Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Ambush at Corellia - The Review



When I picked up this book, it had been a long, long time since I had read any Star Wars novels.  Well, I’m happy to report that, like slipping on an old pair of jeans, this book felt/read very comfortably right from the get-go.  In fact, it starts off with Han and Chewbacca working on the Falcon and (other than Han and Leia together) that’s pretty good stuff in my opinion. 
I’ll get a little of the plot details out of the way here to make things easier.  This trilogy of books is centered on the Corellian System, where Han Solo hails from.  The planets in the system have a sort of an isolationist thing going on and Leia (as Chief of State) is set to visit the system to try and get trade opened up again.  Han has tacked on a few days ahead of Leia’s trade summit for the family to have a vacation on his homeworld.  In addition, there’s an entirely separate story arc that involves Luke and Lando.  I won’t outline it here, but I will comment on it where appropriate.    
As I mentioned above, we start off with Han and Chewie working on the Falcon getting ready for the trip.  Apparently Han is trying to test the shields on the old ship.  It’s explained that the only way to do that, other than getting shot at, is to lift the Falcon up on its repulsors, turn the shields on and then turn the repulsors off.  If the shields are good, they should hold the weight of the ship up (suspended in mid-air). 
Just a little aside here, I’ve always been in awe of those authors that can write about space flight or engine or ship stuff like this.  I personally muddle through it pretty badly (writing it).  But it’s kinda hard to avoid talking about space ships and space travel in any sort of lengthy story about the Star Wars universe.  I thought the author did a good job explaining what was going on and used just enough technical terms to make me think that he knew what he was talking about or at least knew more than me.  On that note, I often wonder if professional writers just get to say:  “Okay, I wanna say something here about the ship doing something ship-y.  Can you do that?”  And then hand it off to some technical writer…  If so, I need to get me one of those.
Anyway.  The ship holds in midair for a while, but then unsurprisingly, things go a little haywire and the Falcon bumps and bangs its way back to the ground.  Han and Chewie exchange some curses and growls and then agree to call it a night and head home in time for dinner.  Which then has Han reflect on this: 
{Amazing, how times changed, how time changed life.  After all the close calls, all the battles, all the captures and rescues and risks and victories Han had been through, now it came down to getting home to dinner. I'm a family man now, Han told himself, still a bit amazed by the fact. And perhaps the most amazing thing of all was how much he liked being one.

Han Solo looked up into the evening sky of Coruscant.

What was it now? Eighteen years? Eighteen years since he had hired on to fly a crazy old man named Ben Kenobi and a kid named Luke Skywalker out of Tatooine. Taking on that job had changed his life forever-and changed the course of galactic history, if you wanted to get grandiose about it.}

Awwww.  Old Han reveling in being a family man.  I like the reminiscing back to that fateful trip out of Tatooine.  I would imagine that the Big Three would think about that every now and again.

Well, Han doesn’t get very far when he is stopped by a strange woman.  He and Chewie agree to talk to her and we are made aware that there is a probe droid hiding in the distance in the space port watching all of this.  Once aboard the Falcon, things quickly go south when the young woman mentions Han’s wife and family in a vague, semi-threatening way, which leads to this:

{Han stiffened and leaned in toward her, and Chewie bared his fangs.  His family had been exposed to too many dangers, too many times, for him to take even the hint of threat less than seriously. "Threats don't impress me either," Han said, his voice as hard as her face. "With Chewbacca around, the people who make them don't live very long. So you just pick your next words very, very carefully."}

Who doesn’t love protective Han?

The woman very quickly confesses to being Belindi Kalenda, an agent with New Republic Intelligence (NRI).  She confides in Han that the NRI has been losing agents in the Corellian Sector and suspect something big and bad is about to happen.  She wants Han to act ‘normal’, which is to say act suspiciously and wreck havoc wherever he goes thereby providing cover for some additional NRI agents to sneak into the system.

Han immediately wonders if they should cancel the trip as thoughts go to the safety of his children.  The agent assures him that his family will not be in any more danger than they would’ve been had she not approached him and that Corellians respect family.  Han presses her more and she confesses that she just isn’t sure:

{Han looked deep into those strange eyes that seemed to see things that were not there. In his old days, his reckless days, he wouldn't even have thought twice about flying straight into the worst sort of danger. But fatherhood did things to a fellow. It wasn't just that he didn't want to endanger his kids. It went beyond that. He didn't want to endanger himself needlessly either. Not for fear of death on his own part-but the thought of leaving his children without a father-it was something he had to work into the equation.}

In the end, Han internalizes his thoughts and decides that he can’t keep his children in a bubble.  He agrees to go to Corellia and act ‘normal’.  Kalendi leaves and Han and Chewie once again try to head home only to spot the spying probe droid and get entangled in a firefight with it.  The thing explodes, they sweep it up and finally head for home.  We are made aware that the droid is working for some Hidden Leader and is trying to get a message to Luke Skywalker, but can only do so AFTER Leia Organa leaves Coruscant.

Next, we get a glimpse at the little Solo children.  The twins, Jacen and Jaina, have enlisted the help of their younger brother, Anakin, to build their very own droid to clean their rooms and do their bidding.  Where Jacen is the animal-lover and Jaina is the tinkerer (like her Father), Anakin can ‘see’ inside machinery and repair it and make it work.  The children had confiscated an old droid and were doing just that when the thing blows up.  It is their Uncle Luke Skywalker that finds them and, after a stern lecture about misusing droids, helps them clean it up.

We then cut to Leia, who is at home and waiting for everyone to arrive for dinner.  Apparently she had enforced a tradition of family dinners (I like that idea) and is a little upset that everyone is late.  She knows she has no right because, as Chief of State, she missed more than anyone, but she is upset that no one in her family had made the effort to appear on time.  Just as she was about to delay the dinner droid one more time, Han and Chewie arrive:

{She was about to light into them both for being late-but then she got a look at Han's expression, and all her angry words melted away.

She could instantly see how hard he was trying to pretend everything was fine. Maybe that lopsided grin was sincere enough to fool a bunch of smugglers around a sabacc table but Leia was not buying it.}

I like when they are able to ‘read’ each other like that.  Han and Leia exchange pleasantries and Leia even smells blaster fire on Han, but she doesn’t ask him what went on.  We get a small mention of how Leia hasn’t developed her Force training like she should (even though she doesn’t need it to read Han) and how she regrets it.  (I’ll rant on this later, I think.)  And while Han and Chewie are washing up (Han got a peck on the cheek from Leia on his way to the ‘fresher), Luke and the children arrive from cleaning up the exploded droid project. 

With the arrival of the children, once again Leia can sense that something is afoot.  When she questions Luke, he assures her that he has handled the punishment for whatever the children did and cautions her about ‘reopening negotiations’.  Leia acquiesces and tells Luke to fill her in later (in a day or two, to be precise).

While Leia and Luke are chatting, we get this: 

{Han, sitting back in his favorite chair, couldn't help but smile.  Leia and Luke's side of the family might be the high-and-mighty, important one, all strong in the Force and busy in politics, but it was obvious that his children took after him. So what if that did mean the little monsters were a constant source of aggravation?

It seemed as if none of his children was happy unless they were a hairbreadth from some sort of disaster. He had lost count of the times they had "experimented" with their Uncle Luke's lightsaber. Rules did not set limits for the children of Han Solo-they represented challenges.  Han smiled, thinking back on a few moments from his own childhood. It pleased him no end to see so much of himself in his children.}

I thought these insights into Han were sweet and it’s great to see him enjoying his children.  Overall I was happy with the picture painted so far by this author of the Solo family life.  I felt a little uneasy with the fact that Leia let Han’s mysteriousness slide and then the kids’ right on top of that.  Maybe one instance a night?  But two?  And then anything involving the kids, I think maybe she would’ve waited until after dinner and pulled Luke aside then, but not waited a few days.  I don’t know, that was just me.

I’ll mention here that we are shown a star somewhere out in the universe that has another probe droid watching/recording it as it mysteriously implodes.  We also get a glimpse of the owner of that other spy droid (Gleasry, agent of the Human League) that Han and Chewie tangled with.  He is still trying to get a message to Luke Skywalker.

Well, I’m probably majorly over quoting here, especially since we are only on about Chapter 2 so far, but I have to mention the dinner that the Solo’s and Luke have.  They are discussing the upcoming trip and, as it is from Jaina’s point of view, we are told that she can tell that all the grown-ups are hiding something from each other.  See?  This is why I didn’t like all the “tell you later” stuff, especially when they’re raising a bunch of perceptive Jedi.  Anyway, the children are lobbying to take 3PO along on the trip (but miraculously there isn’t any room for him – see Han, all you had to do was have a passel of kids to get rid of the droids) and sulking, Jaina says this:

{"Maybe there'd be room for the droids if we didn't have to take the dumb old Falcon," Jaina half mumbled, glaring at her plate.}

Ouch!  I really wish I could see Han’s face here…

{There was a moment of utter silence around the table, and Jaina knew, even as the last words were leaving her mouth, just how big a mistake she had just made. She looked up to see everyone, even little Anakin, staring at her. She stole a glance at her twin brother and saw him shaking his head at her in mute exasperation.

"You know how much that ship means to your father," her mother said, using the coldly reasonable tone of voice that was somehow worse than the loudest yelling. "You also know that the Falcon has saved the lives of half the people around this table, some of them many times over. And I know you know that we know you know. So I can only assume you said something that spiteful and insulting with the deliberate intent of being disrespectful to your father. Am I correct?"

Jaina opened her mouth to deny it all-but then she caught Uncle Luke's eye, and knew there was no point to it. For that matter, her mother had the same skills in truth sensing as Uncle Luke. That would be the one facet of her abilities in the Force that her mother would have practiced.}

Okay, I don’t like that dig about Leia and her #@#$ Force training, but I just had to let you guys read that about Jaina’s comment on the Falcon!

Jaina is sent to her room and eventually all the kids act up and are dismissed.  Luke informs Han and Leia that Mon Mothma has requested a meeting with him and the trio discusses the upcoming trip until Leia grows increasingly upset and feels the need to leave the table and escape to her office down the hall.  We then get this (beware, it’s a long quote):

{Why should such a tiny dinnertime scuffle upset her so much? She knew that most of it was the underlying tension at the table, but there was more to it than that. There were times, and this was one of them, when, for no clear reason at all, the whole idea of motherhood, of the job of molding her children into civilized humans, seemed suddenly terrifying.

She saw now just how much of her childhood had been spent being told to be quiet and not to fidget during state dinners, being constantly handed off to nannies and guardians when her father was too busy. She had had far more meals with the droids and servants than with Bail Organa.

And what childhood she did have had not lasted very long. She had still been in her teens when she found herself getting pulled deeper and deeper into politics. It had been a real accomplishment to become a senator as young as she had but the accomplishment was purchased by surrendering the last of her childhood, the last of her innocence. Only now, as she looked at the world through her children's eyes, did she realize just how steep a price that had been.

Han never did say much about his own childhood, or about much of anything concerning his life before leaving Corellia. Luke had come the closest of any of them to having a normal upbringing. He had been raised on Tatooine, thinking a farm couple, Owen and Beru Lars, were his aunt and uncle. But his early life had been just as isolated as Leia's, in its own way. A moisture farm must have been pretty lonely place for a child to grow up on, even in normal circumstances-and circumstances had been far from normal.

Owen and Beru had posed as Luke's uncle and aunt. As best Leia understood, they had been kind to Luke, but in a distant sort of way. There had never been the closeness, the warmth, Leia wanted for her own children.

It didn't escape Leia's notice that neither she nor her brother had actually been adopted by the people who raised them. Circumstances had required a certain degree of subterfuge, of well-intended deception, of careful distance for everyone's protection. Foster daughter and purported nephew were the closest ties Leia and Luke could claim.

There was another piece of knowledge, guilty knowledge, that gnawed at Leia's conscience, and, she had no doubt, at Luke's as well. Each had been the unwitting, unwilling agent of death for the people who had raised them. The planet of Alderaan was chosen as a fit target for destruction by the Death Star in large part because it was Leia's home, and Owen and Beru had been killed by Imperial stormtroopers as they searched for the droids Luke had.

With all that baggage to carry around, it was scarcely surprising that Leia was determined that her family would be a family, and not just a collection of strangers who happened to share some ancestors. Nor was it ever far from her mind that the children of powerful or prominent families often found themselves as players-or worse, pawns in complicated power struggles. Even if her children were not going to inherit her office or her powers, they were still the next generation of what came close to being the Republic's royal family.

Like it or not, intended or not, her children were, in effect, the second generation of a dynasty. It did not take much imagination to see the dangers in that. The temptations of power and wealth could be strong. Suppose that, somehow, they proved stronger than family ties?

Suppose, twenty years from now, Anakin were plotting to gain some advantage over Jacen? Suppose some untrustworthy adviser urged Jacen to push his brother and sister out of the way of some glittering prize?

It seemed impossible - but history was littered with such tales. But there was more, and worse. That her children were strong in the Force was, beyond doubt, a great gift. But it was also a great danger. It was never far from Leia's mind that Darth Vader, her father, her children's grandfather, had likewise been strong in the Force-and had been destroyed by the dark side. The day would dawn, no doubt, when each of her children would have to face the dark side. The very idea terrified Leia. It made her fear that they might someday bicker with each other over money or power seem utterly trivial.

Every little outburst of childhood surliness, every momentary black mood, every childish temptation to tell an obvious fib, scared her to death. It was illogical, irrational, but she could never stop herself from wondering if this bit of childish naughtiness or that bit of youthful bad judgment was ally to a child succumbing to some temptation of the dark side of the Force.

In theory, that was not supposed to be possible. Jedi lore held that childish innocence was a bulwark against the dark side. But Jedi lore also held it all but unheard of for any child to display the ability and strength in the Force that her children exhibited.

