Friday, October 13, 2023

Star Wars: The High Republic: Into the Dark by: Claudia Gray

 

For my second foray into the Star Wars expanded universe, while Light of the Jedi did not entirely work for me, the setting of the High Republic was intriguing enough to continue in that era.  Into the Dark is the second novel released for the setting in the first phase, though the first to be aimed at the young adult audience from writer Claudia Gray, a veteran of the Star Wars novels according to Wikipedia.  Gray being a veteran novelist actually greatly assists in bringing Into the Dark into focus as a novel, focusing on a small group of characters in the aftermath of the Great Disaster, at least after a few chapters of introduction.  Now Gray does fall into the trap of including a prologue that isn’t actually a prologue but a first chapter in disguise which gave me a slight pause for continuing the book, but outside of this misstep and the odd placement of flashback interludes as part of chapters instead of their own little side story in between chapters, Into the Dark moves along at a wonderful pace.  Gray is clearly interested in expanding on the general themes of light and dark with Star Wars and the true potential for at least some sort of a shade of gray (or at least to appropriate a Terry Pratchett idea, white that’s got a bit grubby).  Speaking of Pratchett, Gray feels largely inspired by Pratchett for the way some of the aliens are treated in this book, on a ship that becomes the protagonist’s primary transportation (at least initially) there is a rock called Geode that purports to be sentient which is just treated as this thing that might be certifiably insane which just adds this little layer of limits to the universe that has telepathic space wizards as protagonists.

 

Reath Silas is the protagonist of Into the Dark and he is kind of the perfect young adult protagonist for a novel.  He’s a Padawan with at least some training under Jedi Master Jora Malli, so there is a sense of understanding of the basics of the Force, and is set up as more of an introverted person.  While Reath is ready to commit himself to becoming a Jedi and learning, his introverted personality allows an exploration of other functions Jedi can fill in the world, Reath being suited to archival work.  There is this metaphor throughout the book of asking why a Jedi wouldn’t cross the Kyber crystal alone, while one of the things that makes this clearly a young adult novel with the obvious answer that the Jedi are all different and need one another revealed at the resolution of the book, but it’s a fitting metaphor to set Reath on his journey.  The setting for thee large part of the novel is an abandoned space station where refugees from the Great Disaster have found themselves, a space station inhabited by gardening droids that take quite the drastic action to those that would destroy the plants.  Reath’s journey is essentially learning to lead and react to situations using his own wits and training for his own.  Sure it’s another play on the hero’s journey which is part and parcel for Star Wars, but it’s done quite well.  Eventually the Nihil get involved, setup in Light of the Jedi as the larger antagonists of this High Republic period, as well as the plant-like Drengir escaping from their prison on the station and torturing the Jedi who was originally Padawan to Jora, Dez Rydan.

 

Gray does a surprisingly nuanced job at depicting the torture and its after effects quite well.  Dez’s stance in the light is directly challenged due to the torture, he ends the novel as needing to recover which will take a long time.  Now this is also represented partially through applicability of the Force as a concept representing one’s mental state, but it’s a nice metaphor to tackle a subject like this.  Gray spends quite a bit of time in the novel questioning the Jedi tenants of not making connections of love and not allowing yourself to mourn, actively contradicting the inherent connections of a master/apprentice relationship.  Reath has to deal with the death of his master, something that shakes his person to his very foundations.  Dez, Jora’s first apprentice, also has to undergo this after being tortured.  The Jedi Council’s reaction to Reath’s decisions are surprisingly measured and allow him to realize the correct path to take in the end, still being in the light but perhaps understanding some of the actual flaws.  These are the clear themes that were present in The Last Jedi that for whatever reason didn’t connect well with people, so Gray writes them to perhaps be more obvious than Johnson’s film.  The interlude sequences pop up throughout the novel to further bolster this theme, though they are slightly choppy due to the formatting being in the middle of chapters and not as their own interludes.  Cohmac and Orla who are the main characters of the interludes are great characters, especially with how they dovetail into the main events of the novel, which ends with some different threads for future stories.

 

Overall, Into the Dark tells a story archetype that everybody has experienced before, but it does it quite well.  Claudia Gray’s prose is light and the characterization is especially strong in reveling in the universe of Star Wars (though at times it expects you to know more of the lore of different species in place of descriptors for potential newcomers).  Some of the twists are perhaps a touch too obvious and there are those small formatting things that feel more like publisher’s requests, but it’s a book that I had a lot of fun with and hope Gray gets the chance to continue with many of these characters in particular.  7.5/10.

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