Essay sample library > Last Shot (Star Wars): A Han and Lando Novel

Last Shot (Star Wars): A Han and Lando Novel

2023-03-11 12:33:29

Books are divided into three different periods. "Gifts", when Han and Leia were new parents, after the return of the Jedi between the aftermath of novels and pedigree novels, the empire was defeated, but before the primary threat was known. After that, it jumped 10 years before Solo movie and A New Hope event, and then five years ago. This story basically includes a gang from Han and Lando who was threatening their gifts with a plan he worked for decades.

In general, this book is fine, but it is not very good. The best part for me is to understand that Han is afraid of being a father (to some extent a husband). In this book we do not really understand his relationship with Ben (he is still a child in the novel) but it implies where the relationship between them may not work doing. It also provides insight into the return of Jedi to Han and Land and how it affects Lang's Han betrayal in Empire strikes.

The main story of this novel is okay, but there is nothing worth noticing. Among the things I mentioned above, the best part of everything else in the novel is Ewok Slicer and Anti-Jar Jar Binks Gangan. And they have a wonderful line like "Stop using Meesa". Otherwise, the plot actually tries to reveal and block the threat to the galaxy, and this threat does not include the empire or its remnants in any way. If you collect Canon novels you buy, it is possible to do any positive or negative comment. For Canon's novel, I think it is a mediator. It is as good as those of the Aftermath series, but it is not as great as the main stories of novels (in my opinion) like Dark Disciple, New Dawn, Frontline II, or Leia, Ashoka, Lost Stars. But this is totally subjective

It is not a true novel, but if it is good at least once, I will say that I have to read it over and over again. It reads very fast and fills the gap between the original trilogy and the new trilogy.

The origins of Han Solo are often expressed in Expanded Universe novels, but they are no longer classical anymore, but the book Last Shot of the new Star Wars of Daniel José Older has arrived. Look at the young days of Han Solo and Lando Calrissian, and more mature in the two adventures before and after the next movie. It's fun and easy to read, humor, Ewok's hack, furious robot, and exciting battle scenes, Han and Lando, have a lot from scratch to scratch when trying to track enemies that have been forgotten for a long time. But this book is a very unique reading. How older people divide the story into four different timelines, using this technique to balance the younger and reckless Han and Rando lives, and they grow. The older man's life

This is the reason why Ald's novel clearly shows the two directions in which Han (and to a certain extent Rando) was drawn in, so it got very interesting. Star Wars has traditionally resisted forms related books, but the performance of the elderly is very striking in stories spanning multiple time series: the main content of the story is two years after Endor's battle And was developed by Hanhe. The story of Rando bounced back 10 years ago (including Solo) and got a mysterious package. The villain was called Fryzen Gor and its main story happened 20 years ago.