The dangers were great, but it seemed to her there was but one defense against both dangers, a defense so commonplace that it almost seemed absurd that it could triumph over such mighty forces, but there it was. The best she could do was to raise her children well.

Leia Organa Solo was bound and determined that her children would reach adulthood with their characters strong and firm and honest, their family ties solid, with love in their hearts for each other. If that meant being strict with her children, or sending Jaina to bed straight from dinner, or refusing them droid servants, then so be it.

Leia propped her elbows up on the desk and rubbed her eyes. She was just too tired, that was all. A minor dinnertime squabble should not induce this much worry. It would be good to get away, take a rest.}

I don’t know if I can explain how much I liked and hated this passage.  I LOVE it because it is the Leia that I think would develop from the person we meet in the movies.  From the first paragraph, where she admits to being terrified by motherhood (who hasn’t felt that?) to her worries about childish antics being harbingers to some horrible fate (what parent hasn’t had some of those irrational fears for different reasons?) to her determination to provide the love and support that she rightly believes would be the answer to all of those worries.  Now, I HATE this passage because the EU does not follow through with this Leia.  I don’t think I have to say any more than that.

Next, we have the visit with Luke and Mon Mothma.  Oh, what is that woman up to now you ask?  Actually, I’m pretty (mostly pretty) happy to report on what old Mon has to say.

Mon Mothma starts off by asking Luke what he is up to.  We find that the Jedi Academy is running well on its own and that Luke pretty much has nothing to do.  Mon observes that heroes often find themselves bored during peacetime and alludes to someone else who had to make the change from war hero to contributing member of society.  Luke assumes she is speaking of Han, but Mon corrects him and tells him she is referring to Leia.

Luke argues that changing to peacetime was no big deal for Leia because she just went back to doing what she was doing before.  To which, Mon says this:

{"Leia shows few signs of enjoying her work-but she is good at it. Probably better than I was. But tell me-what sort of a Jedi is Leia?"}

I cringed a little here preparing for the onslaught of “You should be training your lazy sister to be a Jedi”.  Especially when Mon said this:

{"Yet it has always been a regret to her-and to you that she has not developed her skills more. And if I am not mistaken, the issue has been the cause of gentle and repeated reproaches from you?"}

Mon even says this:

{"Do you find it upsetting that your sister has great gifts and has not developed them? That she has not made use of them? Do you find it something close to a scandalous waste?" }

Neither Luke, nor us, really know where Mon is going with this as he continues to agree with her.  But happily, the conversation takes a different turn than I think Luke (and myself) expected.  In fact, when Luke agrees that Leia’s training has been a source of disappointment in her for him, Mon says this:

{"Then, Luke Skywalker, I suggest you consider the fact that some mirrors reflect both ways." Suddenly there was nothing remotely gentle or subdued about her voice or her manner.}

Me and Luke say, “Wha-?”

Mon continues:

{"I have heard it time and time again, from all sorts of people," she said, somewhat testily. "How the two of you are twins, how you each inherited the same potential, but only one of you made use of it, while the other chose to do something else, something less. People say what a shame it is. And always it is Leia Organa Solo, the Chief of State of the Republic, that they talk about that way. The Chief of State, and they whisper that she has not done enough with herself!" }

You go girl!  And she does, by saying this:

{"My point is that I think it is long past time for you to consider that Luke Skywalker made some choices as well.  It is long past time to reflect on the fact that you have talents and potential you have never developed."

"For instance?" Luke said.

"If Leia has potential in the Force because you, her brother, have shown you do, does it not follow that you have potential in other areas because Leia, your sister, has shown she does? She has become a leader, a stateswoman, a politician, a spouse, and a parent. She is building the New Republic even as she is raising a new generation of Jedi.”}

I LOVE this.  Mon Mothma, the greatest B#@$ of the Star Wars universe taking up for Leia.  I can’t tell you how much I liked reading this part.  It felt so refreshing and empowering!!  Anyway, she goes on to describe to Luke that his Jedi Academy he is building will someday be thousands of Jedi Knights and will be in need of leadership, especially politically and she asks Luke if he has the skills necessary to be more than just a puppet or a figurehead:

{"Will you know the craft of leadership, of negotiating when you should and of making difficult decisions when you must? Or will you be full of good intentions but ill trained and ill prepared to function in the world of politics, so that others must guide and control-and manipulate-you? If you are to be a real leader for the people, you must prepare for the job, just as you prepared to be a Jedi. You must undergo the training that Leia underwent while you were learning your Jedi skills."

There was an unmistakable hint of reproach in her tone, if not in her words. Leia was learning and doing the boring, necessary drudge work while you were out having exciting adventures. She did not say it, but Luke got the message.}

They continue on a little further and in the end Luke agrees to consider Mon’s words.  Mon Mothma then confirms that Luke has a meeting with Lando and encourages Luke to accompany Lando on the venture that he will propose.  Luke then leaves Mon’s apartment totally flabbergasted by the visit.

Okay.  I just totally loved this conversation with Luke and Mon.  We don’t need to go in to the injustice that I think Leia gets throughout the EU while Luke soars high on his Jedi horse.  But let me just tell you that as awesome as that conversation was, it is absolutely ridiculous that Mon’s answer to the entire thing is for Luke to go with Lando.  I won’t tell you yet what the ‘venture’ is, but let’s just say you will die a thousand deaths when you find out that after all that awesomeness that was the above conversation, that THIS was the advice Mon ended with:

{"On the contrary, I would like you to offer him every assistance (speaking of Lando).  That it is grandiose does not make it ill advised.  No. Help your friend. I believe that in doing so, you will do yourself great good as well."}

I just can’t even…  Just wait.

The next part is all about that NRI agent, Belindi, landing on Corellia.  She isn’t sure if she is the only agent sent or a decoy or one of many.  She has problems (which suggest that someone knew she was coming – i.e., a leak at the NRI) but eventually lands and lives.

We then cut to the Solo’s as they prepare to depart Coruscant.  Luke is there to bid his farewells, Han is dealing with the spaceport authorities and Leia is dealing with political lackeys getting last minute time with her.  Luke helps get the kids settled around the Falcon and when he returns to Leia with the intent of ‘rescuing her from the crowd’ he finds this:

{But he should have listened when Mon Mothma reminded him that he was not the only one of the two siblings with skills the other had not developed. The crowd around her was already melting away, each dignitary and hanger-on leaving with a smile on his, her, or its face, clearly pleased with the results of the conference, each of them plainly feeling that the Chief of State had paid special attention to his, her, or its concerns. Luke had never been that good with people, and he felt the slightest pang of envy to see the apparent effortlessness with which she handled them all.

It was the same old story, of course-everything was easy if you practiced the skills required for years on end. He had sold Leia short. He could not make it up to her all at once, with a single gesture-but at least he could make a start.

She was bidding her farewells to the last of her visitors as he came up. She turned to him and gave him the starburstbright smile that always melted his heart. There was no contrivance, nothing but the deepest and sincerest feelings behind that smile. Maybe that was the secret. She always did feel the emotions she was expressing. "Hello, Luke," she said. "An exciting day."

"That it is," he agreed. "You're finally going to get a look at where he came from," he said, nodding toward Han, who was still shouting at the Wookiee and the ground staff even as he kept an affectionate arm around his son. "Must be hard being married to a mystery man," Luke said, only half joking. "I bet you're looking forward to seeing where he got his start."

"Oh, Han's no mystery man," Leia said. "What you see is absolutely
what you get. His past is a mystery, yes. He's never said much and I doubt he ever will. Anyway, I don't think a family tourist trip is going to do much to shed a dazzling light on the hidden corners of his personal history."

"And that doesn't bother you?" Luke asked.

Leia shrugged. "It used to. Not anymore. Han is Han. How much more do I need to know?"

"I suppose," Luke said. "Still, take a look at Corellia, and tell me all about it."}

I liked this exchange, of course the part about Han and how Leia feels she knows everything she needs to know about him.  But also, again, Luke’s thoughts on Leia and how he has sold her short.  Loved it.

Luke then presents Leia with a lightsaber.  She, at first, tries to reject the offer knowing that a Jedi is supposed to build their own.  But Luke says this:

{"But Mon Mothma reminded me that the reverse is also true,” Luke replied. "There is much you have to teach that I must learn. None of us ever learns all that we should know. If it happens that you don't know a few mind tricks or haven't gotten every move with a lightsaber down cold, that has not prevented you from fighting for justice, or knowing right from wrong and acting on it. Take the lightsaber. You have earned it-and you might have need of it."}

Leia takes it, thrums it on and then challenges Luke to a duel.  I liked this part as well.  Leia, for as serious and determined as she can be, can also be adventurous and playful.  She then goes on to kick Luke’s ass in front of the kids, which was totally awesome as well.  When they’re done, she says this:

{"I've been practicing when I can, on the quiet," she said, her voice a bit more serious. "Even Han doesn't know about it.”

"Practiced how?" Luke asked.

Leia shrugged. "With the lightsaber I already have, which is nothing like as good as this one, by the way.  Against a series of drone opponents. Mostly I've been working in the courtyard behind my office. I haven't been able to do much practice, but I guess it's done some good."

"I'll say," Luke said, massaging his wrist. It still stung a bit from having the lightsaber knocked out of his hand.}

See?  I would totally believe this part, too.  That as busy as Leia is and as much as stupid Luke harps on her relentlessly, that she would find time to practice on her own if she felt that it was important.  And then, of course, that she would be totally awesome at it.

We then see Han dealing with the spaceport bureaucrats while Luke and the newly arrived Lando watch on.  As the final inspector leaves, Han says something about winning a bet, to which Leia says:

{"Han! You and Lando haven't been betting on the Falcon again," Leia said.}

Haha!  I thought that was a cute reference to all those crazy bets Han and Lando had at one point handing the ownership of the Falcon back and forth.  But it was only a bet that Lando’s forge papers wouldn’t get past security.  Luke then freaks out that Han is forging inspection papers and when Han sloughs it off, Luke says this:
 
{But it wasn't good enough, Luke told himself. Not by half. "Han-wait a second," he said. "It's one thing to risk your own neck in a dicey ship. But you can't take your wife and children along in a ship that the safety people won't pass."

"Take it easy, kid," Han said. "You think I'd take chances on my children? Or that Leia would let me even if I wanted to try? I promise you all the safety systems they were worried about are at spec or above. That wasn't the problem."

"I don't get it,” Luke said.}

No, Luke you don’t get it.  I realize now I may be a little hard on Luke for this book review.  Apologies to diehard Luke-y fans.  Han explains that the Falcon is rigged up BETTER THAN specs but he doesn’t want anyone to know what the ship is capable of.  DUH.

Okay, now the moment you’ve been waiting for…what the hell is Lando’s deal and what did Mon Mothma think was the answer to her wonderful speech earlier?

I’m just gonna type it because…it’s just really, well, here you go:  Lando asks Luke to go on a galaxy-spanning journey with him to woo a rich wife.

Yep.

Grand Master Jedi Wizard Luke Skywalker on Star Wars Universe’s idea of “The Bachelor”.

Luke agrees.  They plan to depart the next day.  Oh, and they’re taking C-3PO and R2D2.  Okay?  Moving on.

We are finally aboard the Falcon with the Solo’s on the way to Corellia.  The kids are, for a change, behaving and Leia thinks this:

{She smiled at herself. No doubt she had that habit in common with every mother in history. When they were good, they were her children. When they were bad, or when she feared they might be bad, they were Han's. }

Along the way, the family are all together in the lounge and we get this:

{Leia was seated at the far end of the table from Chewbacca and Anakin. In theory, she, too, was reading, giving herself the rare treat of curling up with a good book instead of slogging through some bureaucratic report. She had been looking forward to this for a long time. Instead she found herself doing little more than sit there in a maternal glow.

She was basking in the moment of family, with her children and her husband around her, all safe, all well, and all happy to be together.

"What's it like, Daddy?" Jaina asked, looking up from her book. There hadn't been much in the way of conversation for a while, but it would seem that Jaina had something on her mind.

"What's what like, Princess?" Han asked, turning around in his swivel seat.

"Corellia. What's it like? I keep hearing everyone being so excited that we're going there, but no one ever says much about the place." Jaina stood up and walked over to her father.

Han seemed flustered for a moment, and Leia looked at him intently. Han had hardly spoken about his homeworld, and had said even less about his life in the Corellian Sector.  For years, she had forced herself to restrain her curiosity.  But now. Now he would surely have to say something.

"Well," Han said thoughtfully, "it's a very interesting place."

"And you lived there when you were a kid?" Jaina asked as she climbed up into her father's lap. Jacen stayed where he was, sitting crossed-legged on the floor, but Anakin took his cue from Jaina. He hopped down from where he was sitting next to Chewie, went around the table, and climbed up into his mother's lap. He could tell when it was story time.}

Story time at the Solo’s!  This is a great little snippet of family time for them.  I find it a little hard to believe that Leia knows NOTHING of Han’s childhood.  Am I wrong to think that he would’ve opened up to her about it?  I don’t think I'm wrong.  I also like that he calls Jaina "Princess".  I just really think that's cute.

We then get a fairly detailed account of the Corellian sector.  So family time was a veiled attempt to give the reader their history lesson on where we are headed?  It was still nice anyway, right?

Near the end of the history lesson, um story, Han says this:

{And don't forget that half the galaxy is still recovering from the Imperial-Alliance war. Corellia has probably taken its lumps along with everyone else. But Corellians don't like to show their dirty laundry in public. So we might find out it's the beautiful, well-run planet we hear about, the kind of place it was when I lived there. Or we might discover it's a hardscrabble sort of place, with lots of problems and lots of things not working very well."

