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Triple Zero (Star Wars: Republic Commando, Book 2) [Mass Market Paperback]

Karen Traviss
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (71 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 28, 2006
Following the eruption of the bloody Clone Wars at the battle of Geonosis, both sides remain deadlocked in a stalemate that can be broken only by elite warrior teams like Omega Squad, clone commandos with terrifying combat skills and a lethal arsenal. . . .

For Omega Squad, deployed deep behind enemy lines, it’s the same old special ops grind: sabotage, espionage, ambush, and assassination. But when Omega Squad is rushed to Coruscant, the war’s most dangerous new hotspot, the commandos discover they’re not the only ones penetrating the heart of the enemy.

A surge in Separatist attacks has been traced to a network of Sep terror cells in the Republic’s capital, masterminded by a mole in Command Headquarters. To identify and destroy a Separatist spy and terror network in a city full of civilians will require special talents and skills. Not even the leadership of Jedi generals, along with the assistance of Delta squad and a certain notorious ARC trooper, can even the odds against the Republic Commandos. And while success may not bring victory in the Clone Wars, failure means certain defeat.

Also includes the bonus story Omega Squad: Targets by Karen Traviss!

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Triple Zero (Star Wars: Republic Commando, Book 2) + True Colors (Star Wars: Republic Commando, Book 3) + Order 66 (Star Wars, Vol. 4)
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Karen Traviss is the author of Star Wars: Republic Commando: Hard Contact, Crossing the Line, and City of Pearl. A former defense correspondent and TV and newspaper journalist, Traviss has also worked as a police press officer, an advertising copywriter, and a journalism lecturer. She has served in both the Royal Naval Auxiliary Service and the Territorial Army. Since her graduation from the Clarion East class of 2000, her short stories have appeared in Asimov’s, Realms of Fantasy, and On Spec. She lives in Devizes, England.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Find Skirata. He’s the only one who can talk these men down. And no, I’m not going to obliterate a whole barracks block just to neutralize six ARCs. So get me Skirata: he can’t have traveled very far. —General Iri Camas, Director of Special Forces, to Coruscant Security Force, from Siege Incident Control, Special Operations Brigade HQ Barracks, Coruscant, five days after the Battle of Geonosis Tipoca City, Kamino, eight years before Geonosis Kal Skirata had committed the biggest mistake of his life, and he’d made some pretty big ones in his time.

Kamino was damp. And damp didn’t help his shattered ankle one little bit. No, it was more than damp: it was nothing but storm-whipped sea from pole to pole, and he wished that he’d worked that out before he responded to Jango Fett’s offer of a lucrative long-term deployment in a location that his old comrade hadn’t exactly specified.

But that was the least of his worries now.

The air smelled more like a hospital than a military base. The place didn’t look like barracks, either. Skirata leaned on the polished rail that was all that separated him from a forty-meter fall into a chamber large enough to swallow a battle cruiser and lose it.

Above him, the vaulted illuminated ceiling stretched as far as the abyss did below. The prospect of the fall didn’t worry him half as much as not understanding what he was now seeing.

The cavern—surgically clean, polished durasteel and permaglass—was filled with structures that seemed almost like fractals. At first glance they looked like giant toroids stacked on pillars; then, as he stared, the toroids resolved into smaller rings of permaglass containers, with containers within them, and inside those—

No, this wasn’t happening.

Inside the transparent tubes there was fluid, and within it there was movement.

It took him several minutes of staring and refocusing on one of the tubes to realize there was a body in there, and it was alive. In fact, there was a body in every tube: row upon row of tiny bodies, children’s bodies. Babies.

“Fierfek,” he said aloud.

He thought he’d come to this Force-forsaken hole to train commandos. Now he knew he’d stepped into a nightmare. He heard boots behind him on the walkway of the gantry and turned sharply to see Jango coming slowly toward him, chin lowered as if in reproach.

“If you’re thinking of leaving, Kal, you knew the deal,” said Jango, and leaned on the rail beside him.

“You said—”

“I said you’d be training special forces troops, and you will be. They just happen to be growing them.”

“What?”

“Clones.”

“How the fierfek did you ever get involved with that?”

“A straight five million and a few extras for donating my genes. And don’t look shocked. You’d have done the same.”

The pieces fell into place for Skirata and he let himself be shocked anyway. War was one thing. Weird science was another issue entirely.

