Hey all. I think I should clarify something. I'm a Star Wars fan as is we all are. I guess I should apologize to Fireproof and Reverend. Im not here to offend anyone or make enemies.
But, having said that Im not defending the EU. Some good old authors of the old Star Wars series are gone, and had no choice or input in this LEGENDS label. For example, Brian Daley and Ann Crispin. Interestingly one from the Del Rey era and another from the Bantam era.
Fair enough. While I do think Legends was worth the while when it was around and still has material of value, I will be the first to agree that there were plenty bad things about it and not all of it has ages well.
Not to be disparaging to anyone, but specifically the Corellian series about the Han Solo family was a jumbled mess and a waste. The Black Fleet Crisis was junk. None of those books had any impact.
Personally, I thought the Corellian books were okay (and some of the stuff invented for them was integrated into future novels, Centerpoint Station being the big one). Never like Black Fleet myself, even if I liked the idea on paper.
Sadly the amazing Star Trek writers were GREAT Star Trek writers but poor Star Wars writers. Anyone know why? What when wrong with the Crystal Star?
Back luck of the draw? Not sure about Crystal Star either, but I didn't like that one, either.
Is it just the way I see it but are the newest Star Wars books since 2014 aimed more as a theme about being self contained and about one character or incident? Asking?
That's a good rule of thumb. Some do build off each other, and there are characters who pop up a lot, but yeah, it's a lot of standalone stories and movie prequels.
Its weird we criticize the past, but to be honest if Zahn's first Thrawn series hadnt succeeded in 1991 wouldnt the books be in a different place?
Seeing the Heir to the Empire hardcover on a shelf in Waldenbooks was such a shock for me and no even seeing or hearing anything about it was an INCREDIBLE moment as a Star Wars fan. I couldnt buy it and read it fast enough.
That was before my time, but those books were really good, IMHO, and did impact everything going forward in one way or another.
I wished the Thrawn trilogy wasnt redone. The new covers look cheap.
I personally like the new covers better then the originals, but that's just me.
But Luuke was a mistake and cringe worthy.
I can see the point. I will concede that the cloning stuff in the books has not aged well from either a science or franchise perspective and that a lot of stuff with that character was needlessly silly.
To let everyone know, it wasnt until 1996 with the West End RPG Star Wars Shadows of the Empire Sourcebook, that had a huge disclaimer on the copyright page that said paraphrasing "If George Lucas decides to do any future stories after ROTJ that it would be independent of any author or story printed." I think then certain stories and books went downhill even more, because authors realized that they no impact on the movies or saga whatsoever. I'm torn on if that disclaimer should have been done at all.
Funny, I thought the original print of
Heir to the Empire had one, too (I don't have a copy of that and am going off hearsay). I'm not sure that the authors slacked off since they realized the books weren't going to impact the movies (they did in a few cases, for one and it is common sense going into the job anyways). Besides, there were those years where the tie-ins were the only driving narrative in the franchise, so they were, for all intents and purposes, shaping the franchise in those moments.
As to whether those disclaimers should've been in the books in the first place, I personally wonder how the fanbase of them would've reacted to the reboot had all the books kept printing those at the beginning.
I think you're confusing the word canon with "continuity". They're not interchangeable. The latter can be loose and flexible, the former cannot be. The latter deals with minutia, small details. While the former refers mostly to complete chunks of material as a whole.
For example, the trailer for the upcoming final season of The Clone Wars shows Ahsoka with her old lightsabers but now with blue blades instead of their usual green. The previously published novel 'Ahsoka' features a flashback to what's presumably the immediate aftermath of the above depicted events and the sabers are explicitly described as being green. So which is canon? They both are, it's just that production realities have introduced a minor continuity error. It doesn't matter to the plot, narrative or trajectory of character arcs, so the story as a whole is unaffected. That's not flexible canon, it's rigid canon, with flexible continuity, just as if you see a boom mic shadow in one shot or minor props appear to teleport in and out of existence between shot because the editor used takes from different days of filming. It's minutia, thus not an matter of canon.
To give a different kind of example: in 'The Last Jedi' we see three contextually different version's of Luke's confrontation with Ben, but which is canon? Well, they're all part of the narrative so all of those accounts are canon. As to which one actually, objectively happened: it doesn't matter. This isn't a continuity problem, those accounts are all real because they matter to the person who's perspective it's being told from and those contradictions are in and of themselves part of the narrative and thus part of the canon.
Maybe?