"New content" is not the only determination of whether a book in a franchise is "good" or not.
Its not, but if old content is taking space away from new content, then its bad. I don't believe a movie should get a novelization, especially if its in a franchise like SW and taking space that could be used with a new story. if you want Rogue One's story, watch the movie. There is no reason to waste a book spot on a novelization of an existing story.
What the heck does "legitimate" even mean? All official tie-ins are approved by the franchise owners. They have the brand name on it. In most cases, they are the official account of the event in question. That has "legitimate" written all over it. (Besides, wasn't one of your complaints that if a YA book covers something, then a GA book won't? That suggests that the YA books are indeed "legitimate," since otherwise, there would be no reason that a GA book could overwrite it.)
No, taking stories from real books doesn't make YA legitimate, it just means that the people in charge of the books don't care about good stories and so don't let the real SW books tell some of the stories they should. Basically, if a SW book is made for a general audience, its legitimate. if its written for a specific group, its worthless and, in my opinion, to be completely ignored as the waste of space it is.
Given that Star Wars is using YA books to establish important details (all we know about Rey's pre-Jakku life comes from YA books, Jyn's starring novel is YA), it seems that LucasFilm doesn't agree with you.
Lucasfilm wants money from the Twilight crowd. I don't consider them to really care about important details. They care about the movies, then use the books, especially the YA books, as a cheap, lazy cash grab. Details about Rey and Jyn's life are either in movies, in GA books, or don't count as far as I'm concerned. The fact that anything about them in YA books is garbage just makes it easier to ignore. But, in the end, if its not in a movie or a GA book, its not important and only "canon" in that no real SW story is going to take the time to overwrite inconsequential side stories written for kids that don't effect the characterization of the characters at all.
First off, what criteria even makes a book good? From what I know, that criteria is not limited to one specific market (and I studied writing in college, so I do know a thing or two about this).
There are a lot of criteria, and it usually changes depending on the individual. One notable one, though, is "Its not a kiddie or YA book".
Since you never read it, I don't think that opinion holds any weight. It's certainly not based on good reasoning.
I don't need to read a book to necessarily have an opinion on it. If its YA, its garbage. Its practically a law of the universe, like gravity.
I'd heard that the second was better than the first. Not very encouraged here.
Some people like it more then me, but I've barely seen it reviewed as more then "readable", so even though not as many people hate it its not like aftermath 2 is getting too much praise
No one said you had to read it, but hating something you haven't read? There's no rationality here.
My hatred of Lost Stars is rational and easy to understand. I hate twilight. The author of Lost Stars has literally one book that isn't a Twilight clone, and that's Star Wars: Bloodlines (and that info comes from looking up her books on her own site). I consider Twilight to be THE core of everything terrible about YA, so a teen angsty romance book by an author of Twilight clone novels is just about the worst SW book possible, and something I logically hate.
That "fact" is an opinion, and since you don't know what the book's content are, it's not a credible one.
Ahsoka is a YA book, so I have a very good idea of what the content is. If not in detail, then in tropes, cliches etc. Plus its a post TCW story influenced by Rebels, it could be GA and it would still be terrible because post TCW Ahsoka is a terrible character.
That's semantics. By definition, Young Jedi Knights is YA, since it was written for a juvenile audience. We can't get around that.
Secondly, you're willing to concede that some YA books don't follow the cliches you like, but won't extend the same courtesy to other stuff? That does not follow. If there can be one exception, there can be more. (Your mantra has been that YA books, by definition, cannot be good, but now you're telling me that some are?!)
nope. I'm saying that Young jedi Knights isn't YA, not in the way they're classified nowadays, at least. There was a time before Twilight and Hunger Games when the YA label wasn't shorthand for angsty teen crap. YJK was made in that time period.
(Finally, your might want to reread those Young Jedi. There were a couple teen romance plot threads in them.)
Teen romance doesn't mean teen characters falling in love, at least as an automatic negative. I'm well aware of Jacen and Tenel Ka having a relationship in those books. Compared to YA romance its much better written and without the drama and tropes of Twilight/Lost Stars/every YA book for the last 10-15 years.
Given that you never read the latter, you can't know that.
Once again: Lost Stars is a YA romance novel written by a woman who made her career writing Twilight clone novels. Compared to that, any normal GA book is a shining jewel of literature.
What do you think they should've done?
Never published YA stuff like Lost Stars, hired better writers and let them make stories more important then the ones they were allowed to do and have them tie into the movies more.