“Well, I’m keeping my end of the deal.” Skirata adjusted the fifteen-centimeter, three-sided blade that he always kept sheathed in his jacket sleeve. Two Kaminoan technicians walked serenely across the floor of the facility beneath him. Nobody had searched him and he felt better for having a few weapons located for easy use, including the small hold-out blaster tucked in the cuff of his boot.

And all those little kids in tanks . . .

The Kaminoans disappeared from sight. “What do those things want with an army anyway?”

“They don’t. And you don’t need to know all this right now.” Jango beckoned him to follow. “Besides, you’re already dead, remember?”

“Feels like it,” said Skirata. He was the Cuy’val Dar— literally, “those who no longer exist,” a hundred expert soldiers with a dozen specialties who’d answered Jango’s secret summons in exchange for a lot of credits . . . as long as they were prepared to disappear from the galaxy completely.

He trailed Jango down corridors of unbroken white duraplast, passing the occasional Kaminoan with its long gray neck and snake-like head. He’d been here for four standard days now, staring out the window of his quarters onto the endless ocean and catching an occasional glimpse of the aiwhas soaring up out of the waves and flapping into the air. The thunder was totally silenced by the soundproofing, but the lightning had become an annoyingly irregular pulse in the corner of his eye.

Skirata knew from day one that he wouldn’t like Kaminoans.

Their cold yellow eyes troubled him, and he didn’t care for their arrogance, either. They stared at his limping gait and asked if he minded being defective.

The window-lined corridor seemed to run the length of the city. Outside, it was hard to see where the horizon ended and the rain clouds began.

Jango looked back to see if he was keeping up. “Don’t worry, Kal. I’m told it’s clear weather in the summer—for a few days.”

Right. The dreariest planet in the galaxy, and he was stuck on it. And his ankle was playing up. He really should have invested in getting it fixed surgically. When—if—he got out of here, he’d have the assets to get the best surgeon that credits could buy.

Jango slowed down tactfully. “So, Ilippi threw you out?”

“Yeah.” His wife wasn’t Mandalorian. He’d hoped she would embrace the culture, but she didn’t: she always hated seeing her old man go off to someone else’s war. The fights began when he wanted to take their two sons into battle with him. They were eight years old, old enough to start learning their trade; but she refused, and soon Ilippi and the boys and his daughter were no longer waiting when he returned from the latest war. Ilippi divorced him the Mando way, same as they’d married, on a brief, solemn, private vow. A contract was a contract, written or not. “Just as well I’ve got another assignment to occupy me.”

“You should have married a Mando girl. Aruetiise don’t understand a mercenary’s life.” Jango paused as if waiting for argument, but Kal wasn’t giving him one. “Don’t your sons talk to you any longer?”

“Not often.” So I failed as a father. Don’t rub it in. “Obviously they don’t share the Mando outlook on life any more than their mother does.”

“Well, they won’t be speaking to you at all now. Not here. Ever.”

Nobody seemed to care if he had disappeared anyway. Yes, he was as good as dead. Jango said nothing more, and they walked in silence until they reached a large circular lobby with rooms leading off it like the spokes of a wheel.

“Ko Sai said something wasn’t quite right with the first test batch of clones,” said Jango, ushering Skirata ahead of him into another room. “They’ve tested them and they don’t think these are going to make the grade. I told Orun Wa that we’d give him the benefit of our military experience and take a look.”

Skirata was used to evaluating fighting men—and women, come to that. He knew what it took to make a soldier. He was good at it; soldiering was his life, as it was for all Mando’- ade, all sons and daughters of Mandalore. At least there’d be some familiarity to cling to in this ocean wilderness.

It was just a matter of staying as far from the Kaminoans as he could.

“Gentlemen,” said Orun Wa in his soothing monotone. He welcomed them into his office with a graceful tilt of the head, and Skirata noted that he had a prominent bony fin running across the top of his skull from front to back. Maybe that meant Orun Wa was older, or dominant, or something: he didn’t look like the other examples of aiwha-bait that Skirata had seen so far. “I always believe in being honest about setbacks in a program. We value the Jedi Council as a customer.”

“I have nothing to do with the Jedi,” said Jango. “I’m only a consultant on military matters.”

Oh, Skirata thought. Jedi. Great.

“I would still be happier if you confirmed that the first batch of units is below the acceptable standard.”

“Bring them in, then.”

Skirata shoved his hands in his jacket pockets and wondered what he was going to see: poor marksmanship, poor endurance, lack of aggression? Not if these were Jango’s clones. He was curious to see how the Kaminoans could have fouled up producing fighting men based on that template.

