Star Wars Legacy of the Force #9: Invincible

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Overview

No war can last forever. Now, in the long and punishing battle between the defiant champions of the New Jedi Order and the juggernaut that is the Galactic Alliance, the endgame is finally at hand. With so much lost -- and nothing less than the course of the future still at stake -- there can be no turning back. No matter the consequences.

The rebel cause is losing ground under the twin blows of Admiral Gilad Pellaeon’s assassination and the death of Mara Jade Skywalker. At the same time, having gained the support of the Imperial Remnant and its ruthlessly efficient forces, the Galactic Alliance, with the extraordinary power and dark brilliance of newly ascendant Sith Lord Darth Caedus at its helm, may be unstoppable. Tormented and torn between the call of duty and the thirst for vengeance, Luke has searched the Force and beheld an unspeakable vision of the galaxy enslaved under tyranny more monstrous than even Palpatine’s. Now it seems that the last, best hope lies in mobilizing the scattered Jedi for one decisive search-and-destroy mission. The objective: eliminate Darth Caedus.

It’s a plan that will be as difficult and dangerous to execute as it is daring. For Caedus is a scion of both the Skywalker and Solo bloodlines whose command of the Force surpasses even that of his grandfather Darth Vader. There is only one who is bound by destiny to stand against him in what will surely be a duel to the death, only one with an outside chance of bringing down the dark lord who was once Jacen Solo.

Failure is not an option. The furious final moments between power and peace are here, and whoever confronts Darth Caedus will decide the outcome -- and the fate of those left standing.

About the Author
TROY DENNING is the New York Times–bestselling author of Star Wars: Tatooine Ghost, Star Wars: The New Jedi Order: Star by Star, the Star Wars: Dark Nest trilogy: The Joiner King, The Unseen Queen, and The Swarm War, and Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Tempest and Inferno, as well as Pages of Pain, Beyond the High Road, The Summoning, and many other novels. A former game designer and editor, he lives in western Wisconsin with his wife, Andria.

Editorial Reviews

From Barnes & Noble
In the ninth and final book of the fan favorite Legacy of the Force series, Luke Skywalker, Jaina Solo, and Darth Caedus barrel towards a climactic confrontation. Fast paced action; convincing characterization.
School Library Journal

Adult/High School

Although this book is the conclusion to the series, it is engaging for anyone familiar with the original Star Wars films. Readers become reacquainted with familiar characters such as Luke Skywalker, Boba Fett, Han Solo, and Princess Leia. The story picks up where Karen Traviss's Revelation (Del Rey, 2008) leaves off, with Jaina Solo, daughter of Han and Leia Solo, training alongside Boba Fett in preparation for the greatest battle of her life; Jaina is being sent to destroy Darth Caedus, the Sith who was once known as Jacen Solo, her twin brother. As she pursues him across the galaxy, Jaina and her family struggle to separate the Jedi warrior they knew as Jacen from the Dark Lord that he has become. The novel follows the battle between the Jedi and the Galactic Alliance from the perspectives of Jaina; Jacen; and their cousin, Ben Skywalker, creating a fusion of plots dealing with political dispute, inner struggles, and warfare. This is an entertaining and quick read, although the ending seems to wrap up prematurely with several plotlines left unanswered, presumably to be explored in a future series.-Kelliann Bogan, Colby-Sawyer College, New London, NH

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780345477477
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 12/30/2008
  • Format: Mass Market Paperback
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 368
  • Sales rank: 102,024
  • Series: Star Wars: Legacy of the Force Series, #9
  • Product dimensions: 4.10 (w) x 6.80 (h) x 1.10 (d)

Meet the Author

Troy Denning
Troy Denning is the New York Times bestselling author of Star Wars: Tatooine Ghost, Star Wars: The New Jedi Order: Star by Star, the Star Wars: Dark Nest trilogy: The Joiner King, The Unseen Queen, and The Swarm War, and Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Tempest and Inferno, as well as Pages of Pain, Beyond the High Road, The Summoning, and many other novels. A former game designer and editor, he lives in western Wisconsin with his wife, Andria.

From the Hardcover edition.