Umm, maybe? I will concede that a Del Rey hardcover is the more prestigious release, but Lost Stars became the fan favorite. I'm not sure either of them were true TFA prequels (which is what we had been lead to believe), but the latter did feel more like a lead into than Aftermath; regardless of which was better, I don't think Aftermath deserved to be in the "Journey to..." series; the connections to TFA were too thin, which I think is partially why it lost the popular vote from fans.
It shouldn't have been in "Journey to...", but it deserved to be there more then Lost Stars.
Why's that?
If RO was a book, the characters could have been fleshed out.
Depends. I don't know for sure what's going to happen, but it could tell the story of the campaign that got him the Grand Admiral's rank, which was described in his first Rebels appearance. As @The Wormhole pointed out, Gov. Pryce is in it. Not sure if that counts? Of course, it's hard to say what's important or not important in connection to Rebels. For example, part of Rogue One's backstory is contained in the show.
There is nothing in Rebels important to RO. Having Saw cameo doesn't mean anything. i'd argue that even TCW isn't important to RO, outside of introducing Saw.
We'll have to see, but since TV Thrawn got the thumbs up from Zahn himself, that does suggest that Zahn sees the two as being compatible. In all honesty, I don't really see any difference between Legends Thrawn and canon Thrawn, but, since the novel has more space to tell the story, it might allow for Thrawn to have more characterization and story time, thus seem less rushed?
The rebels version of thrawn only resembles the real Thrawn in physical appearance. Besides that, Rebels Thrawn is the normal saturday morning cartoon "mastermind villain" with an added appreciation for art because some intern working with Dave Filoni glanced at Thrawn's wookiepeida page (which is more work then Filoni or the Rebels writers have ever put into their show, to be fair).
As you yourself, said, there are exceptions, so we can't say that until the book comes out.
There is no exceptions. If its a real yA book, its trash for the same reasons every YA book is.
As the movie showed, those were the years that shaped Jyn into the person she was by the time we meet her in the movie. That doesn't sound like fluff.
All stories about adult characters in their teen years is fluff. Its just muppet babies in the SW universe, which makes it perfect for YA books.
Maybe they will make one later down the road. I think it depends on how comprehensive Rebel Rising is. If it's a complete biography up till she gets arrested with no gaps for other stories, then I'm going to guess that this's probably it as far as books are concerned. For what it's worth, the sneak peek starts with Jyn being taken to the prison camp the Rebels found her at before going back to when Saw found her as a little girl, so it might go all the way through.
Well, if the YA fluff piece takes away the chance for a real SW book about Jyn, that sucks but fits with Lucasfilm not caring about giving the RO characters any real effort.
That remains to be seen.
If its YA then its garbage, and fluff. There is no "maybe" about it.
Right, and then they'll do a sequel where the son realizes the love of his life murdered his father and tries to get some kind of revenge for the betrayal, but will feel conflicted about doing it, not to mention be unsure how he could, since there's no one alive! Angst, brooding, and more angst to keep things rolling!![]()
If they had even hinted at Krennic having a kid in the movie, then I'd say this is a literal description of the book's plot.
Seriously, though, I wouldn't worry about Jyn getting or wanting a boyfriend in the story. First of all, numerous sources have stated that being abandoned by her father and then by the man who adopted her left her with little capability to trust people, so I have a hard time imagining that working with a relationship. Also, for what it's worth, the Rogue One novelization did establish that during her teens a boy her age (a fellow Partisan) tried to kiss her. She didn't let him. So it doesn't sound like she was looking for companionship during the book's timeframe. I'm actually not sure she was ever looking for one. I know some people think that she and Cassian Andor were starting to fall for each other in the movie, but I didn't see that and the novelization didn't really suggest anything on her side of things.
For what it's worth, the blurb makes it sound more like the book will cover the events that lead to Saw cutting her lose to protect her or some other kind of problem rather than her love life.
Its a YA book. There will be romance. the only question is what YA heroine Jyn would be. Only two exist, Bella Swan or...Jennifer Lawrence (I don't know the Hunger Games heroine's name). All YA female protagonists fall into those categories. They'll probably make Jyn into jennifer Lawrence, unless they're completely incompetent (which, being a YA book, they might be). A teen angsty romance is almost assured.
I did think Outbound Flight was kind of weak, personally.
I forgot about that for a second. I thought it was ok, although probably my least favorite Zahn SW book.