"I don't want to go to any place that's all crummy, Jacen said.

"But it might do you some good if you did," Han said. "Your mother and I both feel it'll be good for you to see something of life besides the cushy deal you have on Coruscant. You should see how the other half lives. After all, it's how your parents lived, not all that long ago."

"Were you guys poor and stuff?"

"Well, I always was," Han said. "And your mother well, she lost everything she ever had in the war."

That was an understatement, Leia thought. The Empire had destroyed her entire planet, for no better reason than to terrify the rest of the galaxy.}

I love the “Were you guys poor and stuff?” question.  So sounds like what any little child might ask.  They continue the history lesson a little bit further and we have this:

{Leia listened to Han, every bit as swept up in his words as the children. A city full of parkland and wide-open spaces sounded good to her. She had had enough of the troglodytic life of Coruscant for a while, whether or not the children had. And if Han didn't say much about the casinos and saloons and nightclubs and less reputable establishments that clustered around Coronet's spaceport, she knew they were there as well. Even if she would never go into them herself, they were part of the legend of the place, part of Corellia's rough-and-tumble heritage of smugglers and pirates.

There was a certain romance to such places. Maybe she would go into one or two of them, one night. She could get the children tucked into bed, get Chewie to watch them for the evening, dress in something the Chief of State would never wear, and then slip out with her husband, get him to show her some of the more grown-up playgrounds of Coronet. There could be no harm in taking in a show or two, or even trying her own hand at sabacc. But it seemed that Han had moved past Coronet while she was distracted, and was telling them about the other worlds.}

Ha!  I love this.  I remember reading this for the first time and my mind going wild with ideas of a night on the town for Han and Leia.  Love and totally believe that she would do this.  Don’t believe that she doesn’t yet know how to play sabacc, though.  I’m thinking Han would’ve given her a few lessons by now.  Anyway, Missing Moment opportunity alert!

We then move into an entire chapter of Luke and Lando.  First, pivotal to the plot, we see that the spy guy from the Human League failed to get his message to Luke Skywalker before he disappeared with Lando.  Second, nothing else pivotal to the plot happens…  But I will tell you that Lando’s first attempt at woo’ing a rich woman ends up with him nearly getting killed and R2D2 and C3PO saving him. 

Moving on.

The next time we see the Solo’s the paragraph starts with this sentence:

{Han Solo had gone to sleep happy indeed.}

Hmmm.  Missing Moment opportunity alert!  :-)

The chapter then goes on to say this: 

{After tucking the children in, he had gone to be by himself and shut his own eyes, thinking nostalgic thoughts about his old homeworld. He had felt full of love and pride in his children, felt glad that everyone was safe and secure aboard the good old Millennium Falcon.}

That’s nice, but I had something a little different in mind.  He then has a bad dream about the trip and begins to think through their reentry into the Corellian System.  He wakes up early, heads to the cockpit and finds Chewie at the helm.  Tells Chewie that he is worried and then goes to talk to Leia before they exit hyperspace.

He finds Leia with the children and in a moment alone she (finally!) asks:

{"What is it, Han?" she asked, before he even had a chance to speak.

"What's what?" he asked, a little baffled by her rather clipped tone of voice.

"What is it that has had you worried since before we left?"

Out of reflex more than anything else, Han threw a big, lopsided grin on his face, and got all set to deny it all. But then he stopped, and let the smile fade away. This was his wife. This was the mother of his children. More to the point, this was Leia Organa Solo, Chief of State of the New Republic, war hero, strong in the Force, and capable of being every bit as ruthless as a Noghri assassin. He couldn't play the fool with her and have the slightest hope of getting away with it.

Besides, it would be wrong to try. It was his duty to play it straight, and there was nothing more to be gained by his pretended things were fine. Not when it was plainly obvious he wasn't fooling her.}

That’s right, flyboy.  He goes on to tell her everything about meeting Belindi Kalenda and fighting with the probe droid.

{Leia raised an eyebrow. "I thought I noticed something burned smelling when you came home that night."

"I don't know why I bother trying to fool you," Han said.

"Well, don't try. Was there anything else? Nearly getting killed by a probe droid is bad enough, but is there more that's got you worried?"}

The two compare notes on what they know and decide to go forward with the trip cautiously.  Han heads to the cockpit, leaving Leia with the children.

At the last minute, Han decides to shake things up by dropping out of hyperspace early, thwarting any attackers that might be lying in wait.  He coms Leia who asks if he’s ready:

{"Just about," he said. "I'm going to drop us in twenty seconds early, just to be on the safe side." Han kept his voice casual, knowing that the kids could hear and not wishing to alarm them. He wanted to sound like some routine matter, rather than a major change in plans.

"That sounds fine," Leia said, her voice every bit as relaxed as his own. "I was about to suggest that myself."

"Glad to hear it"' he said. "See you on the other side." He flicked the intercom back to the off position, and doublechecked the switch setting. This would be the perfect time to leave it on by accident. If things did get hot, he didn't want the kids back there listening in.}

I failed to mention how well Han and Chewie worked together with that probe droid in the beginning, but they did.  I liked that.  And I like how Han and Leia work together here, wordlessly trusting each other.  I also like that Leia had thought of doing the same thing as Han came up with.  I think she would be savvy enough to do so.

The Falcon drops out of hyperspace early and they do find some ships that had been waiting at their designated entry area.  A strange flyby ensues where the interlopers give a half-hearted attempt at attacking the Falcon before heading straight into a waiting convey.

Han and Chewie discuss the altercation:

{Chewbacca's voice hooted again, a bit softer, in Han's ear.

"So if they were pirates, they would have tried to disable us, not fry us. So what? They didn't try that either.  And they should have. They had us dead to rights. A blind shot to our rear as we were coming out of hyperspace, and we'd be lunch."

Leia's voice came on from the ship's lounge. "Han, this is Leia on a headset link." She was telling him the children couldn't hear. "What's going on?"

"Later, leia. Don't joggle my elbow just now." Han reached up and cut the lounge out of his com circuit. Not the most respectful way to treat his wife, but on the other hand, one distraction too many could be fatal just now. He could apologize later, if they lived.}

The Falcon approaches the convey after being hailed by it and told that it’s their escort.  As soon as they are close enough, the interlopers once again try to attack the Falcon and the convey puts on a show of destroying them.  Han mans the quad lasers, leaving Chewie in the cockpit but doesn’t put up much of a fight since he figures the entire things was a performance to get the Solo’s to trust the convey.  When it’s over, he acts as if he is grateful and agrees to follow the convey in, not wanting to tip his hand.  He then returns to the cockpit: 

{Han stepped into the cockpit, and was not overly surprised to see Leia in the pilot's seat, watching the main viewport. He hadn't really expected her to sit by quietly while the ship was under attack. He was glad she hadn't. Assuming she had the kids squared away, getting a second pilot into the cockpit was the best thing she could have done. She turned to face Han. "Did you have a nice chat with our new friends?" she asked. She clearly wasn't too happy about being cut out of the comlink.

"Oh, yeah," he said. "Great bunch of folks. Are the kids still okay?"

Leia nodded toward a small repeater screen that was showing a view of the lounge. Han could see three small figures, their expressions very serious, very solemn. "I told them that if they moved out of view, there would be no dinner for a week," she said. "For once it seems like they knew when I needed them to obey. But what the burning skies is going on, Han?"

"Sorry I cut you off from the com back there," he said, answering the hurt in her voice rather than the words of her question. "I just needed to concentrate. If things had gone the wrong way, we could have been in trouble." Han wasn't really paying attention to what he was saying. His mind was on the problem at hand, not on being polite to his wife.}

I like that Leia knew to go and fly the ship, but I don’t know if I believe that she would be so hurt by Han being short with her during an attack?  Oh well, maybe it's just Han being overly attentive to Leia's feelings?  Regardless, Han then shares his theory with Leia that the whole thing had been a setup.  They follow the convey in and land in the designated spaceport.

We then cut to Mara Jade, looking as beautiful and curvaceous as ever.  She receives a strange imperial-looking holocube labeled as such:

{To be opened in the presence of Leia Organa Solo, self styled Chief of State of the so-called New Republic, Han Solo, and the de facto governor-general of the Corellian Sector, Code Rogue Angel Seven. }

She tries to open it but can’t and eventually decides to head to Corellia and deliver the cube as directed.

The Solo’s, meanwhile, are arriving on Corellia and Belindi Kalenda (the NRI operative) is lying in wait several meters away in a field outside of the spaceport watching and waiting for their arrival.

{Organa Solo stepped away from the ship-and then hesitated a moment. She stopped walking, and frowned, a bit uncertainly. She looked around, apparently scanning the horizon-and then stopped, staring straight at Kalenda. For a terrible moment Kalenda was certain that Organa Solo had spotted her, decided she was a sniper or a terrorist, was going to shout a warning to her family, alert the local security forces. Kalenda wanted to dive for cover, run for it, but she knew better. Staying absolutely still was much more likely to keep her alive. And besides, what were the odds that even a Jedi adept would be able to see or sense-a single watcher from that sort of range?}

Kalenda sees Leia shrug it off and then follows the family to where they are going to stay for their vacation and finds an empty villa not far from there where she can watch them and wait.

Insert a plot-free chapter of Lando and Luke here.

In the Solo villa, we find out that Leia and Han, in spite of the fact that Han had already demonstrated an encyclopedia-type of knowledge regarding his planet, are going to hire a tutor for the children to guide them through their trip to Corellia.  I immediately got skin prickles at this with visions of Han and Leia shoving the kids off on some stranger for the rest of the book.  Well, that’s not exactly what happens, but I’ll get to that.  First, we have this:
 
{"Do you think you can handle this tutor thing on your own?"

Leia looked up at him in mild surprise. "I suppose so," she said. "Why? What's up?"

"I don't know, exactly," Han said. "I just feel like I have to get out of here, go and see what it's really like in town. Walk around on my own two feet, instead of driving around in a nice armored CDF landcruiser. I can catch the airlifter shuttle at the village station."

Leia nodded, her expression a bit sad and serious. "I was half expecting you'd want to go in," she said. "Go on and get a look. I can find a tutor by myself. The first of the candidates is due in an hour.”

Han leaned over and gave his wife a gentle kiss on the cheek.  “Thanks," he said. "It really is something I need to do."

"Don't forget we have dinner with the Governor-General tonight at Corona House," Leia reminded him. "The hovercar is supposed to come for us at eight o'clock."}

That’s nice, Leia knows him so well and doesn’t give him a hard time.  Anyone else think Han might not make it for that hovercar?  I did.

And I was right.  Han takes a tour around town, which was pretty nicely described through his eyes as seeing his hometown again after so long, but I’m not going to paste it here, sorry.  In the end, though, he finds trouble as he is wrapped up in some sort of drunken parade/demonstration thing with patches on their clothes that say “Human League”.  Well, someone seemingly recognizes him, clobbers him over the head and takes him prisoner.

A day in the life of Han Solo.

Leia, in the meantime, hired the perfect tutor.  Someone named Ebrihim that has an astromech droid like Artoo that speaks basic named Q9.

Han wakes up in his cell, only for his captors to identify him and decide to let him go.  But not before clobbering him again so he passes out.

We then skip on over to Leia:

{It was evening, getting on toward night, and Leia could not decide whether to be angry or worried. Either Han was off having such a good time with some old cronies that he had forgotten to call home, or else he was in trouble.}

Okay, so DOES Han EVER go off with his old cronies and disappear for long periods of time?  I mean, if this is the first thing Leia always thinks of, then this is what he must always do???  Yet, that’s just not the impression we get from anything else EXCEPT these worries of Leia’s.  What’s up with that?  Other than her wanting to think THAT rather than think he is in trouble, I just don’t get it.

Leia spots a hovercar approaching and thinks it’s their ride.  But when the car comes in too fast and without lights she knows that it is not the Governor-general’s car and sounds an alarm.  Kalendi is watching from her villa and sees the hover car dump Han out onto the pavement before speeding off.  Specifically she sees this:

{The figure lurched to its feet, and she saw Han Solo looking very much the worse for wear.}

We then cut to dinner, well, to the end of dinner.  But all had not been perfect:

{Getting Han patched up from his injuries had put them behind schedule, but they had turned what was meant to be a social occasion into something closer to a council of war.}

I just think that first sentence is funny.  So, after being knocked unconscious, TWICE, and dumped out of a hover car while moving, Han made it to dinner…but he WAS late.    

The Governor-General (Micamberlecto), Han and Leia discuss the status of Corellia.  All is not well.  The parade that Han ran into is nightly demonstration that usually ends in violence all spear-headed by the Human League and its “Hidden Leader”.  All in all it just seems to be pitting the three different species that reside in the Corellian sector against one another and as far as they can tell, the Human League wants to declare independence for Corellia and keep it isolated.

In the end, they decide that it’s best for Han and Leia to continue their vacation but they do decide to move the Falcon out of the spaceport and onto the roof of the Governor-General’s house for safe keeping.

Back at the Villa, Q9 (the tutor’s droid) lets Han know that he is being watched and Han spots Kalendi in the nearby villa.  He doesn’t really understand or know why she is there and apparently with no backup.  He stops trying to figure everything out and the whole thing is chalked up with this statement:

{Han hated politics.}

Yes, I bet he does.  But boy is he knee deep in it?

Next, as part of the family vacation, the Solo’s visit an archeological dig site.  The children, with the help of Anakin’s mechanical prowess, stumble upon some large, strange machine that they believe is what the diggers are REALLY looking for.  They button everything up so that the people won’t find it and then leave the dig site.

I won’t mention how no one seemingly noticed the kids disappear during the trip.  But Leia was looking for them when they finally returned.

