It's not labeled "YA" because it's not a YA book
Wrong on all accounts, esp. what Kanan was doing before the TV show and the murder.
I can obviously only theorize about what happens, but I don't see the book that serves as a prequel to a show with a younger audience then TCW being particularly intense (or good, but that's a different issue). That would be like making a He-Man book in the style of Game of Thrones. Regardless, if it has Rebels characters its either a YA book or a poorly written, dumbed-down book that they just didn't bother labeling YA because they wanted older people to buy it. Anything else wouldn't feature characters from a show for young kids.
It's not as tall, to be sure, but clocks in at 551 pages. Here's a comparison with other Star Wars hardcovers:
- TMP novelization: 324
- Truce at Bakura: 311
- A New Dawn: 383
- TFA novelization: 260
- Catalyst: 352
- Vision of the Future: 692
- Choices of One: 355
Lost Stars is not only comparable in length to a lot of the general audience novels, but is actually longer than most. (For the record, a YA hardcover with similar dimeonsions, Black Widow: Forever Red, clocks in at 401 pages, so it's longer than even the norm in it's genre.)
As far as the complexity goes, it's as complex as any other general audience book in the series.
Well, size can be variable I suppose, and kids books can be pretty long. Thinking about it, while I've obviously never read them the Twilight books look pretty huge. I obviously disagree about the complexity of a YA book compared to a general audience book, though. If it was complex, or written for people over 13-15, it wouldn't be a YA book.
Since you admit you don't read them, I'm not sure how qualified you are on that assessment.
Its an obvious thing. YA books are inferior to general audience books, especially in SW. I have actually read some of the old EU kid books (especially back when I was a kid), and they were definitely not at the level of the General audience books. The same goes for the current YA books. If they were as good as the general audience books, they wouldn't be YA books. Being a YA book automatically makes them inferior, its a style designed to not be as good as a general audience book.
The latter are usually retellings of snippets of the movies (which are canon), and the LucasFilm Story Group disagrees with you on the former.
The story group also disagrees with me about Mandalorians, but I still don't acknowledge the pacifist mandalorians or Sabine's mandalorians as being part of the SW Universe. If I don't like something they say is canon, and the thing in question doesn't effect the movies or the vast majority of books, I feel safe in just ignoring it when it comes to canon. I don't particularly like or agree with what the Story Group says (any group that allows Rebels to exist is either being heavily controlled by Disney executives or just bad at their jobs). That said, even the Story Group wouldn't have any important canon stuff happen in books for kids.
All books exist to get people to buy them, and the target audience has little to do with whether the book is good or not. A lot of classics are technically kids books.
There are classic kid's books. They're classics in that a lot of kids read them and then the kids of those kids read them. That doesn't necessarily make them good books, and definitely doesn't make them superior to general audience books.
As C.S. Lewis put it: “A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children's story in the slightest.” On top of that, a lot of the modern YA and similar-age-targeted Star Wars books have been getting a lot of praise from adult reviewers for being stuff that adults can enjoy right alongside the kids.
Its fine if people like the YA books. I like Power Rangers, and its target demographic is in the 5-10 year old range. But, that doesn't change my opinion on the YA SW books, or YA books in general. Some Star Wars fans love everything with the SW name attached, or at least lower their standards with Star Wars. I'm sure the SW YA books are decent for YA books, but they don't match the general audience books.
Not all of them have fake swearing and no sex (Lost Stars, in fact, has both real swear words and a sexual relationship, albeit not described in graphic detail).
It depends on what you consider swearing. I don't really consider words like "damn" or "hell", those can basically be said on kids shows nowadays. I suppose you might get a s*^t or c%^p, or a "bastard", but its not like you'll see the F word or anything. As for a "sexual encounter", I mean they're alluded to and you can infer them (The Solo's and Skywalker's in the old EU didn't get their kids from a stork), but I seriously don't remember any really specific sex scene in a Star Wars book. In the end the books will never be harsher then the book equivalent of PG-13, which I support. What makes the book a "general audience" book is the complexity of story and characters, and having writing that is for a general audience and not written for kids/teens specifically. The actual content when it comes to violence, swaering,etc might not be that different between types of books considering how its Star Wars and you're (thankfully) not getting SW books that try to be Game of Thrones or stuff like that.