Read an Excerpt

Star Wars(R) Legacy of the Force Invincible
By Troy Denning
Del Rey Copyright © 2008 Troy Denning
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780345477460


What’s the difference between a lightsaber and a glowrod? A lightsaber impresses girls!
–Jacen Solo, age 14 (shortly before he cut off Tenel Ka’s arm in sparring practice)

HE HAD MADE A FEW MISTAKES. CAEDUS COULD SEE THAT NOW.

He had fallen to the same temptation all Sith did, had cut
himself off from everything he loved–his family, his lover, even his
daughter–to avoid being distracted by their betrayals. He could see
now how blinding himself to his pain had also blinded him to his
duty, how he had begun to think only of himself, of his plans, of his
destiny . . . of his galaxy.

Self-absorption.

That was the downfall of the Sith, always. He had studied the lives
of the ancients–such greats as Naga Sadow, Freedon Nadd, Exar
Kun–and he knew that they always made the same mistake, that
sooner or later they always forgot that they existed to serve the galaxy,
and came to believe that the galaxy existed to serve them.

And Caedus had stepped into the same trap. He had forgotten
why he was doing all this, the reason that he had picked up a lightsaber
in the first place and the reason that he had given himself over to the
Sith, the reason that he had taken sole control of the Galactic Alliance.

To serve.

Caedus had forgotten because he was weak. After Allana hadbetrayed
him by sneaking off the Anakin Solo with his parents, his pain
had become a distraction. He had been unable to think, to plan, to
command, to read the future . . . to lead. So he had shut away his feelings
for Allana, had convinced himself that he was not really doing this
for her and the trillions of younglings like her, that he was doing
this for destiny–for his destiny.

It had all been a lie. Even after what Allana had done, Caedus still
loved her. He was her father, and he would always love her, no matter
how much she hurt him. He had been wrong to try to escape that.
Caedus needed to hold on to that love whatever it cost him, to cling to
that love even as it tore his heart apart.

Because that was how Sith stayed strong. They needed pain to keep
the Balance, to remind them they were still human. And they needed
it so they would not forget the pain they were inflicting on others. To
make the galaxy safer, everyone had to suffer–even Sith Lords.

And so there would be no angry outbursts when he confronted
the Moffs over their unauthorized adventures, no demonstration killings,
no Force chokings or threats to have his fleets attack theirs, no
intimidation of any sort. There would be no consequences at all, for
how were they to know of the worrisome things he had been seeing in
his Force visions lately–the Mandalorian maniacs and the burning asteroids,
his uncle’s inescapable gaze–if he failed to tell them? Whether
blunder or master stroke, the taking of the Roche system was as much
his doing as the Moffs’, Caedus saw now, and he was beyond punishing
others for his mistakes. Starting today, Darth Caedus was going to
rule not through anger or fear or even bribery, but as every true Sith
Lord should, through patience and love and . . . pain.

Caedus finally crested the winding pedramp he had been ascending
and found himself looking down a long tubular tunnel coated in
the gray-yellow foamcrete the Verpine reserved for their royal warrens.
At the far end–guarding one of the shiny new beskar-alloy blast
hatches that had done absolutely nothing to stop the Remnant’s
aerosol attack–stood a squad of white-armored stormtroopers. Their
gray-striped shoulder plates identified them as members of the Imperial
Elite Guard, and the two tripod-mounted E-Webs set along the
walls suggested they were serious about preventing unauthorized access
to the chamber beyond.

The stormtroopers were still turning in his direction, no doubt
trying to decide whether the single black-clad figure striding toward
them was anything to be alarmed about, when Caedus raised a gloved
hand and made a grasping motion. The squad leader raised his own
hand as though returning the greeting–then was knocked off his feet
as both E-Web supply cables tore free of the power generators and
came flying down the corridor with weapon and tripod bouncing
along behind them.

The remainder of the squad swiftly moved to firing positions,
dropping to a knee in the middle of the corridor or pressing themselves
against the tunnel wall, and brought their blaster rifles to their
shoulders. Caedus sent a surge of Force energy sizzling down the corridor,
reducing the electronic opticals inside their helmets to a blizzard
of static. They opened fire anyway, but most of the bolts went wide,
and those that did not Caedus deflected with the occasional flick of a
hand.

