makes the story come more to life. These settings are just as important as the characters and plot, and we can’t really imagine the world of Star Wars without the settings around us.

617px-NJO_galaxy_mapThe galaxy is a huge place. We don’t know what the map of the galaxy looks like any longer, but when we did, it always had new corners to explore. Even heavily-populated areas like the Deep Core still held secrets, and an entire region called the “Unknown Regions” speaks volumes about just how little we know about the galaxy. The Republic, and then the Empire, and then the New Republic and its various successors, may have controlled much of the galaxy, but remembering how extensive the galaxy is reinforces just how much control they don’t have. Yes, it’s odd that the Empire keeps finding new places to hide in throughout the galaxy; yes, it’s strange that Sith temples and lost Jedi and new alien species turn up. But it works. In a setting as large as a galaxy, the infinite possibilities are what keep it moving.

Read More

A Kids’ Story For All Ages: Star Wars is for Grown-Ups Too

WaldKittsterCringe-TPM

“Star Wars is for kids.” How many times have we heard that? How many times have people stereotyped Star Wars fans either as children or as adults who didn’t quite grow out of it? Why are all the cool Halloween costumes for kids, and why do we so often find the local library’s Star Wars selections in the children’s area? In such an expansive universe, why should we so limit it to children? Many of us discovered Star Wars as children and have followed the universe into adulthood, and only now realize that there is something in Star Wars for all ages. It’s a universal story, one that we can all connect to.

When I first started seeking out Star Wars books seriously, I was 12 or so. Just too old to really hang around in the children’s area of the library or bookstore, just too young to really be in the adult area. And so often, I’d have to traverse an entire library to find what I was looking for. Hunting down each book of the Bantam-era EU took me across most of southeastern Connecticut, and every new library I went to had a different place for the books. Piecing together the timeline through children’s, young adult, and adult novels proved a challenge, and the variety of stories made me wonder. Why did Star Wars have to be perceived as a story for children? The fans I was meeting, both in person and online, were of all ages. There were books catering to all age groups, there were always new people discovering Star Wars, and the overall market didn’t seem skewed towards children. And yet there was still a lot of public opinion that Star Wars was a kids’ story. Read More

It’s Not A Trap: Plot Holes Can Be Okay

Lost_Twenty_Busts

The Star Wars universe really is full of plot holes big enough to drive a Star Destroyer through. Lots of authors, tangled chronology, and large areas of the timeline off-limits make some of the earlier books confusing. Now that we have a complete Legends timeline, and the Story Group is working hard to maintain continuity in newly published material, we probably don’t have to worry about large plot holes any longer. However, sometimes it isn’t bad if things don’t quite line up.

There is actually good in-universe reason for some of these plot holes. When we re-read the Thrawn trilogy now, we know the actual timeline of the Clone Wars and the real ways to refer to Jedi who left the Order and the exact events that led to the rise of the Empire. However, at the time of the Thrawn trilogy’s publication, we had almost nothing. For all we knew, the Clone Wars could have happened fifty years ago rather than twenty-five, and everything we heard was indeed true. Perhaps the older members of both the Empire and the New Republic aren’t correcting the chronology because they know that the younger ones have heard several jumbled versions of the timeline, and don’t generally trust anyone’s accounts of history. The Empire has fundamentally altered the galaxy, and the New Republic’s challenges include learning to tell history the way it really happened. Read More