I'm only a couple of chapters into Aftermath and I already don't like it. Wendig's writing style (at least for this book, I haven't read anything else by him) is awful.
I've made it through to The Battle of Hoth in Lost Stars, and another thing I haven't mentioned yet that I like is the fact that it's showing us Imperial officers who are real, decent people, and not just eeeevvvviiiiillllll. We even got some acknowledgment of all of the innocent people on the Death Star who were killed, which I don't think I've ever come across outside of Clerks, although rewatching the scene I see that was about the Death Star II, but I think the point still stands.
Yeah, I found the whole thing to be pretty scattershot. Unfocused. The second one is an improvement though as I at least started to buy into what passes for the core characters.
Well, that's encouraging. I'm around 100 pages into it now and 'scattershot' is definitely a good way to describe it.I was not a fan of Aftermath but Life Debt was MUCH better and a more coherent narrative.
I think Bloodline also touches on this, with one character who is something of an Imperial fanboy commenting on the fact that the greater majority of people on both Death Stars were just low or mid ranking officers and not actual decision makers.We even got some acknowledgment of all of the innocent people on the Death Star who were killed, which I don't think I've ever come across outside of Clerks, although rewatching the scene I see that was about the Death Star II, but I think the point still stands.
Well, not everyone on board was directly complicit with the destruction of Alderaan, as I'm sure there's likely some who never realized why they were there until they themselves see the planet attacked, or hear about it after the fact. And the second Death Star hadn't destroyed any planets at all, and yes, since it was still under construction there would have been civilian contractors present. But I take your point the Rebel Alliance can't afford to be considerate about them when taking down a legitimate threat to the galaxy.Pretty sure serving on a battle station that just obliterated a planet of billions rather stretches the definition of "innocent." Just by being there they were all complicit and the rebels that killed them were also about to be obliterated by said station. That's retaliation and self defence all in one.
Well, not everyone on board was directly complicit with the destruction of Alderaan, as I'm sure there's likely some who never realized why they were there until they themselves see the planet attacked, or hear about it after the fact. And the second Death Star hadn't destroyed any planets at all, and yes, since it was still under construction there would have been civilian contractors present. But I take your point the Rebel Alliance can't afford to be considerate about them when taking down a legitimate threat to the galaxy.
On a more serious note, didn't Legends establish the Empire used a slave labour force to construct both Death Stars? If so, then when the second Death Star blew up there's a bunch of innocent people killed who were literally being forced at gunpoint to be there.
I can see what you're saying, but with the Death Star we are talking about thousands of people, a lot of whom seemed to be unaware that it was more than just a space station, and really had nothing to do with what happened to Alderaan.To my way of thinking, if you're working at Auschwitz and you're not a prisoner, then you're complicit. I don't care if you're the Commandant, his secretary or the bloke that changes the lightbulbs. "I was just doing my job" is never a valid defence for participating in mass genocide. Worse still if you're working on the second one since you can no longer claim ignorance. By that point everyone there knows what they're signing up for.
The only tragedy here would be if the Death Star were carrying prisoners.
I can see what you're saying, but with the Death Star we are talking about thousands of people, a lot of whom seemed to be unaware that it was more than just a space station, and really had nothing to do with what happened to Alderaan.
I don't know if I'd find a WWII concentration camp a fair comparison, since that would have probably involved a smaller number of people, and it would have probably been clear from the moment you stepped foot in there exactly what it was.
I don't know. I'd say there's a difference between a high ranking official who is devoted to the group's philosophy and a grunt who doesn't know any of that and just wants to protect his home or thinks joining them will get him/her a better life. Now if that grunt knows about the philosophy and joins anyways I would agree with you.
The situation with The Empire seems to be the former, with the lower level members of the military not being aware of how bad they were.
Well we know they were using them on Kessel, though I don't know that there's been any mention of them elsewhere.The Empire was still using Wookiee slaves, likely for the Death Star's construction. Likely to replace the Geonosians.
They're serving on something called the "Death Star". That really should have been a clue, no?
Regardless, it's not like the Alliance had a choice. That thing had to go, one way or the other and it's only thanks to the force that they pulled it off at all.
I thought it escaped to another compactor when the compacting started to happen?Didn't Han kill the Dianoga during the escape?
I do agree the Death Star was a legitimate target and threat that needed to be dealt with, but I don't think every single person who was on it should be held responsible for what it did. If I'm in a low level non-combat position at a military base in a warzone and I get killed in an attack, then it was OK for the base to be attacked, but that doesn't mean I was in any way responsible for the attacks that other people launched from the base.They're serving on something called the "Death Star". That really should have been a clue, no? Regardless, it's not like the Alliance had a choice. That thing had to go, one way or the other and it's only thanks to the force that they pulled it off at all.
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