He was still ten paces away when the squad leader pulled his helmet
off and, bringing his weapon to bear, began yelling for the others
to do the same. Caedus raised his arm, catching the leader’s bolts on
his palm and deflecting them harmlessly down the tunnel. As the second
and third man prepared to open fire, he flicked a finger toward the
leader’s blaster and sent it spinning into them. It slammed the second
man into the wall and knocked the third’s weapon from his hands.

Caedus summoned the leader forward with two fingers, using the
Force to bring the astonished soldier flying into his grasp.

“I have no intention of harming anyone beyond that door,” Caedus
said, making his voice deep and commanding. “But I have no time
to waste, so I won’t hesitate to kill you or your men. I trust that won’t
be necessary?”

The sergeant’s eyes bulged as though his throat were actually
being squeezed shut–which it was not–and his face paled to the
color of his armor.

“N-n-no, sir. N-not at all.” The sergeant motioned for his men to
lower their weapons. “S-s-sorry.”

“No apologies necessary, Sergeant,” Caedus said. “Obviously, you
haven’t been informed of the new chain of command.”

Caedus set the sergeant’s boots back on the tunnel floor, then
turned to look at each of the others in the squad. He made it appear
that he was requiring each man to look into his yellow eyes, but actually
he was Force-probing their emotions, looking for any hint of
anger or resentment that suggested there might be a hero in the
group. He was down to the last two when he sensed a fist of resolve
tightening inside one.

“Don’t do it, trooper,” he said. “There aren’t enough good soldiers
in the Alliance as it is.”

The fist of resolve immediately began to loosen, but the trooper
wasn’t too surprised to say, “With all due respect, Colonel, we’re not
Alliance soldiers.”

“Not yet.” Caedus gave him a warm smile and turned toward the
blast hatch, presenting his back to the entire squad. “My escorts will
be along shortly. Don’t start a firefight with them.”

When he felt the squad leader motion the hero and everyone else
to lower their weapons, Caedus nodded his approval without turning
around. Then he circled his hand in front of the blast door, using the
Force to send a surge of energy through its internal circuitry until a series
of sharp clicks announced that the locking mechanisms had retracted.
A moment later, a loud hiss sounded from inside the heavy
hatch, and it slid aside into the wall.

Caedus stepped through without hesitation and found himself
looking down on a sunken conference pit where a couple dozen
Imperial Moffs–most of the survivors of the slaughter aboard the
Bloodfin–were rising to their feet, some reaching for their sidearms
and others looking for a place to take cover. Across from them, a small
swarm of insectoid administrators from other Verpine hives squatted
on their haunches, their shiny heads cocked in confusion and their
mandibles spread wide in an instinctive threat display.

“No, please.” Caedus extended his arms toward the Moffs and
motioned for them to return to their seats–using the Force to compel
obedience. “Don’t get up on my account.”

The Moffs dropped almost as one. Most landed in the chairs they
had been occupying, but a couple missed and landed on the floor. Several
of the aides standing behind the Moffs’ chairs were pointing holdout
blasters in his direction, looking to their superiors for some hint as
to whether they should open fire or stand down. Caedus swept his arm
up and sent them all flying out of the conference pit onto the surrounding
service floor.

“I’m afraid this will be a confidential conversation,” he said.

“Leave us.”

When the aides did not instantly obey, he gestured at one of those
who had been pointing a blaster at him and sent the man tumbling out
the hatch.

“Now.”

The remainder of the aides scrambled for the door, many without
bothering to stand. Caedus watched them go, his attention divided
between them and the Moffs, ready to pin motionless anyone who
even thought about raising a weapon. Once the aides were gone, a
simple glance was all it took to send the Verpine administrators scuttling
after them, leaving him and the Moffs alone with a single huge
Verpine with age-silvered eyebulbs and a translucent patch on her thorax
where the carahide was growing thin. She showed no inclination to
rise from her position at the far end of the conference table, where she
lay stretched along a heavily cushioned throne pedestal.

