Razor's Edge (Empire and Rebellion #1) by Martha Wells
Synopsis: Times are desperate for
the Rebel Alliance. Harassment by the Empire and a shortage of vital
supplies are hindering completion of a new secret base on the ice planet
Hoth. So when Mid Rim merchants offer much-needed materials for sale,
Princess Leia Organa and Han Solo lead an Alliance delegation to
negotiate a deal.
But when treachery forces the rebel ship to
flee into territory controlled by pirates, Leia makes a shocking
discovery: the fierce marauders come from Leia’s homeworld of Alderaan,
recently destroyed by the Death Star. These refugees have turned to
pillaging and plundering to survive—and they are in debt to a pirate
armada, which will gladly ransom the princess to the vengeful Empire . .
. if they find out her true identity.
Struggling with intense
feelings of guilt, loyalty, and betrayal, Leia is determined to help her
wayward kinspeople, even as Imperial forces are closing in on her own
crippled ship. Trapped between lethal cutthroats and brutal oppressors,
Leia and Han, along with Luke, Chewbacca, and a battle-ready crew, must
defy death—or embrace it—to keep the rebellion alive.
Review: This was a very traditional and familiar Star Wars story. While this was
good in some ways, such as making it familiar and fitting to the Star
Wars universe it also made it lacking in originality. Almost every plot
point I had seen in one Star Wars story or another.
While it is
set between A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back, it does very little to
connect the two movies, there are some references the Death Star and
talk about plans for Echo Base but these instances are few and far
between, and the story could have almost been set at any point in the
Rebellion Era.
The cast of characters from the movies were
portrayed well and were fitting for their personalities at this point in
their journey. The story focuses mostly on Han and Leia and their
underlying attraction and tension came across well. Leia is especially
well written, she is strong on the surface but has self doubt, fears and
guilt over what she has gone through. Chewie, Luke and Threepio also
appeared a little in the story and their personalities were on target,
Threepio provided some comical moments.
The main cast of good
characters were a little to perfect however, they were always able to
come up with plans that either worked perfectly or they could alter on
the fly to succeed. They also were always able to correctly interpret
events and what others were planning even it was unrealistic for them to
do so due to a lack of information.
The rest of the cast of good
characters was okay but nothing special, I would have liked to have
seen more played with the Alderaanion pirates and what they had been up
to.
The cast of evil characters was fairly weak and they never
really felt like a threat. The danger from the pirate leader was
undermined by constant reminders of how everyone working for her was
unhappy and seemed ready to betray her as soon as the situation
presented itself. The commander of the imperial vessel also never seemed
dangerous, he had a fairly weak spacecraft, he wasn’t a particularly
intelligent commander or tactician and didn’t have and powers that the
characters would need to be scared of.
Overall this was an okay
Star Wars story, but if you have read many before you will probably be
very familiar with the plot and find it predictable. The characters from
the movies were well portrayed but the rest of the cast I found
lacking.
In full disclosure I won this book in a Goodreads giveaway.
Rating: ***