19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Boring, Boring, Boring..... and inconsistant!, June 18, 2003
The one word that characterizes all the books of the Black Fleet Crisis Trilogy? BORING!!!!!!!!!! The book moves too slowly and is simply too inconsistant. Luke Skywalker runs off to become a hermit at Darth Vader's old retreat rejecting his Academy, his family and pretty everything else. Only a mysterious woman who is able to enter his stronghold induces Luke to leave with promises about his lost mother. Leia is shown much more as the Chief of State, an idea that did have merit, while Han Solo is shown more as the family man. The problem is, is that the story moves so slowly. The characterizations are weak: Princess Leia, the people's leader refuses to learn the names of her bodyguards preferring to ignore their existance. That is totally contrary to Princess Leia, Han Solo is done all right but that is because he really has nothing to do. Luke is done terribly. The Black Fleet crisis marks the epitome of stupid Jedi power Luke. It took Zahn coming back into the fold to save the expanded universe after the Black Fleet Debacle. The Lando adventure has possibilities but it too drops by the wayside due to just too much non-sensical writing. Perhaps this story should have been a one or two book set not a trilogy, at time it feels like the auther was just trying to fill space. In any event, this book needed some major editing and marked a dark period of Star Wars literature that not even the Jedi Academy Trilogy (horrible as it was)reached.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Entertaining, but not great Trilogy, June 27, 2001
How do you rate the first book? Well, since this is a trilogy, and I've read enough of them to know better, I expected the majority of the first book to be spent laying the groundwork for the next two.
That is exactly what we got. It isn't until the 100th page or so, that anything that could be considered action occurs (Other than the opening sequence, which takes place on N'Zoth, a few months after the Battle of Endor). This is not say, however, that the events leading up to it aren't interesting. They are, but only if you are interested in political manipulation, and I happen to be.
The story moves along quite well, only bogging down in extreme technical jargon for very short periods. The Yevetha are a fascinating species. Their culture, or lack of one, is based entirely on submission of the weak to the strong. The males of lower station are expected to offer their lives to the upper class, on the spot. Nil Spaar is very well defined, and is quite interesting.
The sub-plots concerning Luke and Lando are difficult at first, but are more interesting as the stories develop. As for the complaints that Lando's story has nothing to with the major line, so what? Why does everything have to tie in completely?
I did find Leia's apparent weaknesses of not wanting to insult a bit tedious at times. She seems to be more of the politician, and less of the fiery rebel here. Then again, this does take place 12 years after Endor.
Luke's behavior is odd at times also. I wonder if it has more to do with the influence of his companion, rather than the author not knowing the universe. The introduction of the White Current is a bit of stretch. It is probably more a variation of the the use of the Force than anything else.
I've read reviews of people who hated the trilogy, and, quite frankly, I can see their points. These books are not for people who crave mindless action, and are not interested in sinking in to the story. The most accurate analogy is the Tom Clancy one. If you're a fan of Clancy, or a fan of Star Wars for the story and intrigue, you will enjoy this series. If you're a fan of Star Wars for the action and nifty special effects, you will not like this trilogy.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
This is Star Wars?, March 27, 2000
It isn't that it contradicted TPM, it isn't that it developed new characters, but something about this book is just plain bad. Luke goes off in search of his mother. . . And does NOTHING for the rest of the trilogy. Leia yells at senators. . . And does NOTHING for the rest of the trilogy. Han gets captured quickly. . . And does NOTHING for the rest of the trilogy. Lando, the droids, the jedi, none of them do anything that should make anyone want to read this book. It was clearly written poorly, and had a weak plot, and it clearly did not have a purpose for being. It was written by someone who obviously knows nothing about Star Wars, and really should never have been published. PLEASE don't buy this book, just to tell publishers and authors that if they can't sell us a decent product, they don't deserve any of our money.
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