
Star Wars Jedi: Battle Scars
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Narrated by:
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Sean Kenin Elias-Reyes
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By:
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Sam Maggs
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Cal Kestis leads the Stinger Mantis crew on an adventure set between Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order and the highly anticipated Star Wars Jedi: Survivor.
Cal Kestis has built a new life for himself with the crew of the Stinger Mantis. Together, Cal’s crew has brought down bounty hunters, defeated Inquisitors, and even evaded Darth Vader himself. More important, Merrin, Cere, Greez, and faithful droid BD-1 are the closest thing Cal has had to a family since the fall of the Jedi Order. Even as the galaxy’s future grows more uncertain by the day, with each blow struck against the Empire the Mantis crew grows more daring.
On what should be a routine mission, they meet a stormtrooper determined to chart her own course with the help of Cal and the crew. In exchange for help starting a new life, the Imperial deserter brings word of a powerful, potentially invaluable tool for their fight against the Empire. And even better, she can help them get to it. The only catch—pursuing it will bring them into the path of one of the Empire’s most dangerous servants, the Inquisitor known as the Fifth Brother.
Can the Imperial deserter truly be trusted? And while Cal and his friends have survived run-ins with the Inquisitors before, how many times can they evade the Empire before their luck runs out?
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Critic reviews
“Author Sam Maggs has managed to turn a tie-in novel that bridges the gap between two video games into one of the most romantic and riveting Star Wars books of all time. Jedi: Battle Scars blows every expectation out of the water for a thrilling and intimate tale of messy found family and finding your fire and purpose in the galaxy.” —Dork Side of the Force
“Maggs is a strong writer and the story is incredibly compelling.” —SlashFilm
“A perfect bridge from Fallen Order to Survivor . . . Battle Scars provides a fun and exciting new adventure for Cal & Co.” —That Hashtag Show
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Was the Author just horny?
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Spoilers from here:
I loved Merrin and Fallen Order, and I'm all for LGBT relationships as long as they're well written... but this one was far from well written. It felt like an author's original character was shoehorned into a forced and unconvincing romance with an established character with no proper buildup or chemistry. As a reader, I had no reason to feel any investment in the sudden 0 to 100 accelerated lust that was injected so suddenly into the story, and it was such a whiplash every time it came up that I absolutely detested any interaction between the two of them. Merrin was well written in just about every other situation in the story, but her romance with Fret left such a bad taste that it spoiled the rest of the book. Doesn't help that the romance takes up half the story.
A bitter taste and eye roller till the very end
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If I wanted to listen to a romance novel, I would have got one.
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First, nothing happens. A lot of things go on but nothing substantial actually happens. This book is 10 hours of filler and 28 minutes of story. A cliff notes version (or even a 3-part comic book) would suffice.
Next, if you've played Fallen Order (and I assume you must have if you're thinking about listening to this book) everything you loved about each character has changed. Cal now sounds like a plucky kid straight out of an after-school special. He's practically reduced to Beaver Cleaver. Greez complains a lot more and comes off more annoying; but at least the narrator's performance of his voice is probably the closest. Cere is probably the closest to her in-game character except far less interesting. And then there's Merrin. Where do we even start to describe the disservice this author (and narrator) did to Merrin?
Think about every bad movie you've ever seen that contains a Russian villain. Borris from Rocky and Bullwinkle for example. That's Merrin's voice now. Now recall how interesting and conflicted Merrin's character was in the game. Remember how strong and challenging and mature she was. That's all been replaced by some vapid female from a cheap dime-store romance novel. No joke. One third of this book is devoted to googly-eyed amorous expressions, not-so-veiled lovemaking, pillow talk, hot tub scenes, and sophomoric descriptions of her new love interest. At no point in ANY book that I'm reading or listening to should I ever come across a sentence like, "the hot, buff, purple mulleted, alien". That laughably bad writing and gross overuse of descriptors cheapens the story and slows down the pace of the narrative. It also makes us question everything we know about the last Nightsister. "Excuse me, Merrin is suddenly smitten by what?"
While we're talking about horrible writing I feel it's worth mentioning that, at one point, Merrin is fighting a Stormtrooper Commander - a singular person that we never learn the name of - that the author feels compelled to use they/them/their pronouns. This nameless Commander with hardly a word of dialogue, whom Merrin handily dispatches within less than a chapter, is written in a way that infers the gender this unnamed person identified as is was well know. Absurd. Unnecessary. Does an actual disservice to those who are not cis-gender.
I could go on but, in the interest of leaving you with a TL:DR version of this review, just don't buy this book. It's horrible,
Desperate Closeted Housewife Fan-Fiction
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Star Wars or erotica?
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Enjoyable
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Disappointed and Confused
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To much about the romance
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doesn't fulfill its purpose
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I don’t know if I learned anything about the characters that actually matter. The exploration of Merrin is valuable but only if it changes the way I view her character. Maybe my opinion will change when I play the game and It’s probably hard for Sam Maggs to write this given certain parameters from the game developers. But all in this book fell short of expectation.
Wish it added more to the story of Cal
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