“Jacen Solo, where will the hives ever gather the wealth to settle
our account?” The Verpine spoke in an ancient, thrumming voice that
seemed to resonate from the very bottom of her long abdomen. As the
High Coordinator of the Roche system’s capital asteroid, she was effectively
the hive mother and chief executive officer of her entire civilization,
outranking even the Verpine’s public face, Speaker Sass Sikili.
“First, you rescue us from the Ancient Ones, and now you come with
your fleet to send away the whiteshells. Welcome.”

“Thank you, Your Maternellence. But the name now is Caedus.
Darth Caedus.”

The hive mother inclined her head. “We have heard you went
through a metamorphosis. It is hard to believe you were just a larva
when you saved us before.” She unfolded an age-curved arm and gestured
at the Moffs. “The hives will be happily rid of these wasps. Proceed.”

“I wish it were that simple,” Caedus said. He turned his attention
to the Moffs, who were studying him with expressions ranging from
impatience to annoyance, depending on whether they were brave, astute,
or just plain foolhardy. “But you’re misinterpreting our presence.
My fleet and I aren’t here to free the Roche system–we’re here to
hold it.”

It was difficult to tell who was more outraged, the mandibleclacking
hive mother or the grumbling Moffs. Caedus raised his hand
and–when that failed to produce quiet–used the Force to muffle the
clamor.

As soon as he could be sure of making himself heard again, he said,
“This will be best for everyone. The conquest of the Roche system has
given it a significance far beyond the value of its munitions factories.”

The hive mother raised her thorax off her couch and demanded,
“What significance? The hives are neutral! We have nothing to do with
your war.”

“You have been selling munitions to all sides–and profiting handsomely,”
interrupted a combat-trim Moff with close-cropped gray
hair. “That makes you a legitimate target.”

“Moff Lecersen makes a good point,” Caedus said. “And I did
warn you that the Mandalorians lacked the strength to protect you.”
Before the hive mother could argue, he turned to Lecersen. “But the
Moff Council should have consulted with me before acting. There
have been indications in the Force all along that this invasion would be
a mistake.”

“Because you want the Roche munitions factories for yourself ?”
scoffed a youthful Moff.

Caedus recognized him from intelligence holos as Voryam Bhao.
With his honey-colored complexion, curly black hair, and a sneering
upper lip just begging to be ripped off his face, he looked even
younger than the twenty-three standard years listed in his file.

“Spare us your dark prophecies, Colonel Solo,” Bhao continued
boldly. “Everyone at this table sees what you’re trying to do.”

The bile began to rise in Caedus’s throat, but he reminded himself
of his resolution and resisted the urge to snap the young Moff’s
neck–as he had Lieutenant Tebut’s not so long ago.

Instead, he said in a calm, durasteel voice, “You really should listen
more carefully, Moff Bhao.” He made a dipping motion with his
index finger, and Bhao’s head sank toward the table as though he were
bowing. “It’s Caedus now. Darth Caedus.”

If Bhao’s older peers were amused, they did not show it–not even
in the Force. They simply glared at Caedus, and another of the
Moffs–this one a round-faced man with a roll of red neck-flab hanging
over the collar of his buttoned tunic–shook his head in open disapproval.

“We are all aware that you are very powerful in the Force, Darth
Caedus,” he said. “But you seem to be forgetting that we are quite
powerful in our own right. If not for us, that catastrophe at Fondor
would have been the end of you and the Galactic Alliance.”

“Nor do we need to consult with you about anything,” Moff
Lecersen added. “The last I checked, the Empire was an ally of the
Galactic Alliance, not its territory. We don’t need your permission to
conduct our operations . . . and we surely don’t need your fleets to
hold what we take.”

Caedus brought his anger under control by reminding himself that
he deserved such a rebuke. He had not failed at Fondor because of
Niathal’s treachery, or his admirals’ lack of boldness, or even because
of Daala’s surprise attack. He had failed because of his own blindness,
because he had allowed his anguish over Allana’s betrayal to make him
arrogant and selfish and vindictive.

