Shield of Lies (Star Wars: The Black Fleet Crisis Deries)

by Michael P. Kube-McDowell

1996

Status

Available

Publication

Del Rey (1996), Edition: 1st, 338 pages

Description

As Leia must deal with a new threat to thenbsp;nbsp;fragile alliance that binds the New Republic, Landonbsp;nbsp;becomes a prisoner aboard a runaway spacecraft ofnbsp;nbsp;unknown origin. The ship is following an unstoppablenbsp;nbsp;path to its homeworld, destroyed by Imperialnbsp;nbsp;forces. Luke continues his quest to learn more aboutnbsp;nbsp;his mother among the Fallanassi, where his everynbsp;nbsp;belief about the use of the Force is about to benbsp;nbsp;challenged. And while Leia ponders a diplomaticnbsp;nbsp;solution to the aggression of the fierce Yevetha race,nbsp;nbsp;Han pilots a spy ship into the heart of Yevethannbsp;nbsp;space and finds himself a hostage on one of thenbsp;nbsp;vast fleet of warships under the command of anbsp;nbsp;ruthless leader.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member ayla.stein
Leia is extremely weak and irritating in these series. While I'm enjoying the overall story, I'd appreciate it more if Kube-McDowell knew how to write women well.
LibraryThing member Stevil2001
There are probably lots of Star Wars novels that follow three (or more) groups of characters having adventures in different parts of the galaxy. This is, as far as I know, the only one to admit that they are so unrelated that instead of bouncing from focal character to focal character, the book
Show More
handles each character in one go. Of the book's 340 pages, the first 100 are in a section called "I. Lando," the next 100, "II. Luke," and the last 140 are "III. Leia." I can kind of imagine why you might want to do this-- even though the stories are happening simultaneously, they impact each other minimally at best-- but it has a negative effect. Jumping from plot to plot gives your story an (admittedly, artificial) energy, while sticking with each for a long stretch highlights just how little happens in it.

The Lando section was my favorite, but that maybe says more about how much I didn't like the other ones than how much I liked it. I mean, Lando continues to be the only interesting and active protagonist in this series, and reading about him at work is always enjoyable: I like how Kube-McDowell shows his slippery gambling mind in action. His repartee with Lobot is nice, Kube-McDowell has a good handle on the droids, and the mystery unfolds reasonably well: except that it's sooooo slooooow. I would be hard-pressed to explain how Kube-McDowell stretches wandering around a spaceship to 100 pages.

Luke's part was my least favorite. His search for his mother with Akanah has the potential to be interesting from a character perspective (even if we know that, as this book was released pre-Revenge of the Sith, he can never actually find her) but instead we are presented with the world's slowest search, accompanied by Akanah moralizing at Luke a lot. And many of the seeds for the Jedi pacifist morality that ruined the early New Jedi Order books were apparently sown here.

Finally, there's Leia's part, which continues the implausibly out-of-character depiction of her from Book One. Except that, while there she was making bad decisions, here she decides to make no decisions. Again, it's hard to account for how Leia constantly not making up her mind about things can somehow be made to last 140 pages. There's potentially something interesting here, about how you transition from being a group of terrorists to being a functioning state: as Rebels, Leia and company could attack whoever they needed to get the job done; as the New Republic, they don't have that luxury. But whatever is interesting here is buried, very deep. Though I did like the idea that the government of the New Republic has to be purposefully inefficient, because of the fear of the Emperor. (Kube-McDowell was right in 1996 about the fact that Palpatine would assume power by legitimate means.)

Kube-McDowell write good space battle scenes-- there are a couple here featuring the Fifth Fleet, as well as the one that opens Before the Storm-- with the choreography, logistics, and tactics well worked out, but his insistence on political realism undermines them, as none of our protagonists participate in them, all being back on Coruscant. Sure, that makes sense, but this is Star Wars, and these space battles would be ten times as good if someone I cared about was in them. Weirdly, the pivotal action scene that closes the book, the kidnapping of Han Solo, is over in about half a page, and none of it is seen from Han's perspective.

There is one saving grace to the whole Leia plot: Admiral Ackbar. Ackbar is a total badass here, the only character who knows what needs to be done and does it. The scenes where he befriends Plat Mallar, the only survivor of a genocidal Yevethan attack on the planet Polneye, as he recovers and then decides to enlist in the New Republic Navy, are a real highlight of the book, one of its few.

One final observation: "Leia was able to hold the meeting down to two hours" proves that Star Wars is fantasy if nothing else does.
Show Less
LibraryThing member wealhtheowwylfing
Luke continues to learn about his mother's people, all of which will be completely ignored when the prequel films are made. I think one of my favorite non-canon characters, Winter, gets a few good scenes in this story.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1996-08-01

Physical description

6.88 inches

ISBN

0553572776 / 9780553572773

Barcode

1603382
Page: 0.2225 seconds