Lando is on his third prospect now, Tendra Risant.  After the first two disastrous trips, Lando decides to call ahead for this one.  The pair have a nice long chat and fall in love over the holo.  We also get a glimpse of Mara Jade as she is on her way to Corellia.

The Solo’s are relocating from their Beachside villa and into Corona House as the family vacation part of their visit officially comes to its end.  They are making the move and it is decided that Han will spend the last night by himself in the villa alone.  Why?

{It had taken some finagling on his part, but he had managed to convince Leia that he should drop everyone off at Corona House, and then fly on to the villa, sleep there, and clear out the last of the family's belongings in the morning. Leia seemed to think that Han wanted to get a night of peace and quiet before diving into the grueling social whirl of a diplomatic meeting, and Han was quite willing to leave her with that impression. He had his own private agenda to take care of overnight, and he could not do what he had to do with company around.}

A night of peace and quiet?  Really?  Some parts of this book are really stupid.  But we do get to see that that isn’t what Leia really thought, as she and Han put the kids to bed: 

{"They are beautiful, aren't they?" Leia asked, sliding her arm around her husband's back as they looked down on the three little people, innocent and asleep, all the cares of the galaxy quite out of their minds.

"Oh, yeah," Han said. "That, they get from your side of the family. Wonderful children. Beautiful children."

Leia nestled her head on Han's shoulder. "You'll be careful tonight, won't you? I want these guys to have a father in the morning."

Han sighed and patted her on the shoulder. "I don't know why I even bother trying to keep you from worrying," he said. "It's not that big a deal tonight. No real danger. I just need to do something without being seen."

"And I shouldn't know about it?" Leia asked.

"Probably best if you don't. For one thing, we don't really know who might be listening in right now. But you might say I'm going to take out a little insurance policy, and the less anyone knows about it, the more likely it is to work. Besides, I don't know if it's the sort of thing we can really count on."

"All right," Leia said, but the tone of her voice was not altogether happy. "I love you. I trust you. Do what you have to do to take care of us."

"Hey, Your Worshipfulness," he said, calling her by the old teasing nickname, "that's all I ever do."

Leia laughed, and looked up at him. "You always were a good liar," she said, and kissed him.}

So, that’s more like it.  And a kiss!  And then the next paragraph starts like this:

{Han said his goodnights to Leia…}

Missing Moment Opportunity alert!  Although when the rest of the sentence says this:

{…and then went to Chewbacca's quarters, just down the hall from his own apartment.}

It’s pretty anti-climatic while you are reading it.  Not to say that something couldn’t have happened there.

Han goes back to the villa and meets up with the NRI agent, Belendi.  He finds that she is working alone and they agree that she should keep an eye on the Solo’s and just wait.  Han brought her stuff to eat and sleep on, which I thought was really nice of him.

Lando meets Tendra only to find that:  A) he’s got to immediately leave her planet because they don’t want visitors and B) that she can’t marry anyone without her father’s permission or she’ll lose her money.  But Lando is smitten and vows to figure something out.

Fast forward to the long-awaited trade summit on Corellia.  Hardly anybody showed and the Solo’s are bored in the reception line.  We do get this, however after Han says something smart about nobody being there:

{"Quiet, Han," Leia said, keeping the smile on her face looking warm and sincere as she chided her husband under her breath. Han had to admit she looked stunning in the flowing, off-the-shoulder royal-blue gown she had chosen.  It set off her coloring and her eyes and hair beautifully.}

Yeah, Han’s checking her out alright.  They continue to greet the few guests that are there and all of them appear to be pretty inebriated.  Han continues to complain:

{"I just can't keep this smile pasted on my face much longer."

"Well, how about being completely astonished instead?" Leia asked.  "Could you handle that?"

"I suppose," Han said.

"Then look to see who's fourth in line at the moment."

Han looked up, and was sufficiently amazed that he failed to make any snide comments for the next three delegates. In fact, he was not aware of talking to them at all. Mara.  Mara Jade. Ex-Emperor's Hand. Ex-smuggler. The woman who had sworn to kill Luke, and then had a change of heart.

There she was, in a long black gown that seemed to make her seem even taller, even more slender-and even more threatening. The years had been good to her. She had lost none of her poise, none of her beauty-and she looked as dangerous as ever. He and his family had been on better terms with her in recent times, but there was something in her demeanor tonight that set off alarm bells in his head. It would be best to tread carefully around her.}

Oh, beautiful Mara Jade.  Remind me someone, have we read yet where she allegedly sleeps with Lando?  I can’t remember.  I know she is wearing his shirt and looking sleepy in some book.  Which was that and when?

Anyway, so Mara tells Han and Leia about the message cube.  Han, Leia, Mara and the Governor-General slip away to the Solo’s apartment and watch the message cube while the children secretly watch on.  But first, they discuss the cube and its markings:

{"Believe me," Mara said, "I've looked at that thing up, down, and sideways. Nothing on the bottom. The only markings are the ones you see on the top."

"Which look suspiciously like an Imperial code I used to crack now and again for very profitable reasons," said Han. "To be opened in the presence of Leia Organa Solo," he read, "`self-styled Chief of State of the so called New Republic, Han Solo, and the de facto Governor General of the Corellian Sector. Code Rogue Angel Seven." Well, they're not going to get high marks for politeness, that's for sure. What’s the Rogue Angel Seven business?"

"Oh, nothing very much," Leia said. "Just the key phrase for my private diplomatic cipher. Someone wants us to know they can read my mail."

Micamberlecto let out a low whistle, a sound that somehow seemed wholly incongruous coming from him. He unfolded his long, multijointed legs and leaned in closer to the cube to get a better look. "Someone knows, someone knows very much about us," he said.

"The thing I don't understand," said Mara, "is why they used me for the courier, whoever they are. They'd have to know that my relations with you people haven't always been of the warmest."

"I can answer that," Leia said. "You were second choice. Luke. Luke was intended to be the courier for this message." She pointed at the cube, still being careful not to touch it, and pointed at the lettering peeking out from under the label. "I don't read it myself, but that looks like the written form of Jawa."

"Jawa?" Mara asked.

"The language of a race from Luke's homeworld, Tatooine. He could read it pretty easily, but most other people couldn't make anything of it without a great deal of effortthe same way you could read the Imperial code. I'll bet that's the same message as the code, intended for Luke's eyes."

"So why didn't Luke carry it?"

Leia shrugged. "I don't know," she said.

"I do," Han said. "Remember he was going to go meet with Lando about some business deal just before we left. Lando told me that he was planning to go off on a trip before he came to the trade summit here. My guess is that Luke decided to go along for the ride, maybe on the spur of the moment."

"And so he wasn't there to get the message cube," Mara said. "So when they couldn't find him, they threw together a backup plan and came looking for me. It makes sense."}

Total sense.  So what did the message say?  Read on:

{Without any preamble, a screen full of numbers appeared, and stayed on the screen. A male human voice began to speak in Corellian-accented Basic.  "This will be your only notification prior to events," the voice said. "Inform no one of this message and await instructions so as to avoid the need for further action. We will be monitoring all communications. Do not attempt to call for help. Any violation of instructions will result in an acceleration of the schedule." The numbers stayed on the screen, but the voice said nothing more. Han frowned. "That voice almost sounded like me," he said. "Why would they want to simulate my voice?"}

Well, they can’t figure out why anyone was trying to sound like Han but they do figure out that the numbers on the screen correspond to stars in the galaxy, the first one being that star that was recorded blowing up.  The Governor-General just so happened to get a video of said star’s explosion.  Each successive star is populated more and more greatly, ending with the capital of the Corellian system:  Corell.

The group figure out that with the timing of the message cube delivery and the taping of the star’s explosion, it is possible that the threatening group COULD have caused the star’s explosion and their threat could be real.  Or it could be a hoax.

As they figure all of this out, the kids are watching on (in secret) in horror.

The next morning, we have Leia waking up Han to find the city surrounding them under attack.  Half of the Governor-General’s forces had betrayed him and half were still loyal.  In the Corona House, Han and Leia are separated by a few floors from the children when the first explosions happen.  Han raises Chewie on the comlink and tells the Wookiee to get the kids out on the Falcon as he and Leia are trapped from the explosion.

Han has a frantic conversation with a scared Jacen on the comlink, Han saying this:

{"We'll meet up with you when we can. Right now you have to do what Chewie says, and take care of your sister and brother.

"But, Dad-"

"No time for that now," Han said. "Get in that ship and do what Chewie says. Tell your brother and sister that your mother and I love you very much. Now go. Go."

"Okay," said the tiny voice coming from the comlink.

"We'll do our best. Good-good-bye, Dad."

"Good-bye, son," Han said, wondering just how long a good-bye it might be. There were at least fair odds that it would be forever. He stuffed the comlink in his pocket and went over to where Leia was tending to the GovernorGeneral. It looked as if Micamberlecto was only shaken up, not seriously injured. Not even a broken bone, which was a bit of a miracle considering how long his arm and leg bones were.

"Chewie has the kids," Han said. "They've reached the Falcon and should be able to lift off any second now. They're all okay."

"Thank the stars for that," Leia said. "I reached out to them with the Force, and I could feel they were scared but all right, but they were so terrified I couldn't get anything more. Good. Good."

"Well, it's the only thing that is good around here," Han said.}

So, lots of stuff happens here. Chewie lifts off with the kids.  Han reaches out to Kalendi to start making possible plans and then everything is interrupted when something comes on the holo:

{"Humans of Corellia!" the man in the holovid said, and that was enough to evoke another gasp from everyone in the office. The man had Han's voice as well. "I am the Hidden Leader of the Human League of Corellia, and I do now hereby reveal myself to you. Many of you may well have known there was a Hidden Leader, even if you did not know who had the honor to hold the post. That person is myself. My name is Thrackan Sal-Solo.

Leia looked at the screen in astonishment. "Han-that man. He's-"

"He's my cousin,' Han said, his voice flat, bitter, angry. Suddenly the past that he thought he had escaped had caught up with him again. "My first cousin, my father's sister's son, he went on. He is not a nice man, to put it mildly.  I thought he died years ago, before I left Corellia, back when he dropped completely out of sight." Han looked at the screen, at the face that was so like his own. "Of course,' he said thoughtfully, "a few people have thought I was dead myself, now and then."

"At least it explains why that Human League mob grabbed you and then let you go," Leia said. "They must have thought you were someone doing a bad job of pretending to be him. And it was his voice on the recording."}

So, Sal-Solo goes on to say that he’s going to blow up the universe if his demands aren’t met and his demands are pretty ridiculous.  Surprise.  He wants the New Republic to remove all but humans from the Corellian system.

Han and Leia discuss options (which aren’t many) and Han says this:

{"But I'm not playing by his rules, anyway. I'm going to meet Kalenda in a little over an hour, and hand her a copy of the data chip we got last night, together with whatever other information we can get together. I'm going to create as big a diversion as I can and hope she can steal a ship and go for help."

"I can't help noticing that you're not asking permission about all this," Leia said. "But at least you're being straight and telling me about it," she said.

"Then I'll keep on being straight and say that I doubt I'll be coming back anytime soon," he said. "The guy creating the diversion is usually the one who gets caught, and this time I don't think they'll let me go because I look like the boss."

"Then we don't have much time," Leia said, putting her arms around him and laying her head on his shoulder.

"We never do, Princess," he said. "We never do."}

Oh, you guys notice that, too, huh?

Alright, so not much Han and Leia stuff after this.  Han helps Belendi escape but there is some kind of interdictor surrounding the entire system that won’t let any ship go into hyperspace and we hope that she got passed it somehow.  Oh, and Han gets captured.  Meanwhile, Luke and Lando are trying to head to Corellia to find out what is going on but they are also lame ducks without hyperspace travel. And Chewie, the kids and that tutor are flying around on the Falcon (also stuck).

Leia is at the Governor’s house, attempting her own escape as she thinks this:

{Early in the day these apartments had been the home to her family, and her family had all been there, safe and together. Now, now they were all gone, scattered to the four winds, and the apartment was a darkened, ruined shell of a place, with the cold wind coming in through the broken windows.

But from here, she could see the spaceport. With a good strong set of macrobinoculars, she could see the flares of the explosions, the flicker of blaster fire, the duller flame of burning ships. She could even see the X-TIE getting away into the sky.

But she could not see Han.

And she knew she might never see him again.}

I’d feel a lot worse if this didn’t happen every other chapter…  No really, I felt bad for Leia, but then it only got worse.  Some aid comes to tell her about the interdictor field and she basically realizes that no one is escaping and no one is coming to help.  Then we have this:

{Leia Organa Solo found a place to be alone in an empty, windowless conference room across from the Governor-General's office. It was a good place for her, just then, for from there she could not see the sky, or the spaceport, or the stars that were suddenly so much farther away.

Her family was lost to her, lost to the depths of space.

The Corellian System, in a single day, had somehow found a way to backslide into the worst sort of irrational species hatred, the sort of thing that should have been left in the slime a thousand generations before. Neighbor was turned against neighbor in a three-way fight that could only grow more vicious as the wounds cut deeper. And the Corellian Sector had seceded from the New Republic in a way that could only tempt others to do the same. She knew how fragile the fabric of the New Republic still was. She knew how easy it would be to tear it to shreds, how impossible it would be to put it back together.

But there were plenty of other worries besides mere politics. Where had Mara Jade gone? She had vanished. How were a bunch of thugs like the Human League capable of stealing the most secret New Republic data? How were they able to blow up stars on command? Were they truly capable of exterminating an entire living star system if they did not get their way? And who was producing this massive new interdiction field?

And they were all counting on her. If she made only the slightest effort, used the least of ability in the Force, she could quite literally feel their need, there in the Governor-General's office. They needed her, had faith in her, believed that she would find the way out of this for all of them.

And she did not have the least idea what to do next.