And then, once his thinking had cleared, he began to see how the
situation must look to someone who did not have the Force. To someone
who could not look into the future and see Luke hunting him
down, or see Mandalorian maniacs bursting from walls and asteroids
burning as bright as stars, Caedus’s assertion might be hard to believe.
Without such foresight, it might be easy to convince oneself that this
lonely cluster of rocks could not be as important as all that–that the
balance of an interstellar war could never hinge on what was about to
happen here.

After a moment’s silence, Caedus said, “You don’t believe me.”

His tone was more disappointed than angry. “You think this is about
spoils.”

Lecersen exchanged suspicious glances with several of the other
Moffs, then asked, “You don’t really expect us to believe you came out
here to protect us, do you?”

Caedus had to stifle a laugh. While he hadn’t been thinking of it
in those terms, he realized that was exactly what he was doing here–
protecting the Moffs and their crucial fleets.

“I suppose that does sound absurd.” Realizing that only events
themselves would convince the Moffs of his sincerity, Caedus turned
and started toward the exit. “The truth so often does.”

Continues...

Excerpted from Star Wars(R) Legacy of the Force Invincible by Troy Denning Copyright © 2008 by Troy Denning. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 27, 2008

    The Invincible Force

    Invincible is a stunning and worthy conclusion to the Legacy of the Force series, suspensfully crafted and conclusively ended while, at the same time, leaving the reader gasping for more. The story moves quickly, dealing skillfully with Karen Traviss's inevitable 'Mandalorian problem' and bringing the story of Darth Caedus's brief but frightening reign to a nicely done conclusion. The dialogue and sequence of events awards Jaina Solo and Boba Fett the credit they deserve for their participation in the story, highlighting the immense power of Luke Skywalker and the massive sadness of Leia and Han Solo. In addition, Ben's development is polished impeccably, and the reader is left proud of Luke's son, hoping that he'll possibly live long enough to assume his father's position. (but not too soon!) Darth Caedus's end is befitting a character as complex and twisted as Jacen Solo, poignant yet with breathtaking action. I am not disheartened by the length, or lack thereof, that is I don't care how short a novel is as long as it's done right, Invincible certainly is. My sole complaintent is that Anakin Solo didn't return through the Force to confront his sibling. Watch for the novel Millenium Falcon, which continues the Star Wars saga following Legacy of the Force! May the Force be with you.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 29, 2008

    I loved Invincible

    I quite frankly couldn't get enough of Invincible. It was an excellent read from beginning to end. It resolved the story without devolving into knock generic sci fi territory like so many other Star War expanded universe novels do. It was Star Wars through and through. It has the focus on characters, destiny and the personal journey as well as dealing with the war. Fortunately it never forgets that the war is the background and should always come second to the human drama. Troy Denning has proved over the last few years that he is better than Tim Zahn, Karen Traviss and any other often quoted 'best' Star Wars author. He is the best because he dares to actually DO something with the characters and how he tells his stories. It is in Invincible that this is really shown. Brilliant stuff.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 25, 2008

    What A Let Down

    Like so many other readers, I finished 'Revelation' and then nearly cried because the release date for 'Invincible' was so far away. I had the day marked on my calendar and headed over to the B&N right after work to pick it up. My wife was with me and to this day still remembers the look of disappointment on my face when I picked it up off the shelf. 'What's wrong?' she asked. 'It's the hardcopy final volume of a 9 book series,' I said, 'and it's barely an inch thick.' That, and it was written by Troy Denning, though I knew that going in. I had spent my time reading his previous Legacy novels thinking, 'This is definitely an improvement. There are specifics. He isn't the vague generalizer that he was in the Dark Nest trilogy and 'Star By Star.' And he's not wasting time on unimportant paraphenalia.' Then I read 'Revelation.' Who would spend so many pages in such a short book writing about the invasion of an asteroid that could only BARELY be described as significant to the overarching plot? Troy Denning. Who would shrug off minor plot points from the entire previous storyline as matters of no conseqence in the concluding volume? Troy Denning. Who would unveil heretofore unseen incredible Force powers that Luke has at his command, and then not pay them the slightest attention the rest of the story, though they significantly affected other major characters? Troy Denning. On the other hand, who could write a 600+ page monster volume as the backbone of the NJO series, and essentionally say nothing more than this hero died accomplishing his mission, this hero was left behind enemy lines, and the galactic capital was lost to the invaders? Oh. Sorry guys. Still on the same hand. Troy Denning is on the same par with James Luceno and Barbara Hambly. Par excellence? No. Try heading the other direction a few klicks and you might end up in their general vicinity. Who allows these people to keep writing in the Star Wars Expanded Universe?