The storm raged against the transparisteel window, rain pounding in surges and then easing again. Orun Wa stood back with a graceful sweep of his arms like a dancer. And the doors opened.

Six identical little boys—four, maybe five years old—walked into the room.

Skirata was not a man who easily fell prey to sentimentality. But this did the job just fine.

They were children: not soldiers, not droids, and not units. Just little kids. They had curly black hair and were all dressed in identical dark blue tunics and pants. He was expecting grown men. And that would have been bad enough.

He heard Jango inhale sharply.

The boys huddled together, and it ripped at Skirata’s heart in a way he wasn’t expecting. Two of the kids clutched each othe...

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: LucasBooks (February 28, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345490096
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345490094
  • Product Dimensions: 4.2 x 1 x 6.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (71 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #15,854 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I'm a full-time novelist. I write science fiction for a living. And that's about it, really.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 40 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Quite possibly the best written Star Wars novel yet March 2, 2006
Format:Mass Market Paperback
It may be damning with faint praise but this is quite possibly the best written Star Wars novel yet. There have been good, even great Star Wars novels before, albiet not a whole lot of them. However, the best of them are well told adventure stories and little else. Perhaps they give some insight into a central character or two but that is about as high as the bar is set. This novel is different. Certainly it is a fine adventure novel in its own right. However, it also touches on philisophic issues that don't typically make it into franchise tie-ins. In here we see the other side of the Galactic War seen in the prequels from the side of the clone troopers, those men bred for war and used up as easily and callously as one treats a piece of tissue paper. We've been told that the Republic before the fall was corrupt but we've really not seen much; characters simply announce that it is or was and we accept it as part of the backstory. Here we see the corruption of ideals and beliefs from the Jedi who shuck their treasured beliefs for an advantage in war to the government and supportive public who don't know much of the clones and don't generally care.

Beyond that, the story is well told and possibly the most realistic of any Star Wars novel, if realism can be used in a story of clones and magic using warrior priests. The action works the way it would in the real world and the challenges and plans ring true. This book is a better primer for someone interested in the SAS or "Delta Force" than many of the Ramboesque Walter Mitty garbage that pollute the book stores. In addition, characters are engaging and actually develop and grow, something all to rare in a book like this.

Simply put, this would be an excellent book without the Star Wars universe behind it. That it actually takes place in that universe and can stimulate discussion about the underpinnings of the prequels is extraordinary. Buy the book.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Clone Saga Continues March 26, 2006
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The reaction to this book has been...interesting, and Karen Traviss is fast becoming a source of controversy in Star Wars fandom. The interesting thing is, no one disputes her writing ability, but there seems to be an inability on the part of some to seperate what they "want" to see happen with what the author writes.

Simple put, Karen Traviss writes excellent prose, and she writes dense prose, which means that there is always a lot going on. Despite those who claim that there is a lack of action when compared to HARD CONTACT, the first in the series, I'd have to respectfully disagree, in fact, there's quite a lot of action, and I'd hazard to say that the two books are rather equal in that regard.

In HARD CONTACT people seem to forget that there was quite a lot of time spent dealing with Etain and Darman meeting and talking and the two coming to grips with each other as well as time spent on the squad scouting the planet before the battle at the end.

Traviss does not spend the pages on lightsabre duels that some authors in the SW universe are known for, and her combat writing is quick and aggressive, and perhaps that is why some feel it lacks immediate action. However, there's quite a few battles and fights and a final confrontation that's fairly action packed and bloody.

This isn't the story of a fleet battle or an epic conflict, but the story of special forces carrying out an urban anti-terror campaign in a heavily populated city. With the reintroduction of Kal Skirata we see more of the politics of black ops work, and we also see more of tha Mandalorian culture since Kal is one.

This is another sticking point for critics. Look, Mandalorians are not Klingons, they weren't before Karen Traviss arrived on scene and they are not now. Their mercenary roots and tactics alone set them apart from those age-old Star Trek aliens.

The Mandalorian culture and language is played up more in this novel, and not just because the author is writing the language and has a large input on the culture, but because it's been established that 75 Mandalorian's trained the clones as part of Jango's accellerated training program to produce the ARCS and Commandos.

So, a group of men with the minds of children (remember, they barely have any life experience having been rapidly aged) are hooked up with a group of warriors from a culture that has no problems with adopting outsiders into their ranks.

This is something that has been telegraphed for ages, and like Chekov's famous "gun on the mantle" in Act One being fired in Act Three, it's being fired.