Leia reached down, deep into herself, into the power of the Force, and searched for the strength that would let her hang on.}

I LOVE Leia.  And consequently, I love to read about her being strong.  So I liked all of that.

That’s about it.  The book does end with a classic line, so I guess I should mention it.  We close with Luke and Lando ambling their way through space to come to Leia’s rescue and after having all sorts of trouble, Luke says:

{"I've got a bad feeling about this."}

Being the first of a trilogy set, the cliffhanger was not surprising.  And overall, I really enjoyed this book.  I thought it painted Leia well in lots or respects (but not all).  Really can’t ask for better odds than that in these books, though.  I also prefer dealing with the more believable fanatics that just want to take over their own systems, rather than the galaxy-wide threat that some storylines try to weave through. 

I guess on the Han and Leia factor I’ll give it a 3.5 unless you guys totally disagree.  There is lots of not only Han and Leia time, but Solo family time that makes it a pretty nice read from the Han/Leia shipper perspective.  I’ll say again that I like getting to know the kids as they grow up, even though we find out that it’s mostly a waste of our time.  I probably shouldn’t have said that.  Can you tell that I’m bitter?

Well, that’s it.  Hope you enjoyed.  Up next will be Book Two of the trilogy.  Stay tuned.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Happy New Year... A Week Late!




Welcome to 2013, kids!  Aw, Han and Leia making out at midnight.  Of course.  And once again, poor Luke because there is no Mara action figure. 

My first bit of advice is don't listen to anyone who tries to tell you that this was the year that Marty McFly went into the future.  He didn't.  It was 2015.  You still have a couple more years to figure out hoverboards. 

I know things have slowed down around here this year.  I do hope the trend does not continue although I can't make any promises.  I'd love to see the book reviews continue to make headway, again, so that after we cover them all I never have to read them again and maybe only have to check the reviews for the good parts!  I'd also love to see the joint story continue.  But then again, it's not my turn to write the next chapter...

I feel as though January always sees a resurgence in the Han and Leia fandom.  I don't know if it works this way elsewhere, but it feels like people come back again right about now.  And I think I've spent more than one New Year's Eve talking back and forth on NHP with other fans who maybe haven't been around in a while.  While I was spending this year much the same, alone at home that night, that didn't happen this time.  But I think it would be bad not to mention that the infamous Green Branches story "Something Left Undone" has been updated for the first time in nearly two years.  If you're around, thank you for not abandoning it!  Now tell us what all that noise was that Han was making!  ;)  

Hopefully everyone is beginning a good year.  I personally need a good one.  And hopefully we can all get writing and commenting again because it's been too quiet around here.  It'd also be nice to hear from some people who seem to have all but vanished.  Seams?  Virgo12?  jzhanfan seems to be slowly coming back.  Hikari no tsubasa?  And Stoned Rose, for the love of the gods, please make 2013 be the year that you finally update While You Were Gone! 

Happy New Year!

Monday, December 17, 2012

Star Wars Celebration VI Report by Amara Z

Thank you to Amara Z for this report on her experience at Celebration VI last August!

 I've been meaning to write up something on Celebration for a while. Hard to believe it's been several months now. I think it took me a while to recover from Celebration and then Darth Real Life kind of got in the way. But I wanted to give everyone an idea of what Celebration is like, the panels I went to, and some really cool things that happened.

There are two main components to Celebration: the expo floor and panels. The expo floor is exactly like you think it is. It's a huge room filled with vendors and various sorts of things. There were a ton of vendors there: Dark Horse comics, Del Ray/Barnes and Noble, Disney and the Jedi Academy, Her Universe (which has very cool and comfortable SW clothes for women). Even some lesser known ones like a candy company. Totally scored a huge free Vader lollipop there. There were a lot of old toy vendors there and t-shirt shops. There were so many toys, it almost hurt my head to look through them all. I did score a really cool statue of Leia dressed as Boussch though. She's very cool and curvy. They had Lego displays, cars done up SW style. A group in Belgium made a bunch of movie scenes. Got some great pics of my daughter and I in front of Jabba on his throne and me in the hold of the Falcon. Yeah, I was loving that part. :) There was also a tattoo pavilion and an art show. The art show was just spectacular. The art was so beautiful. Unfortunately also very expensive. I did get a copy of His Vision Returns and got to meet Chris Trevas. Was pretty stoked about that. There was an exhibit from Rancho Obi-Wan of memorabilia, but the line was always too long for me to get in. They even had laser tag. My daughter loved it and I let her play a few rounds. I totally sucked at it and only played once.

There were also things outside the main room. Along the concourses they had a big model AT-AT and an inflatable Death Star. The 501st cosplay group had their own room dedicated to villains. That was cool. They had a guy as the Emperor on his throne and a lot of costume models. Even a scene where you could pretend to be trapped in the trash compactor.

 



 

 
There was an R2 builders room and got to see a bunch of different variations of R2, including one that a baby could ride in. Very cute. That room had a Han in carbonite. Had to get my pic with it. :)

 



And it seemed like Celebration was very family friendly. There were a lot of things for the kids to enjoy, like the laser tag. There was a huge pile of Legos kids could play with and build things. They had a family room where you could drop off your kids for a while. And they had special viewings and events just for kids and their parents. Thought that was cool.


In the back of the main room was the autograph and photo op area. This section got really busy at times and there would sometimes be overflow lines. But the staff was really nice and you could usually count on them to give you a good time to come back later. I got Mark's autograph for my daughter. And sprung for a photo with Carrie and her autograph for myself. We waited for an hour to meet Mark on Friday, but by Sunday he had no line at all. So it might be a better idea to wait for the end of the weekend to try to get an autograph. Waited a little less than that for Carrie's autograph The autograph lines were a little different. It was up to each actor how much they interacted with guests. Ian McDermid's line hardly moved and I heard he was spending time talking to people. Mark did talk to my daughter for a moment. Carrie was only there for two days and really swamped the whole time. So they were kind of blowing us through there and she really didn't say anything at all. A bit of a bummer, but still glad I did it and very cool to have met her.

Half the fun was walking around and seeing how everyone dressed up. Or even just sitting and watching everyone walk by. I did see some very funny things and odd things. Some Han and Leias running around, even a Bespin Leia and awards ceremony Leia. Was very cool and got a lot of good pics. One Han let me hold his blaster. :) I loved that. And I mean his blaster not his "blaster."




 

The panels were basically talks or shows on a variety of things. They had authors giving talks, previews of Episode II in 3D, Seth Green announcing his new Star Wars project, interviews with Mark and with Carrie. The one downside to panels is that sometimes, if not most of the time, you had to line up early for the panel. For the Timothy Zahn panel, I showed up 30 minutes early and it was full 10 minutes before it started. There was even a line to enter the expo in the morning. I figured in the morning I was going to wait in line or wait in the hotel room, so I might as well wait with everyone else. But not really my preference to have to wait too long for a panel. Probably unrealistic of me, but it was hard to know what to expect ahead of time. On the upside, I found that waiting in lines wasn't all that bad and met some really interesting people. And a couple of the mornings, Anthony Daniels walked around the lines to get in, taking pics with people.

 



 Here are the panels I made it to:

Timothy Zahn talked about how to judge if the science and technology in your story works and to think about how it impacts the society within your story. I was hoping more for a discussion about how to come up with the ideas, but it was still pretty good.

Caught 15 minutes of Troy Denning's talk. He spoke about how there are different levels of climaxes in a story, how they relate to raising questions in a reader, and building them up over time. There is something called the hero’s journey that struck me as kind of similar.

Saw the preview of Episode II in 3D. It was pretty interesting to hear about the process to convert it to 3D. They use artifacts and other items from the movie to fill in missing details to make it 3D. 3D requires an image from the left and the right and sometimes the original shot will have gaps in it. It makes me wonder how easy it will be to convert the OT into 3D. How much extra footage and other items did they really keep? Episode II did look pretty cool though and the chase scene through Coruscant was pretty neat.

Star Wars in 60 Minutes was a parody where they act out each of the six movies in ten minutes each and use household items as props. It went over by a little bit, but was so hysterical. They made Luke super whiney and Padme into a bored sounding Valley girl. It was hilarious and I would recommend seeing it.

I went to see an interview with Sam Witwer. I know him from the American version of the show Being Human. But he has also voiced Starkiller in The Force Unleashed and currently voicing the resurrected Darth Maul in the Clone Wars show. He seemed pretty cool and a huge Star Wars fan. I was mostly curious to see if he was just as hot as he is on screen. Ooooohhhh, yeah. He is smoking hot. If there was a new guy to drool over, he is it. Another married lady behind me at the panel agreed. :)

The big panel I went to was Carrie’s interview. I definitely wanted to go and since it’s Carrie I will have to dedicate some space to it. :) This was definitely a case of needing to get there early. My Saturday afternoon ended up a bit of a mess. There were things I wanted to do that day – see Carrie’s show and get her autograph and it for the photo-op. But Carrie was only signing autographs for two days and that day she took a long lunch (supposedly with George) and was way behind. By mid-afternoon, her photo op time had been pushed back to just before her show started and her autograph line had a huge overflow. I could postpone the autograph and photo op for Sunday. So I ended up grabbing some food and waited in line for two hours for Carrie’s show. Not what I really felt like doing for two hours, but lucky I went when I did because it filled to capacity a half hour after I got in line.

The show was so worth the wait. It really was. James Arnold Taylor opened the show with a one hour, one man show. He is the voice of Obi-Wan in the Clone Wars and he is quite funny. In the second half of the show, James interviewed Carrie for an hour. She was just awesome and I thought she looked cute. She tried to bring her dog Gary on stage with her, but he was too scared.  They talked about all sorts of things. She made fun of the holiday special, saying she wished it was so bad that it’s good and sang along with a clip. They showed a clip of her on Saturday Night Live singing about being a teenage girl from outer space. She had a great story about filming Empire. One night she went home to the house she was renting and the owner, one of the Monty Python guys, was home and having a party with the Rolling Stones. Of course Carrie couldn’t tell the Stones to leave because she had an early call in the morning. So they ended up partying all night and they didn’t show up to the call the next morning hung over because they were still drunk! They filmed the scene where they land on Bespin that morning and that’s why they look so happy in that scene because they are all still drunk. It was funny. She talked about being a writer, that she likes to have written, but not to write and she did it because she wanted to get all the crap out of her head. Someone asked if anyone slipped her the tongue in the movies and we knew the person meant Mark or Harrison. Her answer was Jabba slipped her the tongue. :) Not sure poor James knew what to do at times because he seems kind of straight laced and Carrie most definitely is not. But at the end of the show, James wanted to set up a fake photo op for everyone and asked her if there was something she always wanted to do. So she said she wanted to spank him and got him over her knee. Lol! I totally missed a picture of it though.

One of things I wasn’t aware of going into Celebration is that even though the expo floor closes at 7 and there aren’t many, if any, panels after that time, they still have events going on. They had a screening of Robot Chicken most nights. Every night they were showing two of the movies on a big screen. So after Carrie’s show, there was more to do. There was a mixer that night which I did check out. It was more like music from an ok wedding reception and I only stayed for a little bit. But Empire and Jedi were playing that night and I caught the carbonite scene and the opening of Jedi on the big screen. It was very cool. Where else do people wave lightsabers during the opening scroll and clap when a major character comes on screen? It was a lot of fun.

By then though it was getting a little late and I was tired from being on the go all day and decided to head back to my hotel. In order to get to my room, I had to pass through a small lobby in the hotel with a bar to the side. As I was walking through that night I looked over at this long table of people having a drink. This guy gets up from the table to walk past me and I watch him and thought "Holy smokes; that's Seth Green!" I quickly turned around, stepped up quietly and said, “Excuse me Seth, could I get a picture?” OMG, he was so nice. He asked my name and think he asked if was having a good time at Celebration. I told him I remembered him from Buffy as Oz and that we love Robot Chicken. He thought it was kind of funny I let my 11 year old watch it. :) I got a picture and he shook my hand and said to check out Star Wars Detours. I hate to say, but it was one of the trip highlights for me. Such a nerd, but I've never just bumped into someone like that and not anyone cool like that. Needless to say it was a little hard for me to sleep that night. Was just too excited about all the cool stuff that had happened and about more to do on Sunday.

I did end up getting my photo op and autograph with Carrie. The photo op was really interesting because basically you went into a booth with her, posed, and then stepped out. There was very little interaction with her. But it's all good. I got my autograph and the pic was really, really cute.

One of the other fun things I got to do was meet up with Seams and her family. We had such a great time with them and they are all so very sweet. It was a treat to meet up with one of our fellow writers. We went to a private cupcake party together and Seams and I spent some time walking around the expo floor together.

That's basically the story. It was definitely a good trip. And Orlando can be fun. Mostly had nice weather too. Of course I wonder now if most of the Celebrations will be there now that Disney bought Lucasfilm. ;) I would probably go again. It was awesome to see everyone dressed up and basically get to be a geek about Star Wars. It might depend on where they are having it and how easy it is for me to get there. I might do some things differently next time too. They have special Jedi Knight and Jedi Master badges that you pay extra for, but they give you special almost total access to the panels. I'd probably try to score one of those next time so wouldn’t have to wait too long for panels, but there's a limited number, they aren’t cheap, and apparently they sell out quickly. Not sure I’d do the autograph thing again since I already have done it. But I’d consider doing the photo-op again. I might also do some things that are more laid back on Saturday. It was very packed that and hard to get through some areas of the expo floor. Since there were a lot of people and costumes, t was nice to sit down and just people watch for a while.