    1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 4, 2008

    Amazing

    Like my headline says, Invicible was amazing. Even though I was a bit disappointed at it's length, or lack thereof, it was still superbly written. And I know that a lot of people are complaining about all of the plot holes, and I just have this to say: Hello!!! It's far from over, people! There will be more SW titles to continue the timeline, which I'm sure WILL explain what happens to everyone. So just be patient!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 4, 2012

    One of the Greatest Series Ever

    I've enjoyed this series greatly, and this final book didn't let me down, in terms of enjoyment. The only bad part about it is that it's over. If you haven't read the series yet, you're missing out on a great story.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 7, 2011

    Cool

    Pretty good. Epic battles, betrayals, all that good stuff. Classic star wars.

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  • Posted May 16, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    the greatest lightsaber duel since luke vs vader TESB

    amazing from begining to the very end!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  • Posted January 2, 2011

    amazing

    this is the book to read. action on everypage. if you are a true star wars fan this book will make you proud!

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  • Posted July 18, 2010

    I Also Recommend:

    The exciting conclusion

    This is a novel of decisions. Luke must decide how he needs to proceed with the Jacen Solo issue. Jaina Solo must decide how to approach her given task of hunting down her own brother. Do not miss this one.

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  • Posted April 9, 2010

    Not all we expect from this Series

    This was a good book, not a great one. I honestly expected a little more. At the end of the last book, Jaina had learned the secrets of the bounty hunters from Bobba Fett, whose character was well fleshed out for this series. I admit that I hadn't read any of the other Star Wars books before, and now I am a big fan. This series could have had more debpth and character development that is more available in older books.
    As a matter of fact if you want to read a good book about the conflict of a young Luke Skywalker, I suggest the classic "A splinter in the Mind's Eye". This book ("Splinter") gives the reader a good understanding of what the young Luke was dealing with as the new center of a conflict between good and evil that was bigger than the whole galaxy. That book lack some dramatic effect, but for character development it is the best.
    I admit that I enjoy seeing how characters become the men and women they become. The character Jaina is howere somewhat 1 dementional. I thought that there would have been a more fleshed out study of the relationship between her and her newly dubbed Sith lord brother.
    The characters that got the most development for this series were Mara Jade and Lumiya. I't is sad that the two most interesting characters, the two most real characters had to meet their end. Sorry if I gave it away, but really why are you reading this if you didn't already know that?

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  • Posted July 20, 2009

    more from this reviewer

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    I loved this series!

    I am a big starwars fan and have been since I was little. I have read most of the other books out there but I must say I liked this one the best.

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  • Posted May 18, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    My First Star Wars novel

    I'll start off by saying I liked it a lot. I had read up most of the back story off wikipedia and the internet so I had a good idea of what was going on before I actually read it which helped. The book really keeps you in the story and moves a lot of the characters forward in development and leaves a lot open for the future. This book shows many of them having to mature and in the end are pretty changed. The one complaint I have was how they make Jaina fulfill her prophecy. I won't give it away fully with a spoiler, but I think it could have been a much stronger story had it been her and only her involved with the battle against Jacen/Caedus.

    Let's just say there is some trickery I would have been ok with, but it goes a little further than that.

    Otherwise, it's still a good story and leaves much to be written about. I have also read Millennium Falcon, which takes place after this, and only a tiny bit of what has happened is told in that book. Check my review for that one too.

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  • Posted April 12, 2009

    I Also Recommend:

    Jaina in the Spotlight

    As someone who has loved the character of Jaina since the Young Jedi Knights series, it was immensely satisfying to read this book where Jaina fulfills her destiny as the Sword of the Jedi. The cover art is amazing as well.

