The thing with Legends Thrawn was that, esp. in the later written books, his deductions and skills got more and more "magical," for lack of a better word, to the point where it felt like he was infallible (a bit like the stereotypical Mary Sue). They also inserted the idea that he was with the Empire only to prepare the Galaxy for the Vong invasion didn't work for me either; it seemed like they were trying to whitewash the original books where he was clearly a villain.
We'll have to agree to disagree there. I liked the Vong stuff, although he was clearly a villain. He did a lot of terrible things, and I don't think they really tried to say that the ends justified the means, just that he might have had a bit different motivation then what we thought.
For my money, Zahn gave the character depth that he didn't have before in the new novel and also got the balance between making Thrawn a tactical genius who's among the best in his profession, but in a way that seemed "real life" plausible. But that's just me.
Well, the character in Rebels couldn't have less depth, and Zahn wrote the Rebels character, not the real Thrawn, so I definitely disagree there. I should also point out that in no way should he be real life plausible. Its like Sherlock Holmes, him being almost supernaturally good is part of the interesting things about him. I'm not reading a book with thrawn, or a Star Wars book in general, to read some realistic, "grounded" story about space ships and wizards with laser swords.
We don't know what was going on behind the scenes. For example, Jyn Erso is getting her own novel focusing on her life between being taken in by Saw and being rescued from the prison camp. Maybe a prequel focusing on the earlier generation was chosen to avoid stepping on the toes of other projects like that?
You can't step on the toes of a kiddie book. As of right now, Jyn is getting no real book about her backstory. She should be, but they're probably too busy writing a GA book about the origin of Poe Dameron's favorite brand of space toothpaste. The movie has very real characterization problems, and everyone, from the director and writer on down, has to know that. But, nothing was done. Instead, two characters who need literally not one second more of story time get a book. Because why put effort into something when you can crap out a pointless book.
This is DK doing a kiddie movie reference work.
It looks just like the RO book to me, except more colorful (and with animals, obviously). 99% of DK's output is stuff like that, and the RO book isn't different. Not that it being for 12 year olds instead of 9 year olds would make it any more canon or relevant.
Unless you're referring to headcanon, the Survival Guide is canon. I don't really see what's wrong with having stuff that's written to be okay for kids as well. Star Wars has a wide appeal across different age ranges.
Its fine to have stuff for kids, but its not canon. There is no secret bit of information only available if you read a book for 7 year olds. Anything canon in those books was from another source, it doesn't make canon.
NJO also connected to Junior Jedi Knights, which was written for a primarily children-based audience. The point I'm making is that children's/YA and more adult-orientated books have always coexisted and always connected together to create a single canon. Disney doing the same today is business as usual.
Nope. the kiddie books take their cues and canon from the big books, but don't effect the big books. That's how its always been, and rightfully so. The general audience stuff is what is important to the universe, not the stuff pushed out for kids. Even in the old EU it was only the Young Jedi Knights that ever connected, its not like, for example, those Obi-Wan Kenobi books for 5 year olds ever counted for anything.
Funny, given that Rey's Survival Guide and the Force Awakens junior novelization offered the most clues to Rey's past than anything else to date (until Last Jedi is released, at least). Finn's backstory was only fleshed out in a YA book (Before the Awakening). The explanation of how the Skywalker map worked, only in the junior novelizations.
If that stuff was in junior novelizations, its non canon. Anything in those books not said in the movie or in a GA book is non canon, just like every other kids book and things like novelizations. Finn's counts because YA, while awful is unfortunately canon (the real YA stuff that is, after reading Ahsoka that thing is no more YA then Tarkin, its just shorter and double spaced to look bigger for some reason).
Heck, if the normal novelization is non canon, a junior novelization is even less so, since it probably leaves things from the canon movie out. As for the Skywalker map, that's not exactly a mystery. Its stupid and makes no sense (you could find Luke with just the last piece if you could identify even one planet in that section), but not something that got some kind of reveal in a kiddie book.
What's that got to do with a YA and adult book series being interconnected and building off each other?
The real books don't build off the kiddie books. The YA stuff is canon, but it doesn't add things. In the new canon, it just exists to shove unimportant Twilight style stories about teen angst onto the shelves.
I've heard a lot of good things about it in Star Wars fan circles. If there's hard data, that's one thing, but it's has been renewed, as I recall, so it has have gotten enough of a fanbase to be profitable enough to keep making.
Ask people coming out of an average Star Wars movie showing about Rebels, and I can pretty much guarantee that the vast majority either don't know about it, or don't care. This is the same with any of the non-movie media, but I'd bet you'd find more who know/care about The Clone Wars, the books, the comics, etc, and they'd be older then most of the Rebels fans.