The book is an intelligent look into another side of Star Wars, a look that may be more "realistic" than some may like, but it's fully within the remit of the series (and anyone who played the game and watched the game features knows that the game developers wanted to show how a real special forces squad would act in the SW Universe, well, this is it).

Will this be the book for every Star Wars fan? Probably not, but it's a book that doesn't speak down to the reader, that is filled with love for the Star Wars universe and the characters, and offers a new insight into a new and, yes, more realistic side of the Star Wars universe.

No different than any other writer Karen Traviss is carving her own little niche in the Star Wars universe, and bravo to that, because as a fan of Star Wars I want more writers like her who repsect the universe and the readers and produce intelligent novels that explore the human condition inside Star Wars and use the universe to ask hard questions as well as entertain.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars A big step down from 'Hard Contact' July 15, 2008
By Tanaqui
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Before starting the Republic Commando series, I had been a fairly avid Star Wars fan, but had read none of the EU novels. I was pleasantly surprised by 'Hard Contact,' especially in terms of pace, characterization, and the realistic atmosphere Traviss created through her own military experiences and research. However, 'Triple Zero' maintains little of these qualities: it actually expanded on some nitpicky issues I had with the first, as well as adding a few more of its own.

My major issue with this novel is the writing, namely the tendency to tell instead of show thoughts and emotions, as well as the author's refusal to let her story carry her message, and instead insert her opinion into the narration itself. There is little question that the novel is meant to portray clones, and by extension Mandalorians, as noble people downtrodden by the bloated Republic and the ignorant "civvies." This idea is reiterated a few times every chapter, not just by characters, but by the narration itself. I found this jarring to the point of grating--Traviss's tight writing in 'Hard Contact' becomes unbearably preachy in this book, almost berating the reader for even considering that clones/Mandalorians are anything less than heroes of the galaxy. Kal Skirata, who intrigued me in the first book, is little more than a mouthpiece for this idea.

In terms of plot, one of the biggest disappointments of this book was the complete lack of pace in the romance between Etain and Darman--there is nothing but a couple lines of dialog leading up to "the big moment." Also, I certainly wouldn't expect an explicit sex scene in a YA book, but the fact that no true moment of intimacy between the two is ever shown caused me to care less about their relationship (which should be momentous).

I have other issues with the book as well, but these stood out most to me. Not to say the book is irredeemable, however--from what I hear, the RC series is leaps and bounds better than most EU novels, and if you are a fan of the clones or the Mandalorians (like I am), there's enough in here to keep you going.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Traviss is superb, again.
Simply put, Traviss is a great writer. The Republic Commando series is superb and this book is a great sequel to Book 1. Read more
Published 9 days ago by Sumair Akhtar
5.0 out of 5 stars Great!
I have been reading the republic commando series since the game first came out, unfortunately I skipped around a bit and I am finally getting around to this. Read more
Published 25 days ago by Kerwin Holmes Jr.
5.0 out of 5 stars Good books for teenage boys
My son really likes this series, and he is not much of a reader. I think it would probably be good for 12-15 year olds.
Published 4 months ago by Maria K
5.0 out of 5 stars great
Action packed. Great story line. I love how the two squads butt heads together. Just an amazing book. I recommend!
Published 5 months ago by Tina
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best line of books I've read.
This is the third time I have read through this book and I still love it. the story has a great speed and devolops each character very well and is an over all easy read. Read more
Published 6 months ago by BoMan
4.0 out of 5 stars 3Z great book, good read as a soldier I feel for the clones.
Ok, I've been reading this series backward, yes I started from the last book. Just had to keep reading it after that. Read more
Published 7 months ago by David
5.0 out of 5 stars For Fiance
My fiance loves Starwars and this series of books. He reads them all the time and says its a fun and easy read. He takes these books with him everywhere!
Published 14 months ago by Christina S.
5.0 out of 5 stars Good story from a great author
I've been following these books for a while now. And Karen Traviss has got to be the best author that the star wars novels have ever seen. Read more
Published 14 months ago by shenora1116
5.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing!
This series is an absolute must for any Star Wars fan. I highly recommend them. Triple Zero is my favorite. Although its like trying to pick a favorite child. Read more
Published 15 months ago by C. Pacholski
4.0 out of 5 stars Fun and engaging.
Great read, too bad the prequels couldn't be this good. The clone stories have grown more engaging and entertaining then anything else. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Michael S. Smith
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