And by the way, was this a sign of things to come? ;)

 



 

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The New Rebellion: The Review


Remember these?  I know, we're terrible.  Truth be told, I read this book in April and had the review partly written back then before our reviews came to a screeching halt.  But I do hope that we can get back on track at least somewhat.  So here we go:

Next up in the EU is a favorite of mine: The New Rebellion. I know we all bash the EU quite a bit but I guess I'm a bit surprised as we go through it again to be reminded that there really were quite a few books I genuinely liked, and this one is high on that list. This might surprise you when I tell you that Han and Leia really aren't together very much. But there just don't seem to be that many crappy chapters I mostly want to just scan over to get to the good parts. Everyone has their own interesting story line going on, which is why this was probably at least the third time I've read this one.

The story basically opens with Luke feeling a great disturbance in the Force. He feels as though millions of lives have just been taken out and he fears specifically for Leia's safety, although he can tell she is still alive. And at the moment, she doesn't seem to be in imminent danger as she is getting ready to address the senate. She is not happy about it, though, as a lot of ex-Imperials have recently joined up and she is very worried about what this will mean.

Leia is wearing her white senatorial robes and it seems she's going with the side buns look for old times sake. And we get a little flash that tells us that at least Han and Leia still like to joke around, Han had kissed her roughly before she left their apartments and had grinned at her. Well, Your Worship, does this mean I get to go back to being a scoundrel?

She had laughingly pushed him away...


I bet Han has a lot of fun teasing her about how she used to act around him. But this fun little memory is interrupted as Leia senses the same thing as Luke, like millions have been killed. She reaches out and senses the children at home and safe and then finds Luke who tells her that he felt the same thing and he's on his way to her. Taking only a moment to compose herself, Leia goes out to give her speech.

Then we find Han, hanging out in a shady casino, the likes of which he hasn't been to in many years. He's meeting up with an old smuggling buddy, Jarril. Apparently he wouldn't have even answered the request if it hadn't been for Leia. "She had looked like that sharp-tongued princess he'd rescued back when he'd been an equally sharp-tongued scoundrel. Sometimes he missed that part of himself more than he cared to admit."

I do think that Han would sometimes miss his old self. I don't think he would trade what he has, but who wouldn't occasionally miss being independent and free of responsibility when mired in household duties and rambunctious children? Anyway, he wants Han to go check out the Smuggler's Run and Han doesn't seem too interested, something about the "little lady" wanting him home with dinner ready when she gets there.

Before we get to the end of that conversation it cuts to the Solo kids, who are driving Threepio crazy. He thinks the Solos are indulgent parents so the children lack discipline and at least Winter understands the value of discipline. Didn't we just get over one book ago how Winter wasn't so responsible for the kids anymore? So much for that. Some random new nanny droid comes in and says she's there to replace Threepio, which causes some commotion because Winter and everyone else knows that nobody did that. Anakin shouts from the next room, "It's not my fault!" echoing one of his father's favorite phrases. But in the midst of Anakin trying to argue his way out of this and Jacen and Jaina wondering what he was thinking, all three of them seem to sense the same thing as Luke and Leia and simply begin screaming.

Back to Leia, now, she barely gets through the first sentence of her speech when there is a huge explosion in the Senate Hall. Yes, a huge explosion. And she, along with many others, winds up pretty injured with blood all over her and no sense of hearing due to the noise of the bomb. Many were killed and Leia starts trying to help those who need it.

From the casino, Han hears the explosion. At first he fears they are in imminent danger at the casina underground, but when they run outside he realizes that there has been an explosion at the palace, and he knows that Leia is in there. Just as you would expect Han to do, he takes off as fast as he can, running into the building and searching for his wife. Then he finally sees her.

Then he saw Leia, drenched in blood, her white gown, white no longer, ripped and stuck to her frame. One braid had come loose and hung down her back. The other was half-undone, her beautiful brown hair tangled and matted as it fell along her face. She had her hands beneath the secondary bumps on an unconscious Llewebum. Two guards supported its feet. She limped as she moved backward, favoring her right leg.

He goes to her to help her and she seems insistent on helping the injured rather than going to medical care. Han tries to get through to her but a medical droid tells him that she can't hear him.

"It's my fault."

"No, sweetheart, it's not."

"I let the Imperials in. I didn't fight hard enough."


Her words chilled him. "We don't know what caused this. Come on. Let me get you help."

"No," she said. "My friends are dying in there."

"You've done all you can."

"Don't be stubborn," she said.

"I'm not the one-!" He bit back the words. He couldn't stand here and argue with her. She couldn't hear. She'd win. He scooped her into his arms. She was light and warm. "You're coming with me," he said.

"I can't, Han," she said, but she didn't struggle. "I'm fine. Really."

"I don't want you to die because you don't know when to quit," he said as he stepped past the wounded.

Either her hearing was coming back or she could read lips. "I'm not going to die," she said.

His heart was pounding against his chest. He cradled her close. "Lady, I wish I were as sure of that as you are."


This is definitely the Han Solo we know and love. The one who runs to save his wife and carries her to safety.

Next we move to Luke arriving at the med center, and a visibly upset Anakin running to his uncle, followed closely by the twins.  Poor kids having to go to the hospital after their mom is almost killed, and of course they are reeling from the scary vision they had experienced, and Luke knows this.  And it becomes apparent that the children are blaming themselves for what happened to Leia.  There is a cute little moment when Jacen and Jaina share a little look and Luke wonders if he and Leia would've shared that kind of bond if they had grown up together. 

It's very sweet because Luke keeps noticing things about them that remind him of their parents. 

He [Jacen] tried to be tough, just like his father, but beneath he was one of the most sensitive hearts Luke had ever met.

And that, too, was like Han.

Aw.  Luke manages to convince the kids that it wasn't there fault (it wasn't, obviously) and then they all go in to see Leia who is recovering in the hospital bed, a little cut and bruised and still not really hearing but recovering.  Of course Han is there with her as well as Chewie and Winter.  The kids are sent home and Han promises that he will be home to tuck them in. 

The grown ups are left to discuss who they think was responsible.  Leia is convinced it was the Imperials who she never should've allowed to become part of the New Republic but Han is skeptical.  Han mentions that there might be more to see on the Smuggler's Run, and Leia is opposed to him leaving right now.  Knowing him like she does, she lays some guilt on him by telling him that the children need him.  He counters by saying that they need her, too, along with the entire New Republic who almost lost her, and in the end he convinces her to let him go. 

Leia goes to a meeting with other New Republic officials and it is decided to launch an independent investigation to find out who is behind the bombing.  She's not thrilled with this because she isn't sure that there won't be any tampering of evidence or anything like that.  And they even discuss the possibility of investigating her.  Luke goes into the Senate Hall to try and see if he can figure anything out and in the end he senses one of his old students: Brakiss. 

Now we go to Han and Leia in their bedroom, but unfortunately not doing that.  Instead they are having a serious conversation.  Leia is mostly healed but still looking pale, brushing her hair, and Han is trying to get her to let him go check out the Smuggler's Run, which she doesn't want him to do.  She accuses him of wanting to go off and play with the boys and she knows that part of his conversation with Jarill poked fun of Han having become so domesticated.  So Han just reasons with her:

"Leia," he said, "I'm useless here."

"Not useless," she said, looking at his hands protecting hers. "You're never useless, Han." He put his head against her shoulder, felt the silky smoothness of her hair against his forehead, smelled her faint perfume. He didn't know how to explain something she usually understood. He was a man of action. He needed to act.

Then she sighed. "You want to contribute." He nodded.

"And there's nothing you can do on Coruscant." He sat back on his heels. He was squeezing her hands tightly. The bristles of her brush dug into his fingertips. "I've already done what I can do, Leia..."

They discuss some more, and then:

She smiled at him then, the quirky half-smile she got when she knew she should fight with him, but didn't have the heart to.

"I'll stay if you need me," he said.

She shook her head. "I don't need anyone, you big oaf."

"I know that, Your Worship," he said, grinning. Then he let the grin fade. "But I mean it. If you need me-"

"We're better if we work as a team, Han." He knew that too. He'd been trying to say that all along.

"My only concern is the children." She slipped a hand out from underneath his, and put the brush on her dressing table. "What if the next attack is on them? What if R'yet is right? What if the attack was meant for me or my family?"

"If it was meant for you, it was meant as a warning," Han said.

"Like Jarril's visit." He nodded.

"Winter says the base at Anoth has been rebuilt. Maybe we should send them there with her."

"A visit to their babyhood homes?" He got off his haunches and stood. "Can you do without them, Leia? I'll be gone, and they'll be gone, and then you'll have the political crisis to deal with." She took a deep breath. He could see the struggle in her face. He knew how much she relied on her family, how important it all was to her.

"I'll work better if I know everyone is safe," she said. "That's why you want me to stay, isn't it?" She didn't look at him. He pulled her hair back and kissed the nape of her neck.

"I can take care of myself, Princess."

"I know," she said, still not looking at him.

"You're the one in the greatest danger. Maybe you should go with Winter and the children to Anoth." She lifted her head, finally looking at him. "I can't do that. I have duties here. I have to take the same risks as the rest of the government." He knew. He had to take risks too.

Protecting him and forcing him to remain on Coruscant would be as bad as making Leia go to Anoth.

He waited, watched the realization dawn on her face as she understood what he had done.

"You've manipulated me," she said.

He nodded.

She stood and wrapped her arms around him, pulling him close. In the last few days, she had lost weight. She felt thin and fragile. He held her tightly, knowing that more strength lay within her slender form than he would ever have. He had to trust in her abilities, just as she had to trust in his.

"Don't you wish that, just once, we could live calmly and comfortably like normal people?" Her voice was soft, almost a whisper.

"No," he said. He stepped back just far enough so that he could see her face. "Because if we had been normal people, we would never have met. Your Highness-ness." She laughed, and he kissed her. Deeply. Passionately.

As if he would never be able to kiss her again.

Top five kiss in the EU, right there, I'd say.  And just for good measure, I'll logically conclude that after that, they totally did it.  That's one of those little passages in the EU that has stuck with me since I first read it way back when this book came out.  It's nice to see them both acting like adults and having a real conversation like a real husband and wife, and they're even both being reasonable and affectionate.  And of course they both know each other so well, knowing that it will be hard for Leia without her family, and Leia saying they work better as a team but knowing sometimes it just doesn't work out that way.  Anyway, I love simple little scenes like this for them.  But, sadly, they are not together again until the end of the book.  But that doesn't mean it's not a good book. 

Now we move to Lando, who has, unfortunately, stumbled upon a very dead Jarill.  He had been killed almost right after Han left him, and then sent to orbit into space for all eternity aboard his ship, except Lando found him and gets to see the last message sent: 

CARGO DELIVERED. FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR.

It was followed shortly thereafter by another message.

SOLO KNOWS. WE CAN COUNT ON HIS INVOLVEMENT.

Lando knows this cannot be good news for Han and assumes whomever killed Jarril will be after Han next. 

We get back to Leia who is in the temporary meeting space for the Senate, and obviously very much missing her husband and children and likens the experience to those first few days after Alderaan when she was completely on her own.  She continues to deal with the new Imperial presence in the Senate and things are starting to not look so good for her and she feels like she is losing control of the situation. 

Han arrives at the Smuggler's Run with Chewie and runs into some old friends, including a beautiful woman by the name of Sinewy Ana Blue.  She seems to thoroughly enjoy teasing Han.  There's a bit of a skirmish and Han gets shot... in his ass.  It leaves a scorched hole that Ana sticks her finger into, which Han doesn't like very much. 

"Leave it alone, Blue."

"Oooh." Her grin got wider. "We are married though, aren't we? Some things have changed."

"Just my taste," he snapped, his good humor completely gone.

"From smugglers to princesses," Zeen said. "Can't argue with that." Blue drew herself to her full height, showing her slender, magnificent body to complete advantage. "Some of us don't need a pedigree to prove our worth," she said. "I've been quality from the beginning."

And she seems to love the idea of helping Han out with his wounds:

"I think we'd better tend to your wound first," Blue said with a suggestive leer.

"Lay off, Blue," Han said.

"Testy, testy." She moved ahead of them, leading the group into a thin passage that wound around Cavern 2 and led directly to Cavern 3. "You were a lot more fun when you were younger, Han."

"You weren't interested when I was younger, Blue."

"You were so naive, untested, good-hearted. I like a man with a bit more experience, Han."

"And a wife," Zeen said.

She continues to relentlessly tease him, even after they go on to get something to eat.  Han, being the one-woman man that he is, never gives in.

Still treat your wife to candlelight dinners, Solo?"

"Of course," Han said. "The rewards are worth it." He winked, then sauntered to the med station.

Yep, I bet he gets some nice rewards for that.  And I'm sure he wishes Leia was around to tend to the wound on his ass. 

But Leia is back at home, and definitely missing him:

Leia sprawled on the center of her bed, flimsies spread before her. She wore an old pair of fighting pants, and one of Han's shirts. Her hair was loose except for two braids in front to keep it from falling in her eyes.

The bed, a large, soft mattress, piled high with pillows and blankets, was the safest place in their quarters. She and Han spent much time in the chamber, and she felt his presence strongly there. No one else came into the room without invitation, not even the children.

Sometimes she felt as though it was the only place she could be herself.

On this afternoon, she was there because it was the only place she could be completely alone and undisturbed. She also felt that she needed Han's presence, however superficially, while she studied the hard copies in front of her.

There is just so much to like about this passage here.  I love the image of Leia wearing Han's shirt of course, and the idea that their bed is the safest place she knows, though surely it's more fun when Han is in it, too!  I love that it was basically the only place she felt like she could be herself, of course insinuating that Han was the only one she could open up to completely.  And that she needed his presence to give her strength in these difficult times.  It all just gives me warm, fuzzy feelings.  See, I told you that even though they are apart in so much of this book it's still pretty good.

