Well, that's disappointing. I guess my (mostly joking, until now) conspiracy theory of Thrawn being ghost written by Filoni is more true then I thought. Well, at least the trainwreck will produce a (hopefully cathartic) rant about sellouts and how Filoni needs to go away. It looks like Zahn is basically done writing good books. It seems to happen to some good writers, eventually they just either stop giving a crap or just lose their writing ability. In my experience its been more common with comic book writers, but Zahn seems to be in that group.
I don't know. I'm partway through the book and it's been good so far. Certainly very much in line with Zahn's previous stuff.
Now, it might be less about him losing his writing ability and more about him being a sellout under the control of that hack Filoni, but the result is the same. The character of Thrawn is thoroughly a "Saturday morning cartoon" character, complete with being unable to kill a group of incompetent characters he should have defeated in his first appearance. Well, at least now I know there is no redemption for the character, so I can just ignore him instead of getting angrier and angrier.
In Zahn's own words (from the aforementioned interview):
He’s the same character. It’s the landscape around him — physical, political, and military — that changes. It was simply a matter of getting as much information of what he does and how he acts on Rebels and start back where I had last left him in the timeline with the “Mist Encounter” short story [originally published in the Star Wars Adventure Journal #7 in 1995], where he’s first found by the Empire during his exile, and kind of match those up."
When asked about how Thrawn was portrayed in the TV show:
I liked it! I think they did a great job with him. There were a lot of places early in the season where he let people go and let them have a small victory, because he plays the long game. And you saw the payoff where he identifies Ezra, through art, in the episode “Through Imperial Eyes,” and deduces from that who the spy is and proceeds to use that information to find the rebel base."
Spoilers for season ending:
Despite the fact that our heroes all get away [in the finale “Zero Hour”], that is a pretty small remnant of what they started with. I saw some reviews that said it was not much of a payoff. Oh, no! Thrawn pretty much destroyed everything capital ship-wise and a lot of the fighters. Our heroes got away, but it was by the skin of their teeth, and they didn’t take a lot of force with them. I think he had a very good success there, from his point of view.
I don't know, you don't have to like the TV show or anything, but the guy who created Thrawn has been constant in the opinion that the TV show perfectly captured his character and I have to agree with that. (For what it's worth, the novel itself is in line with the old novels as far as the characterization goes; it does seem written to appeal to both Legends and Rebels fans.)
On other book related talk, the public Library recently got two of the newer SW books, so even though I knew I'd hate them, I did check them out and look at them. Its a good thing they're library books, because if they weren't I would have legitimately chucked Lost Stars out the nearest window. I got about 15 pages before the whininess and YA cliches completely infuriated me. I think I actually got farther into Twilight (not much farther, but probably a good 5-10 pages). It was kind of impressive to completely hate a book from the very first page. I actually laughed at the whole "child with abusive parents" subplot because it was so pointless and badly done. Based on that book, no one should ever be allowed to give any old EU book shit ever again, because even the really bad old EU stuff was better written then what I managed to force myself to read of Lost Stars.
Never read Twilight. I will say that Lost Stars gets better the further in you go (where it starts doing Rozencrantz and Gildensturn stuff).
The other book is Ahsoka. It starts out on fake racist idiot Mandalore, which almost made me stop reading instantly.
Huh?
I'll give it a few more pages, but I'm pretty sure it will continue my current trend of disliking ever new canon book I've tried to read for awhile (so far its Aftermath 2, Twilight Company and Lost Stars all being dropped before the half way point).
I think it's one of the lesser ones, but not bad. If you don't like Ahsoka, it's going to be a tough sell.
When the first freaking Rebels tie in is still, so far, one of the only decent new canon books, I start to question what the point of them still making books is. So far, its three good books (Tarkin, Lords of the Sith and New Dawn) and a bunch of mediocre to terrible ones. The only books I still need to try are Heir to the Jedi, Dark Disciple and Catalyst (which are the last two remaining GA books, everything else is YA, the pointless novelizations or the last Aftermath book which will be just as terrible as the first two). Of those three, one has gotten critically panned, the next is based on an unused TCW script from after TCW went to shit and the last one is basically agreed to be a completely useless tie-in that adds nothing to Rogue One. Its basically the worst time since I've been alive to be a fan of non-movie SW stuff.
Heir to the Jedi was weak, Dark Disciple was good, and Catalyst adds a lot to Rogue One (two parts of one story, if you will). The YA market is great, but we don't agree on it. If you're not enjoying it, fair enough, but for me, we're in a golden age after the string of badness that Legends had at the end of the run.