main
side
curve
  1. In Memory of LAJ_FETT: Please share your remembrances and condolences HERE

Books The High Republic: The Fallen Star by Claudia Gray

Discussion in 'Literature' started by Todd the Jedi , Jul 23, 2021.

  1. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    Yeah but at least it'll be the new kids complaining about new things

    As i said once this is all said and done no one will care about this choice since they'll have the full story and they'll complain about something else...Most likely how it ended.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 15, 2022
  2. Jedi Ben

    Jedi Ben Chosen One star 9

    Registered:
    Jul 19, 1999
    How do you know who is complaining about anything online?

    Even if someone is unhappy about a SW story, chances are good they'll be enjoying another one or few. You're attaching too much significance to the complaints in the overall picture.
     
  3. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    Because i spend A LOT of time on social media online since i have nothing better to do with myself.

    And I have discovered fandom in general is mostly petty complaints and pettiness.
     
  4. Jedi Ben

    Jedi Ben Chosen One star 9

    Registered:
    Jul 19, 1999
    That's your fault for hanging around virual Mos Eisley then!
     
  5. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    Well when your disabled, board and in need of social interaction and have no one around the house...that's all i got...Sometimes the deck of life throws at you is a harsh one.
     
  6. Jedi Ben

    Jedi Ben Chosen One star 9

    Registered:
    Jul 19, 1999
    What's your disability Jid? PM if you prefer, but it is genuine curiosity and interest on my part.

    I get a lot of value from online activity, but being selective about where is key.

    It's very easy to find the traditional, negative internet but does that do anyone any good? There is a quieter, more positive version lurking in the background, even in the likes of Twitter.
     
    Last edited: Jan 15, 2022
    my kind of scum likes this.
  7. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    I did since i didn't wanna derail the thread :)
     
    Jedi Ben likes this.
  8. Ginkasa

    Ginkasa Jedi Grand Master star 3

    Registered:
    Jun 13, 2002
    I need to look into doing that. I don't want to subscribe to a magazine just for the short stories and I kind of resent having something apparently pivotal revealed in a story that is less accessible, but through the library is a decent option.
     
  9. Jedi Ben

    Jedi Ben Chosen One star 9

    Registered:
    Jul 19, 1999
    What are the Insider HR stories covering?
     
  10. Chris_Fives

    Chris_Fives Jedi Master star 3

    Registered:
    Apr 16, 2015
    I'm in the middle of the book for now and it is another great read... Maybe a bit too quick jumps between characters but enjoying it so far.
    Overall I really dig the High Republic era and cannot wait for more content:D
     
    Ghost, Jedi Ben and JediFett10 like this.
  11. AvarandElzarsittininatree

    AvarandElzarsittininatree Jedi Master star 4

    Registered:
    Nov 13, 2021
    Yeah that is definitely something that could be frustrating to readers is how many point of view characters there were (especially considering if you haven't read the YA novels as well you'd have no idea who half the view point characters were).

    Also the book didn't do the best job showing when a viewpoint was changing. There were several instances while reading the book I missed the viewpoint change and things stopped making sense until I realized that I was reading through the eyes of a different character now.
     
    Last edited: Jan 18, 2022
    Chris_Fives and Jedi Ben like this.
  12. LAJ_FETT

    LAJ_FETT Tech Admin (2007-2023) - She Held Us Together star 10 VIP - Former Mod/RSA

    Registered:
    May 25, 2002
    My copy is currently on an Amazon UK van along with a few other books.
     
  13. Senpezeco

    Senpezeco Jedi Grand Master star 4

    Registered:
    Apr 27, 2014
    SYFY posted a spoiler-y interview with Claudia Gray. I underlined some bits that interested me:

    By the end of the book, Starlight Beacon is no more. Was it always marked for destruction?

    I'm afraid so, yes. I don't think I'm giving anything away there too much, but yes, that was always, or at least from a fairly early stage, part of our master planning.

    You really put the reader in the midst of the disaster as it's unfolding, and the anxiety becomes very real. How did you manage to craft that slow burn?

    My whole life I've been a fan of the great '60s and '70s disaster movies. The number one for me is The Poseidon Adventure. That's one of my top ten films, and sometimes I find it hard to put a finger on exactly why. There are things about it that are really campy and of course, it does get at one of the fundamental questions of human existence, which is: What would I do if my cruise ship turned upside down? But those movies, they're not slow paced, but they make it very immediate because there are all these little crises within the huge crisis and you don't get that same feeling if you're not in it with the people and actually experiencing them like, “okay, that chance is gone. Okay, that didn't work.”

    I read a book years ago that was talking about worst-case scenarios and how people think they will react in an emergency situation usually has almost no relationship to how they will act, unless you've been in at least one major emergency before, then you tend to be able to keep your head a little bit more. But one thing that I really remember from that book, they said, "People don't panic when they know they're trapped. They panic when they think they're trapped.”

    Promotional artwork made it clear that the whole thing was going down, but you made me hold out hope for the lower half.