Unfortunately, she was looking through the election results and it seemed that suddenly former Imperials held the majority in the Senate, which was not good news.  Leia's private stewing is interrupted by the house computer, which speaks in Han's voice - something it was not meant to do but it is apparent that Anakin had reprogrammed it, as just another little nod to the children being both intelligent and mischievous - and Lando has come to see her. 

Leia is immediately suspicious as he doesn't try to hit on her at all, and he voices his concerns about Han and tells her about the message.  He hadn't been able to get through to her.  Funny how in the galaxy far, far away they can travel faster than the speed of light across all kinds of planets but nobody can make a phone call, even though us lowly Earthlings can use the internet from our tiny phones wherever we are.  Anyway, Lando decides he's going to the Smuggler's Run to warn Han.  Again, because apparently communications are just really, really crappy in their universe.  And because the Smuggler's Run is really difficult to navigate. 


So Han is, predictably, facing his own issues.  People are always out to get him, and he encounters one of them: 

"I rarely make such a serious oversight, General Solo." The Glottalphib smiled, and as it did, a tiny lick of flame emerged from its nostril. "My name is lisner. I work for Nandreeson. He's heard that the concubine of the great Princess Leia is on the Run, and he would like to meet you."

Han's finger edged toward the trigger. The comment was supposed to make him angry. He knew that. And he was even angrier that it had. "I'm no one's concubine," he said, unable to stop himself.

Chewie growled a warning.

"I'm her husband."

For some reason I always enjoy it when anyone references Han as Leia's concubine.  Unfortunately, Leia's concubine is about to get in some trouble.  Leia is called into a meeting, purposely informed so last minute that she has no choice but to arrive late.  It seems the results of the preliminary investigation on the Senate bombing are in, and they are wondering exactly where Han is.  They start asking questions about his past and having worked on the Smuggler's Run and of course Leia defends him, saying that he has not been judged for his past and he shouldn't be now. 

The chill in Leia's hands moved up her arms. She knew where this was going. She didn't want it to go in that direction, but she knew. She knew.

"You'd better have a point," C-Gosf said. "General Solo is a hero of the Republic."

"My point is simple," Meido said. "General Solo is behind the bombing of the Senate Hall." Leia slammed her palms on the table as she stood. "I was in that Hall. Are you suggesting my husband was trying to kill me?" Gno grabbed at her sleeve. She shook him off. The room was deadly quiet.

"You weren't seriously injured, President."

"And neither were you, Meido. Is that a crime?"

"The bulk of the blast hit the seats, not the floor. If he knew you'd be there-"

"I'd be quiet now," Gno said. "General Solo is well respected. His affection for his family is extremely well known. He has jeopardized his life for the New Republic more often than anyone else except perhaps President Organa Solo and her brother. Games like this may have been popular in the Empire, but they are not popular here. We work on mutual respect in this Council. Respect, Meido, not idle recriminations." The crimson had almost completely faded from Meido's face. The white lines were blurring together. "I am not making idle accusations. I'm sorry, but I am not. I wish I were." The softness of his voice caught all of them. Leia could see it. Her supporters had all leaned back in their chairs.

"You said this is a preliminary report," Gno said. "You cannot have proof."

"But I do," Meido said. He looked up at Leia, his eyes pale. "I'm sorry, President. Truly I am." The thing of it was, she believed him. She believed he was sorry. Perhaps she could feel his regret through the Force or perhaps he was sending it through his body language. She didn't know. Slowly she sat down.

Meido passed out several copies of a single sheet of paper. "My people intercepted this message. I have sent it to your personal computers. You can verify its authenticity through your own systems." Leia took the paper. Her hand was shaking.

CARGO DELIVERED. FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR.

SOLO KNOWS.  WE CAN COUNT ON HIS INVOLVEMENT.

Lando. Lando had betrayed them again. Over the years she had learned to trust him, but that trust had always felt awkward, always slightly misplaced.

No. Lando wouldn't betray Han. What had he said? That he'd never make up for betraying Han. Ever.

The information must have come to Meido some other way.

"There's nothing here that says Han is involved with the bombing," she said.

"This was sent by a ship called the Spicy Lady just as it was leaving our section of space on the day of the bombing," Meido said. "The Spicy Lady is owned by a smuggler named Jarril, who was seen in Solo's company at the time of the bombing. Shortly after Jarril left, Solo left, ostensibly in search of him." It looked bad. She had known it looked bad when Lando showed it to her. She should have done something then, but Lando had assured her he had everything under control.

"This isn't proof," Gno said.

"This is suspicious," said R'yet Coome. "I would suggest that we put out a notification for Solo's arrest."

"We can't do that," C-Gosf said. "He's a hero."

"He's a traitor," Meido said.

"He's my husband," Leia said. "He would never do anything to harm me. Someone is trying to set him up." She clasped her shaking hands in her lap. "What else does your report say?"

"We have only preliminary results, President," Meido said. His voice was still gentle, still filled with apology. He accused her own husband of trying to murder her and to destroy everything they all had worked for, and he was acting sorry for her.

"What are those results, Senator?" Leia's voice was cold.

"That there was more than one detonation point."

"We know that," Leia said. "Our results say the same thing. Have you anything besides this message that links my husband to the scene?"

"He was seen with-"

"Have you?" Gno put his hand on Leia's. She shook him off.

"Have you evidence that he planted a bomb? Have you evidence that Jarril is involved in this bombing? Do you know whether Jarril sent that message or whether someone else did? Can you prove that this isn't some scheme to get my husband or to divide us?"

"Leia," Gno said softly.

"This seems conclusive to me," Meido said.

"It is not conclusive," Leia said. "It is mere speculation. I could devise a message tonight and send it along channels that would make it look as if you planted the bomb. Such things are easy. My husband and I are often targets for strange behavior. I don't think we should make decisions about this until we have the whole truth."

"Leia," Gno said again.

She turned on him so fast that her hair swung loose of its tie. "What?" she asked.

"You can't be objective about this."

"Objective?" Leia was shaking all over with the force of containing her anger. "This man, this former Imperial, has just accused my husband of treason, and you think I should be objective?"

"Yes," Gno said. "I do. You're the head of government. We need your calmness."

"Calmness? Calmness? This is not a situation for calmness, Gno. This is exactly what we feared when we brought the Imperials into this body. They're dividing us. Can't you all see the ploy?"

"Leia," Gno said.

Meido's entire face had gone white, except for crimson lines near his eyes and mouth. "I'm sorry, President."

"I will not accept your apology. How dare you-"

"He dares because he is doing the right thing." C-Gosf stood beside Leia and put a delicate arm around her shoulders. "Better he discusses this here, in the Inner Council, than among the other senators. Better that we do what we can to silence these rumors than allow them to spread all over Coruscant. For if we do, General Solo will always be under suspicion, even if we later learn of his innocence." All of her supporters were siding with Meido. "I'm sorry, President," he said again.

"Han had nothing to do with this," she snapped.

"Leia," Gno said, "I think you need to absent yourself from this discussion. None of us can be objective about the ones we love, no matter how hard we try." Her heart was pounding. "You believe Meido. You believe him."

"I believe we need to investigate this, Leia." Gno looked away from her. "I'm sorry. But the charge is too serious to let slip." She looked around the room, at her closest remaining allies in the government. Familiar faces, and three unfamiliar faces, elected after the bombing. Meido,

R'yet, and Wwebyls watched her warily. Her friends had sympathetic expressions on their faces. Even those who normally opposed her were looking at her with pity.

"Is this all it takes?" she asked. "An accusation, and a good man is found guilty of a crime he didn't commit? This is not proof, and even if it were, you all know Han. You know he's not capable of this."

"Leia, please, don't make this difficult," Gno said.

"What do you want me to do, Senator?" she asked, using his formal title. "Resign?"

"No," he said. "Absent yourself from any proceedings concerning Han. "

"And if I don't?" Gno looked away from her. C-Gosf squeezed Leia close and then let go. "Think about it, Leia. We'll meet in the morning. By then this news won't be quite as shocking."

"The news isn't shocking," Leia said as she stood. "What's shocking to me is your willingness to believe it."

"Forgive me, President," Meido said. "But whoever planted that bomb had to have access to the Chamber. Very few people had such access. The person who set the bomb will be one we trust. I can guarantee that, just from the circumstances. And I think when you're calm you'll realize that too."

Leia stood slowly, drawing upon all her regal training to stare down Meido. "When I was eighteen years old, I stood beside Grand Moff Tarkin as he gave one order from the depth of space and wiped out Alderaan, my home planet, with a single blast from the Death Star. Until that moment, I had believed the destruction of a planet in an instant was impossible. So don't tell me what has to be true, Meido. I am Force-sensitive. If my husband were to betray me or the Republic, I would know. And so would my brother, who is a Jedi Master. We still don't know what happened in the Hall that day. And until we do, we can't be certain if a friend betrayed us, or if someone tested a new weapon. But if I were you, I would stop making baseless accusations now. Such accusations will only divide us. And now, more than ever, we need to be unified." She met everyone's gaze individually. Borsk Fey'lya was leaning back in his chair, his eyes bright. Bel Iblis wasn't looking at her. ChoFi' was studying his hands. C-Gosf's whiskers were trembling, and she wouldn't meet Leia's gaze. Gno was the only one of her friends who smiled at her, in an attempt to reassure her.

They would not do any more than they already had. She could count on them to hear the evidence, nothing more.

Leia nodded once. "This meeting is adjourned until tomorrow morning. By then," she said, "I expect answers. Not accusations. Concrete information. Am I clear?" Leia didn't give them a chance to respond. She turned and walked out of the room, holding herself as proudly as she could. But once she was alone, she let the shaking overtake her.

It had begun. The unity she valued above everything except her family was shattering.

Just as she had known it would.

All right, can we all just agree that being the president of the New Republic just sucks?  How often is Leia going to be manipulated?  At least she immediately and relentlessly comes to Han's defense here.  She obviously knows without question that he wouldn't do something like that. 

Meanwhile, Han is not having an easy time as he is being chased after by some guys working for Nandreeson, who really, really wants Lando dead and wants to use Han as bait.  Han being Han, he does not get captured.  But Lando, who hadn't found Han yet, did get taken by Nandreeson and basically gets left swimming in this slime stuff to wait to die.  As we all know from watching all sorts of movies and reading books, when enemies catch the ones they want to kill, they should probably just kill them instead of leaving them to die elaborately.  I'll spoil it for you right now that Lando lives through this book.

One thing I remembered clearly from the first time I read this book was that it felt like everyone escaped death multiple times.  Leia and Wedge discover that someone has rigged all of the X-wings to explode if a certain series of commands is given, except they don't know what exactly that series entails.  They do know that they need to ground all of the X-wings, except Luke is off in one and they don't know where he is.  Cut to Luke, who while flying in his X-wing, explodes.  Crap. 

Meanwhile, Leia calls a meeting of her own to explain the X-wing incident, and the detonators have Imperial markings, which the new Imperials in the Senate think is just a way for her to make them look bad.  Wedge is not amused.  They accuse Han of treason, and then decide that what they really need is to take a vote of no-confidence in Leia.  Did I mention it must suck to be president of the New Republic?  There is a lot of back and forth in this meeting, lots of accusations of leaked information and such, and nobody gets anywhere.

Leia is of course still alone.  She checks and makes sure the kids are still fine.  She thinks that she would know if something happened to Han, and I quite like the insinuation that she is bonded to him in such a way that she could sense something like that.  Leia receives a message from Kueller, who has the same, skeletal face that Leia had seen in the beginning of the book in her vision.  He shows her an image of Luke, who survived his crash but is badly injured.  And he's very close to Kueller, who will kill him if Leia doesn't disband the government.  He also says that if she doesn't do what he asks, he will kill her husband and children as well.  And then he will kill all of her subjects.  And just to prove that he's serious, he uses the Force to kill a whole lot of random beings and Leia can sense it.  And he tells her that she has three days to decide or Luke is a dead man. 

So, Leia's life still sucks and she's just pacing alone in her chambers, constantly checking for messages from Han and knowing he can't communicate with her until he leaves the Run.

Han would have contacted her when he left the Run.

She had meant what she said to him just before he left. Sometimes she wished they were a normal couple with normal concerns. Then sitting down to dinner at night with her children would be routine, not the unusual. Sleeping beside her husband would happen every night instead of a few nights every other month.

But she was as loath to give up their life as he was.

Except at moments like these.

Ugh, every other month?  Really?  I cannot imagine that her job is worth that.  One of the elements of the EU I choose to pretend does not exist.  So Mon Mothma comes to visit.  Can someone please tell me if a meeting with Mon Mothma has ever gone well for Leia?  Leia tells her that she needs to step down from her role.  Kueller is targetting her family and if she steps aside she believes that this threat to the New Republic as a whole was secondary and he won't follow through with it, and it will also remove the threat of this vote. 

"He doesn't know you well, does he?" Mon Mothma said softly. "Threats to your family always make you stronger."

Leia's eyes burned. She rubbed at them. She didn't want sympathy. Not yet, anyway. Later, when she had time. "In either case," she said, choosing not to respond to Mon Mothma's last sentence, "the solution is the same. I need to step down as Chief of State."

Mon Mothma clasped her hands in her lap. "You can't do that now, Leia. I have had word from my sources in the Senate. Unless you campaign, you'll lose that no-confidence vote. They're looking to blame someone, anyone, for that bombing, and they'll blame Han, which means they'll blame you."

"I've thought this through," Leia said. She rubbed her hands together, nervous habits she hadn't used in years. "If I step down, the vote is null, right?"

"Well, technically, it's null only if you resign, Leia. A temporary standing aside will allow the vote to go forward." Leia nodded. She had been afraid of that, but it didn't matter. Luke mattered. Protecting her children mattered.

Han mattered.

For the first time since she had become head of the New Republic, she could serve her family better as a private citizen than as a public one.

