Book Review: Death Star

I think I’ve mentioned before that my book club tends to talk about Star Wars a lot. In one of these conversations, someone mentioned a novel that focused on minor crewmembers aboard the Death Star—and they had me at “canteen owner.” There’s a Death Star canteen? Do they have trays? And…no one in my book club had seen the Death Star Canteen sketch from Eddie Izzard, so they all stared at me blankly. So I sent them the above link, and added Death Star by Michael Reaves and Steve Perry to my “To Read” list.

As promised, Death Star focuses on minor crewmembers aboard the battle station: a TIE fighter pilot, an archivist, a low-level architect, a doctor, a security guard. The trigger man for the biggest gun in the galaxy. A criminal who conned his way aboard. And, yes, the civilian contractor running the Hard Heart Cantina. The only really recognizable figures are Grand Moff Tarkin and, of course, Darth Vader himself. The book follows a dozen or so separate strands, as various people find their way to the Death Star during its construction…and then become peripherally involved in events of A New Hope.

This is an odd book, set in an established universe but with very few of the characters who usually drive stories in that universe. Our favorite members of the Rebel Alliance do put in very small cameos, but mostly we’re hanging out with new people. And that…works and doesn’t. There are a lot of characters here, and it probably took me half the book to keep them straight—and it’s three-quarters of the book before the different strands really start coming together, apart from a vague geographic connection. But even though that seems like a problem, I enjoyed the different story lines, and the book was at least pretty good at reminding me who was who when I needed the clarification. So even though I’m intellectually bothered by the multitude of characters, I can’t honestly say it stopped me from enjoying the book.

And I do really like the concept and how it was handled. The Death Star has a crew complement of a million people, and this book digs into who they all are and how they got there—and explores questions of personal responsibility in a way that the movies largely skate past. Who carries the guilt when a planet is destroyed? The Grand Moff who gave the order? The soldier who pulled the trigger? The architect who helped design crew quarters? The cantina owner who served drinks to the soldiers? At what point does merely standing by bring you in for a share of the responsibility?

All the characters have their own paths and their own personal justifications for why they’re working for the Empire. Some are loyal soldiers. Some are apolitical, who feel no one government would be better than any other, so best to just get on. Some are prisoners, more or less literally, who justify cooperating with the enemy on the grounds of having no alternative. And these justifications come into crisis as the destruction by the Death Star grows.

All of the book was interesting, but the best part was once events began paralleling the plot of A New Hope. I love seeing stories from different perspectives, and this was an intriguing look at familiar events from a new angle. What would it be like at the Death Star’s bar the night Alderaan exploded? How would an Imperial medic view the captured Leia, or a stormtrooper view Luke and Han’s rescue attempt? I suspect this book wouldn’t work at all if you haven’t seen the movie—too many assumptions made, too many explanations missing—but if you have seen the movie, it’s pretty fascinating.

So how does it all come out when the Death Star is destroyed? Well…some characters survive. Some don’t. I won’t tell you which! But I do think that was the best way to handle the end. If every character I’d been following died, the book would have felt kind of pointless (and depressing!) If every character miraculously escaped, that would have felt contrived.

As it is, this delivered a sobering but ultimately hopeful ending, a satisfying conclusion to a book exploring war, death and the morality around both.

Other reviews:
SF Site
TheForce.net
Anyone else?

Buy it here: Death Star

Book Review: Snow in Summer

Despite mixed feelings about Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, I decided to give another Jane Yolen fairy tale retelling a try: Snow in Summer, a retelling of Snow White. And…I have mixed feelings! But in a very different way.

Snow in Summer (called Summer for day to day) lives in the Appalachians in the 1930s. Her mother dies when she is young, and her father retreats into himself, with little regard for his daughter or anything else. But at least Summer has Cousin Nancy, her godmother who looks after her in her father’s distraction. Until one day Summer’s father meets a mysterious woman and falls under her spell. Summer wants to love her new Stepmama, even if she calls her Snow, assigns chores, and bans Cousin Nancy from the house. But Summer’s father grows ever more listless, and Stepmama has plans for her stepdaughter.

