God. I feel old.
Is this how people felt in 1991 with Star Trek VI and the 25th Anniversary of Trek?
Obligatory GADM Thrawn:

EDITED TO ADD: I also remember seeing Heir appearing in bookstores in hardcover format.
Moderator: Vympel


Definitely for ST6, because it was the last hurrah for the original crew, and the end of the franchise's high-water mark.MKSheppard wrote:I remember waiting for the final book in the Thrawn trilogy to hit the local public libraries.
God. I feel old.
Is this how people felt in 1991 with Star Trek VI and the 25th Anniversary of Trek?
Strip out everything Star Wars, and Shadows is your generic Steve Perry martial arts/sci-fi novel. Hence the anticipation, as I was impressed with his Matador series*, and some of his short story work for The Fleet anthologies, and was eager to see how well he could write a SW novel.Elheru Aran wrote:Shadows of the Empire was... mediocre.

Now you're making me feel old.Galvatron wrote:I enjoyed Heir to the Empire and even accepted it as a surrogate sequel to the OT until Dark Empire #1 was published and turned the entire Thrawn campaign into a footnote. It essentially spoiled the fuck out of Zahn's two follow-up books and rendered them inconsequential filler stories.
God, I hate Dark Empire.
Or gee, maybe Allston knew that Han and Corran would be meeting for the first time years later in I, Jedi and he consciously avoided using Stackpole's character other than that one gag scene to make sure there weren't any plot holes?Elheru Aran wrote:Notice how in the Wraith Squadron books, even the one where they're working alongside Rogue Squadron, he appears for like... one scene, at the very end? I halfway think Allston wrote it that way to piss off Stackpole...
Seriously. He's a flawed character. His arrogance is not supposed to be likable. Never got the Stackpole hate around here.Crazedwraith wrote:I see the Mary Sue thing but really no-one notices that Corran constantly got himself nearly killed through arrogance and stupidity? I mean it's basically an intentional character flaw. He spends I,Jedi basically being entirely wrong about nearly everything and needs Luke to turn up bail him out and do the heavy lifting when they rescue Mirax.
I didn't know about the publishing dates but this does explain the in-universe joke in "Solo Command," that because Corran and Han are never seen in the same place, people begin assuming they're actually the same person, despite different age, size, weight, personality etc.Ralin wrote:Or gee, maybe Allston knew that Han and Corran would be meeting for the first time years later in I, Jedi and he consciously avoided using Stackpole's character other than that one gag scene to make sure there weren't any plot holes?Elheru Aran wrote:Notice how in the Wraith Squadron books, even the one where they're working alongside Rogue Squadron, he appears for like... one scene, at the very end? I halfway think Allston wrote it that way to piss off Stackpole...
I never actually looked up the dates until now, but I always assumed that was it, yeah. Allston always seemed very respectful about other people's characters, and a good team player when working on arcs with multiple authors like in the NJO.Eternal_Freedom wrote:I didn't know about the publishing dates but this does explain the in-universe joke in "Solo Command," that because Corran and Han are never seen in the same place, people begin assuming they're actually the same person, despite different age, size, weight, personality etc.
Suddenly that goes from being "mildly amusing side gag" to "that's actually pretty clever."
Yeah, you were misinformed. The people who thought it was great probably did so because it was anti-minimalist or provided ammo against the Trekkies back then. There was nothing else about it to like.MKSheppard wrote:I ordered Dark Empire from AMZN on May 1, 1999 as part of a $42~ order that also included Vision of the Future Hardback; with some of teh money from my first job, because some people on ASVS were talking about how great it was, and how it was referenced in the SWTC etc.
So I wait and wait.
Then I get it, and art is horrible as fuck and the story's not really that great. It's massively underwhelming, tbh.
I think it was just assumed they continued to draw from worlds like Carida and Kuat that were still loyal to whatever was the largest and most legit-looking Imperial leader that week. That and mass conscription, requisitioning from whatever private industry they could get their hands on, etc.biostem wrote:In many of these stories that take place after the fall of the Empire, do they ever address how the remnants are able to pool together enough funds to pay for all these fleets and personnel?
It wasn't long after TTT that both Bantam and Dark Horse started spewing out scads of KJA's horseshit too and all of it treated WEG's fucking RPG like holy writ. There were also the PC games, starting with X-wing.Batman wrote:It was more Wars material at a time when such material was rare. At that time the EU meant TTT, the Han Solo/Lando Callrissian trilogies, and for those who wanted to admit its existence 'Splinter of the Mind's Eye' and that was it. The massive Legends EU we've come to know and loathe hadn't happened yet.
Nope. It was retconned years later that Thrawn was supported by what was left of the Emperor's Ruling Council and the Moffs, but Zahn never addressed in TTT. In the Jedi Search trilogy, Admiral Daala outright stated that she was the highest ranking officer in the galaxy following Thrawn's death.biostem wrote:In many of these stories that take place after the fall of the Empire, do they ever address how the remnants are able to pool together enough funds to pay for all these fleets and personnel?