    You were meant to.

    Adding to the anxiety was the insane dread that you conjured with the Leveler, which I find so much more worrying than the Nihil. I felt my own anxieties amplify when the Jedi were dealing with it. Was that at all intentional or am I reading way too much into that?

    I would say that over the last almost two years, all of us have gotten really well acquainted with our anxiety, even if we weren't before, which I certainly was. But yes, the Leveler… I can't get into spoilers or anything, but clearly what you fear is part of what it pulls upon. That's as much as I can say.

    You focus on the characters in the lower section of the disaster, and don’t really get into what is happening in the top section. Was that a deal made with your fellow writers?

    Yes. Cavan and I had to work that out because the ending of his comic run was meant to feature the death of Starlight, and my book was meant to feature the death of Starlight. And it became very apparent to us that there's no way to do that coherently without a lot of repetition that readers both do not want, unless we did something that divided the station. That way we were able to have two different narratives going on. We felt it really does amp up the tension.

    All of a sudden, half of the resources you had you can't get to. Half of the personnel you thought you would call on, you can't call on them. You're having to wonder what happened to your friend or your ship or whatever else is going on. So even though it was for us — as writers — a very convenient device, I also think it's a really valid way to inject more tension into that story.

    Which character had you not written before that you enjoyed writing the most?

    It was Stellan [Gios] actually, which to some extent surprised me because he was not one of the characters I'd felt most connected to, but because when I see oh, this person's meant to me the ideal of something, then I'm always like, well, the thing that isn't the ideal is usually a little more interesting, but then you start to say, okay, what's it like to have everybody looking at you and saying, you're the ideal? What expectations does that create? Don't you feel like you're on a pedestal and if you move an inch in any direction, all of a sudden you're going to tumble off it? And I think Stellan had gotten to a place where he was letting those expectations define his path a little bit.

    That’s so interesting because I liked and appreciated Stellan before, but he wasn't one of my favorites. This book made me love him and also identify with him.

    Well, that's great. That's great.

    A big part of that was his final line, “I know who I am”, which is so beautiful and so incredibly Star Wars. Can you speak to just how you crafted that line?

    It rose very naturally. Once I was able to streamline his story… because in the earliest stages of working on this book, Cavan and I were still figuring out what we needed, he was still editing The Rising Storm. Once I was finally in a place where I was able to go, "this is his arc, this is what he's going to do," that came very naturally out of it. He begins in a place where he's recognizing that his identity has become something very divorced from his inner self. And by the end of the book, those things are united again.

    What happens to him, and the double meaning of the title, lead me to wonder if he was always marked for death along with the station.

    He was not. No. In fact, he survived the first draft. I don't know if I should admit that, but it wasn't working and Stellan's story wasn't working. I realized he has to make a bigger sacrifice for that story to land the way it's supposed to.
    And for the station's death, as much as we love the station, and as much as Starlight Beacon is a symbol, you don't feel it emotionally the way you feel a character. You just don't.

    And I was like, it's not going to land, no puns intended, the way it should land. This event isn't going to feel the way it should feel unless we have a sacrifice on this level. And it was really something we talked about a lot because there were already, there's a death count in the Wave 3 of these Phase 1 books. So it was not a thing we did lightly at all. I really felt that was a thing it absolutely needed. And I do think it makes the book. Another fun fact, I don't even know if I should be telling you this. It was named The Fallen Star before we knew that Stellan would die. So it didn't get the double meaning until later.

    He’s hardly the only casualty in this book. You made me love Orla Jareni in Into the Dark and now she’s dead. Was that a difficult choice? Will we ever get the tale of her history with Stellan?

    It was a difficult choice. She's a character I enjoyed writing a lot and we had a lot of fun with, but she was somebody who was marked from an early stage. It's a good sign, you should not care about a character that gets killed off. As a writer, your job is to make it really hard on you to do it. In terms of getting back to her and Stellan, I don't know whether they'll ever do that. I hope so. I think that would be awesome. I know there's a lot of appetite out there in the fandom for getting some backstory with Avar, Elzar, and Stellan, and it wouldn't surprise me a bit if Orla were to show up in part of that. As far as I know, nothing's planned right now.

    You left the fate of Burryaga up in the air. I know you love Wookiees.

    Oh, I do.

    We're not going to know whether he’s alive or dead for at least a year, probably more. You had to have known what you were doing with that.

    Yeah. I mean, again, I don't know if I should be admitting this, there was some pressure from way up higher, “oh, don't we need a lot of unknown outcomes?” I was like, “no, we do not.” People don't know the outcome and it's going to be a little while before we get into Phase 3. We can only have one big question mark, and I decided Burryaga is somebody we all love and we all care about.


    And also, it really played well, I think with Bell's story in this, which is him rising up from all this loss that he's already endured and he takes another couple hits in this book. But I think you really see him come into his own so much more confidently. And he has a win. Bell Zettifar needed a win. And so at the end, he isn't crushed, he's like, “I'm going to find Burryaga, if there's any way he's alive, I'm going out there to find him.” He's going to go in there and fight.

