After
three phases of The High Republic, Claudia Gray made me feel terrible
when a rock with absolutely no dialogue but so much characterization sacrifices
itself. Geode as an integral crew of the
Vessel has been in this publishing initiative since the beginning,
almost out of place in Star Wars as a franchise while being presented as
almost coming from the pen of the late great Douglas Adams. Gray’s decision to end the character in
self-sacrifice while being placed in the third act of Into the Light symbolizes
an end of the young adult line, the entire novel swerving to an ending where the
protagonists don’t win. Gray ends the
novel not on a downer, but a sense of growing up while the Nihil are still out
there and the publishing initiative is coming to an end. Geode’s death is a focusing of the novel to
the destruction of a Thornseed, an artefact of the Sith, that when destroyed indicates
a returning of the light to the galaxy.
The trouble there is that before this point, Gray had been building up
that Into the Light would be about undoing the blight that had been
spreading across the galaxy. To Gray’s
credit, there is very likely somebody higher up at Lucasfilm stopping her from
resolving that plot in this novel, but the ever present threat of the blight is
the drive behind the actions of the novel.
The Thornseed provides a last minute goal as it becomes clear that
destroying the blight is not going to be what this book does. That isn’t to say the Thornseed is not
interesting, it’s essentially an evil terraforming device that makes plants
evil which leads to some great scenes, it just feels like an extra addition pushing
the trajectory of Into the Light away.
Claudia
Gray, despite weakening the ending of the novel in this way, is still an
excellent writer when it comes to character work. Gray understands that the overarching story
is in fact winding down. Interestingly
there is a lot of development for Burryaga and the Wookiees as a culture,
examining how their experiences as Padawans to Jedi work differently. Like Geode, Wookiees not speaking English
means that there is not actually dialogue, but the planet Kashyyk being
afflicted with the blight is one of those turning points where the book tonally
becomes more real. The blight throughout
presents this larger than life threat, despite Marchion Ro wishing to show the
galaxy he has it under his control to position himself as political savior it
couldn’t be further from the truth. Watching
the Nihil slowly unravel themselves is particularly interesting, while Avon
Starros deals with the real fear that if the Jedi unravel her safety is in
danger, unknowingly being in a similar position to her mother. This is largely as another addition to the
idea of the galaxy being at war with something far bigger than itself. The Thornseed represents things becoming too
big, when it falls there is a sense of everything falling around it. Seeing the Nihil internally begin to fall apart
is one of those additions to the novel that create this sense of hope at its
core, especially when considering how much of this book is also focused on
Amadeo Azzazzo and Reath Silas, even if their respective character arcs while
continued in this novel are on the downward trajectory towards resolution. There is also the active effort to connect
the book to more familiar Star Wars ideas: the Sith get several mentions
throughout and there is something more present about the character of Yoda
different from other books in The High Republic.
Overall, Into
the Light while continuing to be good is a novel that reads as if something
is missing. The ending leaves you with
this question of if there should be more, not in a way of a forthcoming sequel,
but in a way that the ideas are gone.
The idea of the light returning as the villains become too big to keep their
empire going. It is a novel that is clearly
the resolution to much of what had been setup and for the young adult line
there is a satisfying conclusion for the characters even if the plot is still technically
going by the end. 7/10.