There’s a lot that’s really intriguing here. Yolen played with the elements of the original fairy tale to create something that’s familiar and new. She weaves in the Appalachian setting and culture, while somehow making it work seamlessly with the presence of a magic mirror. Snow White’s father has always been strangely absent in the original, and Yolen builds that into a tragedy of a father who is physically present but emotionally inaccessible to his daughter. Continue reading “Book Review: Snow in Summer”

Movie Review: The Wolf Man

The_Wolf_Man_1941_Poster_2_by_smalltownheroMy string of classic horror novels this fall mostly had the effect of driving me to watch classic horror movies. And after watching The Invisible Man, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and even the Karloff Frankenstein, I couldn’t resist picking up The Wolf Man when I happened across it on my library’s DVD shelf. It turned out to be quite horrifying—but not remotely for the reasons the filmmakers intended!

The story opens with the return of Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr.) to his ancestral estate, trying to fill his deceased older brother’s shoes as heir, and rebuild a relationship with his father (Claude Rains). He’s quickly distracted by the lovely Gwen, by folklore about a werewolf in the neighborhood, and by a rather creepy band of gypsies. And after he’s bitten by a very peculiar wolf, he has something else to distract him… Continue reading “Movie Review: The Wolf Man”

Book Reviews: Wolfskin and Foxmask

I first read Wolfskin by Juliet Marillier in 2009–and even though it was excellent, it took me five years to finally get to the sequel.  Partially that’s because, in the intervening time, I also read Marillier’s six-book Sevenwaters series, and her Bridei Chronicles trilogy.  It wasn’t until I reread Wolfskin that I also realized another possible reason.  Marillier writes amazing, powerful, emotionally-intense books…and they’re kind of exhausting!  I highly recommend everything she writes, but I also highly recommend blocking off substantial time for reading–and you probably want to bring tissues.

On the other hand, after reading 13 of Marillier’s books, I can promise you that (so far) she always delivers a happy ending!  Even though, very often, it seems impossible…

Since I often review YA, I think I better note that, despite having young characters, these books are definitely for older readers, due to both specific content and “adult themes,” as they say.

Wolfskin begins in Norway around 1000 AD, or maybe earlier (I can’t find the time nailed down anywhere!)  Eyvind dreams of growing up to be a Wolfskin, powerful Viking warriors who care for nothing but the call of Thor leading them into battle.  Eyvind befriends Somerled, a solemn, scholarly boy who dreams of becoming king, and they make a vow of loyalty as blood brothers.  As adults, Eyvind becomes the warrior he wished to be–and his vow draws him with Somerled on an expedition to the Light Isles.  Here Eyvind (and the reader) meet Nessa, princess of the Folk and priestess of ancient mysteries.  Her people are threatened by these new arrivals, and Eyvind finds himself torn between loyalty and conscience.

Marillier brings us into a fascinating and very grim world of the Vikings, where honor and loyalty are powerful forces, and vowing allegiance to the death is not in the slightest bit metaphorical.  Continue reading “Book Reviews: Wolfskin and Foxmask”

Book Review: Hogfather

Here on this planet, Christmas will soon be upon us, and you can hardly miss seeing the image of jolly old Santa Claus. But on Discworld (a flat disc on the back of four elephants, on the back of a turtle), the end of the year is celebrated with Hogswatch, and children put out meat pies and turnips for the jolly Hogfather, who delivers presents in his sled pulled by four enormous boars. So I decided that Christmas time was the perfect time for a reread of Hogfather by Terry Pratchett.

Hogfather centers on Susan, who is trying very hard to be normal, even though she happens to be Death’s granddaughter (by adoption). She even got a job as a governess, and is determinedly proper and refined, although she does have a poker ready to hand to bash bogeyman and other monsters of childhood. But then on Hogswatch Eve, the Hogfather comes down the chimney…and despite the false beard, Susan promptly recognizes Death, who has inexplicably taken on the job. Has the old skeleton finally lost it, or is something more going on? Meanwhile, the Guild of Assassins has received a very mysterious contract, and assigned it out to Teatime (pronounced Teh-ah-tim-eh, though no one gets it right), a problematic student who makes assassins nervous. Continue reading “Book Review: Hogfather”