"I'll resign, then," she said. "The vote's called off, and Kueller can no longer use the New Republic as his excuse for targeting my family."

Now, let's think about this for a minute.  Just another book before this one, Han was held hostage and Leia decided to give him up, not knowing that Luke was going to save him anyway.  Now Luke is the one in immediate danger, and she resigns.  But then there is this added glitch that apparently Kueller was also going to kill Han and the kids, so she has a lot more to lose in this case.  So, I don't know how I feel about this.  Also, at the end of this conversation she says that she's going after Luke.  So, that kind of bothers me.  She drops everything to go after Luke but in the last book she wouldn't do the same for Han?  I don't love this...

Fortunately, Han can take care of himself... mostly.  He is on a mission to save Lando, and he and his crew of smugglers make their way through some mud and muck to find and save Lando, who they finally find with Nandreeson, who also loves the idea of killing Han, whom he refers to as the princess's consort, to which Han feebly corrects, "Husband."  Han winds up swimming with Lando, and tells Nandreeson that his plan of waiting for the victims to drown is a little elaborate.  He agrees, and they start getting shot at.  Chapter ends.  See, I told you that everyone is about to die a lot during this book.  Case in point: after this chapter, Kueller nabs Luke and renders him unconscious.  Things aren't going well for our Rebel heroes.

Just as Leia is about to go off and find Luke, Wedge stops her and tells her that they are going to bring a whole fleet to help save Luke.  If they work fast enough, they emerge as heroes.  If not, they just say they were rogues who went off on their own. 

Remember when I said Han could take care of himself?  Well, of course he and Lando escape after some furious fighting in the slimy water.  He is on Lando's ship when he starts hearing massive explosions outside and goes to find that dozens of droids are exploding and all sorts of beings are injured.  He finds Blue who tells Han that she knows about Kueller and knows that he wants Luke and Leia dead.  The droids had been stolen from Coruscant, where they were intended to explode.  Oh, none of this is good news.

Han was frantic for Leia. More bombs on Coruscant. She might be dead by now. The entire planet might be in flames.

He hoped she had gotten the children away.


Poor Han.  See this is the kind of thing that wouldn't happen if they didn't split up all the time!  Han was torn now though between Leia and all of the injured beings there in front of him from the explosion:

"But we can't leave these people like this." Han's brain was moving faster than his mouth. He wanted to be gone, wanted to be outside the Run so that he could contact Coruscant and find out if anyone had survived.

Find out if Leia had survived.

His hands were shaking. All he could see was his beautiful wife, her white dress torn and scorch-marked, her hair falling around her ears, her nose bleeding, her body bent with the strain of carrying a senator three times her own weight. Leia during the last bombing. She might have collapsed if he hadn't taken her from there.

He wasn't there to rescue her now.

Well, at least you seem to be there to rescue her more often than she is there to rescue you.  Is it weird to anyone else that anytime, ever Leia is in trouble Han immediately drops what he's doing and goes after her but Leia doesn't seem to operate the same way when Han is in trouble?  Just a little something to think about.  Anyway, Han organizes some medics to help the injured and get them off-planet, all the while determined to get out and try and get to Leia, thinking about what might happen if he lost her.

Han hurried out of the Luck. He hoped he still had it all. Losing Leia and the children was a threat he seemed to have to deal with constantly, and it was one he never wanted to contemplate. He knew what he would do if they were murdered, and it would be ugly.

If something happened to Leia and the children, Han would never be considered nice again.

I don't think anyone wants to imagine Han Solo if someone messes with his family.

At least Leia is still on her mission, and we know she does not quit:

...she should have felt tired, but she was curiously elated. She loved this feeling. She had had it several times in her life. The first was the day she met Han. After the experience with the interrogation droid, after watching Alderaan shatter, after losing everything, she should never have been able to run through those corridors, blast her way into that garbage bin, and shoot her way to the Falcon, But she did.

Han called it a core of strength within her, but it was more than that. No matter what, she would never give up. She would win and take risks just as Han did. She had proven that when she had sent the fleets to Koornacht the year before.

Now she would have to do it again.

You keep kicking ass, Leia Organa-Solo.  She receives a message telling her that all of the new-model droids are dangerous, so she has them all deactivated.  There is no indication of who the message came from. 


Things start moving pretty fast at this point.  Leia finds Luke and they try and make their escape.  Han is getting the injured off the planet and finally gets to a point where he can check for messages, and he gets some from Leia but none of them are recent.  Then he finds one from Anakin:

It was from Anakin. The room behind him was dark, and he was hunched near the console. Obviously everyone else was asleep, and he was sending a message without permission.

"Papa?" he whispered. "Something bad happened, and I can't get Mama or Uncle Luke." Han felt a pang that his son had turned to Luke before coming to Han. But the children always did on Force matters. They knew Han had no expertise in that area.

"Winter says we would hear if something went wrong. But Papa, I keep having dreams of a dead man. Bad things are going to keep happening again, I know it." He glanced over his little shoulder, as if he had heard a noise. Then he hunched even closer to the console.

"Please call when you get this. Please." Anakin's image winked off.

Ugh, again, kind of mixed feelings here that Anakin would go to Luke before Han, and how it hurts Han to know this.  I can't stand the fact that they seem to constantly rub it in our faces that Han is somehow lesser-than because he doesn't have the Force.  But anyway...

So he then contacts Coruscant and talks to Mon Mothma and learns of Leia's resignation and that she was all right at last check, and of the accusation of treason against him, and, fortunately, that the droids had been deactivated.  Next up on his list is to talk to Anakin, so he contacts Winter on Anoth. 

"Let me speak to him," Han said.

"As you wish, sir." Her voice didn't have the disapproval her words implied. She was a wise woman, and probably a better parent to his children than either he or Leia was. She was with them all the time. Han had no qualms about the arrangement. Only a few stabs of guilt daily that he wasn't with his children as much as he should be.

Oh, the anger inside me is rising as I read this.  You're letting a nanny be a better parent to your kids than you are?  Really?  And you're letting this happen and not spending time with them?  Seriously?  This is infuriating!  Not to mention the idea that Han would even admit to himself that she was a better parent than he or Leia.  Again, can we pretend that they raised their own kids?  And yet again, what happened between the last book and this one that suddenly Han and Leia aren't raising their own kids anymore?  I don't get it!

Anakin's small face appeared on the screen. His resemblance to Luke always startled Han. That, and his son's blue eyes, which had more intelligence in them than Han had seen in any being, human or otherwise.

Oh, there's some more pointless foreshadowing of how smart and Force sensitive Anakin Solo is.  Seriously, they work so hard to build this kid up in these books only to kill him at 15 years old.  Talk about crappy story telling.

"Winter already said I shouldn'ta called you." Han smiled, hoping that the smile was reassuring. "No, Anakin. You can always contact me. Just let Winter know first." His son nodded. He looked very subdued. Even the worst of Winter's scoldings never brought this.

"What's happening?" Han asked. "What scared you so?"

"Can't find Mama," Anakin said. "Jacen and Jaina say she's all right, though. We'd know."

"She is all right," Han said. "She's on a trip right now. She'll be back soon." Anakin rubbed his left eye with his fist. He clearly hadn't been getting much sleep. "I know," Anakin said. "She's going to see the dead man." Han glanced at Chewie, who shrugged.

"He comes in my dreams. He says he will get us. He can't get us, can he, Papa?"

"No," Han said, feeling an anger so deep that he could barely hold it in. "You're safe on Anoth."

"They got here once," Anakin said.

Han remembered. Winter and a nanny droid had saved his infant son's life. He was surprised that Anakin remembered. But then, nothing Anakin did should surprise him. "Winter saved you. That's what she's there for."

"I wish you were here."

Oh, good to know that Anakin wants his daddy around sometimes to make him feel safer.

"I do too, son," Han said. Then Jacen and Jaina crowded into the picture and demanded some of his time. He gave them what he could. Chewie growled a warning. Han looked up. Wrea filled the cockpit transparisteel.

"Put Winter back on, would you, guys?" he said. They protested but drifted off, all except Anakin, who watched from the side, looking more serious than Han had ever seen him.

"Winter," Han asked. "Have you any droids there?"

"We shut them off, per Master Skywalker's instruction." Luke was way ahead of him. Thank every lucky piece Han had ever owned.

"Keep them off," Han said. "And Anakin, no fooling with the droids at all. Okay, son?" Anakin nodded. No protest, no nothing. That wasn't like his youngest son. Then Anakin said, "Papa?" Winter stepped aside. Apparently she was as worried about Anakin as Han was.

"What, little Jedi?"

"The dead man says he'll kill Mama."

Han smiled, even though his anger deepened. "The dead man has no right telling you lies in your dreams. I'm going to your mother right now. She'll be just fine."

"He almost killed her the first time," Anakin said, his voice small.

Han started. The Senate Hall, the droids, the messages, everything traced to Kueller. "Maybe he thinks that," Han said, "but your mom is one of the toughest people I know. He scared her. He scared all of us. But he didn't 'almost kill' her."

"She was hurt."

"Yes," Han said. "She was. This 'dead man' of yours isn't very nice. But we'll get him, and we'll make him stop giving you dreams."

"Promise, Papa?"

"I promise," Han said. "You be careful, Anakin, okay? Listen to Winter."

Anakin nodded. "Love you, Papa." Han glanced at Chewie. Chewie stared at the controls as if he weren't listening to the exchange.

"Me, too, kid," Han said. It was the best he could do in front of Chewie. "See you soon." And then he signed off.

Well, regardless of my anger that the kids are off somewhere else and all of the implications that Han and Leia have almost nothing to do with parenting their own kids, I do enjoy little bits like this of Han being a good dad in the face of such adversity. 

Craziness ensues.  Han picks up Mara and some ylsalamiri to help mess with Kueller, who is in the midst of a lightsaber duel with Luke and Leia.  Don't ask me for more details, this was a long book!  Plus, above planet is a big space battle with the fleet and Wedge.  I told you there was a lot going on. 

Han, Chewie, Mara and their ylsalamiri make it to the planet, searching frantically for Leia.  Just as he's about to give up Han hears a woman yelling in the distance and immediately knows it's Leia.  Before they can get to her, a large and menacing creature shows up and eats the ylsalamiri, cage and all, which sort of ruins Han's whole plan after clawing and bloodying Han's shoulder in the process. 

They continue to head toward Leia's voice and Han is even more nervous as her cries of Luke's name are getting more desperate.  And apparently Luke appears ready to let Kueller kill him, only to come back as a Force ghost and help Leia defeat him.  But in the midst of battle, suddenly they each stop feeling things through the Force, as though they are being blocked.  Kueller, rather than striking Luke because he's thrown off his game, pulls out a remote detonator and punches in some numbers.  Elsewhere, Artoo, the true hero of the Rebellion, has deactivated all of the detonators this is meant to set off. 

Leia can't sense Luke anymore, but suddenly she senses... "... someone close.  Someone precious."  Who could that be?  She finally turns to see Han.  As Luke is still in the heat of battle, she calls Han's blaster to her through the Force and turns and fires on Kueller, killing him in a couple of shots and wondering if she's gone to the dark side by doing so.  But she hadn't felt through the Force, as even though the ylsalamiri had been eaten it was still doing its job.  And Han finally approaches Leia.

She took one last look at the man who had threatened her entire family. Then she turned around. Han was behind her, watching her.

"I love you, Princess," he said softly.

She launched herself into his arms, and pulled him close. "I know," she whispered. "I know."

Well, they do know how to make me happy sometimes with just a few short lines.  I'm always a big fan of Leia "launching herself" into Han's arms.  I am also a fan of this little passage from when they get back home:

Leia was wearing a copy of her white dress, but she had forgone the braids wrapped around her ears. Instead, she wore her hair down. Han had smiled at her before she left the suite, and had made her promise to return from the Senate early. The children were due back the following day. He wanted to make the most of his time alone with her.

So did she.

Does this count as directly implied sexy time?  It probably should.  Obviously they later stay up all night "making the most of their time alone."  We know what that means.  Even Mon Mothma does, apparently:

"Then I am going home. Han promised dinner for me."

"And no children until tomorrow," Mon Mothma said.

Leia smiled. "A person always has to make the best of every situation," she said.

"Oh, you do, Leia," Mon Mothma said.

Yeah, even Mon Mothma and all of her frigid bitchiness knows that when you have a night alone with Han Solo, you make the most of it.  All appears to be well with the New Republic.  Since the mission had been a success Leia is regarded as a hero once again.  No more dissention, everything is just swell.  End of book.  No, there is no chapter of them making the most of their time alone.  But if you would like to write it for us, please, go ahead!

Phew, I forgot how time consuming these things are!  Especially when Han and Leia are so prominently featured.  As just a general Star Wars book, I really enjoy this one.  Lots of action, but the kind of action that actually engages me and keeps me interested rather than just seemingly pointless space battles.  I was always pretty drawn into what was going on and at times genuinely concerned as to what might happen to our heroes.  And for the most part Han and Leia are in character, which is always a plus. 

And in spite of their being apart and the constant reminder that they are apart all of the time, there are also plenty of indications that they do, in fact, share a pretty close bond.  Leia can sense Han when he's near, she wears his shirt when he's gone and longs for his presence, he drops everything to save her, a really good kiss and some solid evidence that they have fun alone when the kids are away.  Except let's not try and think about how often the kids are away. 

That said, given their extensive time apart I think I can only in good conscience give this one a 3 on the Han and Leia factor scale.  Maybe a 3.5, I don't know.  It's been a while since I did one of these and I kind of forgot how I usually rate them!  So comment, agree or disagree.  But all that said, This is high up there on my list of favorite EU books.  It's an enjoyable read if you get your hands on it.

I promise to try not to let another 8 months pass before the next book review!