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  • Posted February 23, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Good end to a good series

    I had trouble putting all of this series down, especially this one. I like the character progression. I do recommend this book for anyone who likes Star Wars.

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  • Posted February 19, 2009

    Disappointing after reading the prior books

    While the plot is engaging, Troy Denning's final work in the series lacks the depth of the previous books. The characters' motivations and actions are superficially represented. This is in sharp contrast to the prior book, Revelations, where the characters and relationships are richly portrayed. Initially, I was very excited to see Denning was the final author in the series -- but now wish one of the others had the honor of finishing it. The plot twists and characters' choices are inconsistent, which demands a thorough insight into their thoughts be developed in the book - that does not happen here. The series had built a tremendous foundation upon which the finale could have soared. Yet, all of that appeared to be forgotten. Overall, it reads as if Denning suddenly lost interest in writing the series.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 21, 2008

    I Also Recommend:

    Great finalie

    I thought this was a very well done book by Troy Denning that had me glued to from the start to finish.

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  • Posted December 15, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    Good book

    Won't say it was the best. Won't say it was the worst. It is an ok read. alot of holes that well be filled in future books.

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  • Posted November 9, 2008

    I AM INVINCIBLE

    I loved this book. It kept you guessing right up to the end.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted October 28, 2008

    I Also Recommend:

    Perfect end to the series

    Great book. Kept you guessing right up to the end.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 16, 2008

    Good ending book, but with some holes

    while i did enjoy much of the book, i do find a few glaring holes that really need to be explained.. 1) the imperial remnant dumping several tons of the assassin strain of nanokiller into the Mandolarian atmosphere to get back at Fett.. what happens to all the Fett cloned blood (like Venku) who, at last word, were still on planet? I would assume they¿re all dead, making the Mandos that much more ticked off at the remnant. 2) Zekk¿s complete disappearance (for as far as we know, he was never taught the force hiding technique).. which I will assume was perpetrated by the Sith enclave we haven¿t seen since Fury (I believe), and will make a re-appearance sometime down the line as the head of the expanded Sith order, but thats just a guess on yours truly¿s part which I'll expand on a little later. 3) how did Tenel Ka and Allana manage to get off the Dragon Queen before the remnant commandos got on board with the nanokiller designed for the royal family? I don¿t think Jacen¿s (as Jaina was correct, he did become Jacen again that moment right before he died trying to warn them about the attempt on thier lives) dying warning would have gotten to them in time. Will refer to this as well later. 4) most star wars writers make true beskar out to be the functional equal to marvel comic¿s adamanatium, pretty much totally indestructable.. yet a whole lot of vessels made of the supposed indestructable metal (both the bessie fighters and the Tra¿kads) get atomized and blaster bolts manage to penetrate body armor made of the stuff when a lightsaber strike barely scorches the stuff? 5) Daala as chief of state? I would¿ve thought she would¿ve been a better fit for Jag¿s new role keeping the Moff Council in check (Karen even went as far as possibly suggesting that in Revelation when Admiral Pellaeon hinted her as the first female Moff.), but I digress as it will give Jag an expanded role in the EU as the books progress. It will be intersting to see how the EU carries on from here.. A) How the Chiss ruling families *including his own* react to Jag¿s new position B) How the hidden enclave of the new Sith Order (an aspect all 3 writers barely touched upon towards the end of the series) respond, presumably with thier new addition *see point 2 for reference*.. C) How long before the truth behind Allana¿s ¿death¿ gets found out to be the lie it is (Jacen¿s vision of an adult Allana on an ivory throne makes me think it¿ll probably be around the time shes at least Ben¿s age or so.. that would give them a decade of EU time to train her, etc) D) somewhat related to point 2.. what does Daala as Chief of State mean for the Jedi Order.. in her speech at the and of the book, she hints that in a truly just government, the jedi wouldn¿t be needed to resolve disputes. what becomes of them now then? E)Assuming a lot of the Fett clone blood does indeed die from the Remnanat's nanokiller attack on Mandalore.. what will Boba, Mirta, and the rest of the Mandalorians response be? this will likely be Karen Traviss's next book if i had to guess

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