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Sunday, February 18, 2024

Star Wars: Dark Force Rising by: Timothy Zahn

 

Let’s talk about the original Star Wars trilogy and its format.  Star Wars is one of the easiest examples of the three act structures: the first film is complete rising action while having its own three act structure within itself, Return of the Jedi is the big extended climax lifting the characters from the darkest point into success, and The Empire Strikes Back is the big second act with the major twist reveals and ending with the characters at their lowest point.  When Timothy Zahn was commissioned for his Star Wars trilogy, Heir to the Empire felt structurally similar to Star Wars, which isn’t a bad thing.  While there was an ending clearly with a sequel in mind there was also the sense that there could have at one point been an off-ramp while the immediate sequel, Dark Force Rising, follows the structure of The Empire Strikes Back almost to the letter including the final twist leading to a particularly harrowing final moment for the characters to reflect on where the New Republic could possibly be going.  Heir to the Empire as a novel was quite concerned with the nitty gritty of the politics of the New Republic while Luke Skywalker’s journey was a general uncertainty over reestablishing the Jedi Order.  Dark Force Rising sees Zahn put his focus inward on the characters as the general Republic is now aware of the greater extent Grand Admiral Thrawn poses to the galaxy and Luke has become more of an independent figure in proceedings.

 

Luke’s story arc in particular is one of two halves: for much of the first half he is paired with Lando Calrissian in basically a smuggler’s plot trying to find evidence as to who in the New Republic is a traitor.  This particular pairing of characters really shows Zahn’s mastery of who these characters are because the original trilogy rarely had Luke and Lando interact, and the brief interactions they did share were in group sequences in both The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi.  Zahn writes Luke with this respect for Lando’s attitude towards life and the universe that is separate from his relationship with Han Solo, who in essence is from the same character archetype as Lando.  It takes talent since a lesser writer would just attempt to graft the Han/Lando relationship onto Lando and Luke, something that Zahn does replicate when Lando and Han share scenes and a subplot after Luke goes on his larger plot for the bulk of the novel.  The rest of Luke’s plot is in large part reuniting with Mara Jade who has been struggling with her preconceived notions of the Empire and being generally used by others.  What becomes especially interesting is that Dark Force Rising as a title is double meaning, it is in one aspect a reference to Thrawn’s forces rising, but there is also a legendary fleet of 200 Dreadnaught class cruisers called the Dark Force.  The fleet itself is one of those McGuffins that leads to the last lines of the novel being incredibly foreboding for what is to come, ending after a climax but a climax that also ends without total resolution.

 


The other major plotline of the novel involves an extension of Leia’s plotline from Heir to the Empire.  Zahn is clearly interested in exploring Leia’s political nature, continuing the idea that she could represent a Lady Vader and successor to her father.  Luke is the one always afraid of falling to the Dark Side of the Force, and with good reason he is sent to an insane Jedi in this novel, but Leia’s plotline has her actively working for a group that the Empire had both repressed and kept under a form of codependency in the Noghri.  The Noghri were a part of Heir to the Empire, but here Zahn explores their culture particularly well as Leia uses much of the charm and cunning to convince them of the righteousness of the New Republic.  While it’s a plotline that takes over, it does have a slight problem in recapping the events of Heir to the Empire, but outside of that it also ends up being one of the most compelling plotlines of the trilogy thus far.  It’s also interesting that Dark Force Rising actually doesn’t have Thrawn appear as often as he did in Heir to the Empire, something that isn’t a problem, Zahn’s novel is compelling without his presence since when off-page there is also a sense of menace when he does appear.

 

Overall, Dark Force Rising is definitely the middle leg of a trilogy for better and for worse, the ending being mostly satisfactory but also ending on a wham line.  Zahn has developed his prose and sense of the world (Chewbacca’s dialogue isn’t just written out in bracketed English for example), and the character pairings are a particular delight.  This, however, in places feels like a book that could improve or be made worse by the quality of the conclusion to the trilogy which for me ends up slightly holding it back from being stronger than the first.  8/10.

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