    At what point is the council just going to make Bell Zettifar a Jedi Knight, whether he wants it or not?

    I would assume that moment is not that far away, but I don't actually know. Phase 3 is not yet more than a twinkle in our eyes. We have some ideas of what's going to happen, but the exact details of when and what, that's still going to get hammered out. We know the biggest things, but now I'm really getting to the zone, so I'm going to shut up now.

    Speaking of phases, a big announcement happened recently that Phase 2 will go 150 years into the past.

    That was always part of it from the very, very earliest stages. We always knew that Phase 2 was going to be going back in time.
    And it is a risk. We talked about this, too. It was like, we've just asked everybody to invest in this. And now we want to go back and do more. But I think when people see Phase 2, and they see what's being set up and the ways in which that era and that mood are different, I think they're really going to enjoy that adventure. And they're going to learn a lot that is going to be very vital in Phase 3.

    Towards the end of the book, we see many civilian ships show up to try and help save Starlight. We see that the phrase “We are all the Republic” is more than just a nice saying. Do you think that kind of unity is possible in our real world, or is it only the stuff of fantasy worlds like Star Wars?

    Oh. I do not know. I will say, we've seen examples of unity in the past… while there's never been one point in time where absolutely everybody in this huge group agreed on everything. That's just not natural, but you've seen unity in the past. And while we may be far from it right now, that doesn't mean it's an impossible thing.
     
    Last edited: Jan 18, 2022
  14. AusStig

    AusStig Force Ghost star 5

    Registered:
    Feb 3, 2010
    Thanks

    Cool so sounds like all phase 2 will be in the past. All momentum is dead and it will be years before we get answers. I am disappointed they don't have an outline for the ending yet. I like her, but this info doesn't fill me with hope.
     
    Last edited: Jan 18, 2022
    Jedi Ben likes this.
  15. AvarandElzarsittininatree

    AvarandElzarsittininatree Jedi Master star 4

    Registered:
    Nov 13, 2021
    Basically it's the way most everything is created. They know the rough outline and the major plot points but how everything gets to that point is developed along the way.
     
  16. Senpezeco

    Senpezeco Jedi Grand Master star 4

    Registered:
    Apr 27, 2014
    Yeah, I wouldn't worry too much about that part. From it I got the impression that they *do* have a skeleton outline for Phase 3 and will work out the nitty-gritty later. Which allows them some flexibility based on reception of and feedback to things that happen in Phases 1 and 2.
     
    Jedi Ben likes this.
  17. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    Yeah as someone whose dabbled in writing having every nutty gritty detail planned out never works. Just a basic idea and what a general ending works
     
    Ghost likes this.
  18. SyndicThrass

    SyndicThrass Jedi Grand Master star 4

    Registered:
    Sep 25, 2016
    It very much depends on the writer. It’s the gardener/architect thing, where some writers prefer to just have a basic idea and allow things to grow (gardeners) while others prefer to work everything out in advance with an outline, lots of pre-planning to give the book structure so that when they set down to write it comes easier. (Architects)

    I can see the pros and cons of both, especially with something like the High Republic where it’s many different kinds of writers working in tandem.
     
  19. ColeFardreamer

    ColeFardreamer Force Ghost star 5

    Registered:
    Nov 24, 2013
    The Fallen Star was the High Republics "Star by Star" to use a NJO analogue. So now I am curious for their "Dark Journey" and "Traitor" analogues please! This is going to get interesting!
     
    Jedi Ben likes this.
  20. Jedi Ben

    Jedi Ben Chosen One star 9

    Registered:
    Jul 19, 1999
    Yeah, I don't think they've realised how badly they've shot their feet off with the Phase II news.

    Will I still buy and enjoy it? Yes. Will it match the impact of Light of the Jedi for me? Probably not.
     
  21. Todd the Jedi

    Todd the Jedi Mod and Loving Tyrant of SWTV, Lit, & Collecting star 6 Staff Member Manager

    Registered:
    Oct 16, 2008
    I mean they obviously have some reason for the switch- they've had a lot of time to ask themselves "is this a good solid idea", so I imagine it'll make sense as Phase 2 unfolds.
     
    Ghost likes this.
  22. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    Guess that makes me more curious since Light of the Jedi i didn't think was that impressive on the whole.

    Test of Courage I must preferred.
     
  23. Dawud786

    Dawud786 Chosen One star 5

    Registered:
    Dec 28, 2006
    I sure hope Phase 2 Book 1 gives us major "ah-ha" for why this choice was made.

    Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk
     
    Jedi Ben and Jid123Sheeve like this.
  24. Jid123Sheeve

    Jid123Sheeve Guest

    That too

    I'll be keeping my eye on the Charles Soule one since

    He mentioned Darth Bane lately
     
  25. Jedi Knight88

    Jedi Knight88 Jedi Master star 4

    Registered:
    Sep 4, 2018
    I like this book so far