Reviews

Han Solo at Stars' End by Brian Daley

calistareads's review against another edition

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3.0

I was watching a Youtube video about Star Wars books in the beginning and it gave me the name of the books I didn't remember. I had this book that collected these 3 stories. I read them in the early 90s. I think I read the 1st 2 and not the 3rd one.

I don't remember the plot at all. I love the Jedi and the spiritual aspect of the story, so not having Jedi in the story was rather bland for me. Han Needs Luke and opposite. I would not re-read these, but it was interesting.

I got rid of my copy of this when I purged most of my paperbacks moving to MD. I do wish I still had this even if I don't read it.

amelianicholebooks's review against another edition

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3.0

This book actually had a fun plot, but it isn't Star Wars, so if you are a EU or legends fan, this is a must. But otherwise, it breaks so many Star Wars rules, it is almost funny. Best characters were Chewie and the feline ranger and mother.

octavia_cade's review against another edition

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1.0

Yeah, this was a bit of a slog. There's nothing wrong with it exactly, but it just didn't hold my interest - it's taken me months to wade through what is a relatively short book because I kept getting distracted by more interesting reads. It's action-packed, I'll say that for it, but my impression afterwards is of escape after escape and not a lot of character-building or anything of any depth to tie the story together. And eventually even the escapes occur on such a scale as to become a bit ridiculous - the less said about an entire tower blasting into space the better. Popcorn fare at best, and that's from someone who likes popcorn.

leialocks's review against another edition

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3.0

When Solo came out, there were lists with the best Han books to check out to get excited about the movie. That's how this ended up on my list. It was nice to visit The Star Wars Legends canon. The tale is a straight adventure story. There's no much character development; it's all action plot. I kept saying, "What has Han gotten himself into now?" I'm not sure if this is "one of the best" Han stories as the list described, but it was a fun ride in the Falcon with Star Wars' most lovable scoundrel.

bassplyr5150's review against another edition

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4.0

I didn't even know this existed until I saw portions of it on Tumblr. It was a favorite book as a child but this adaptation caught me off guard with a plot twist ending!

erikwade's review against another edition

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adventurous fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot

3.5

shanhaddock's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a good book, it unfortunately wasn't really a good Star Wars book. It felt a bit like Han and Chewie were adventuring in some other setting entirely.

jess_anderson's review against another edition

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

depizan's review against another edition

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4.0

These books are the books that feel the most Star Wars to me out of all the Star Wars books. Daley does a wonderful job of mixing humor and action, and I feel like he does a good job of painting Han as a conflicted person - he's both plausibly the guy that Obi-Wan hires out of the cantina and someone with enough decency that sets up his change of heart in the original movie without making him already totally a good guy who's down to fight for a cause.

It helps that Daley created a kind of borderline cyberpunk corner of the galaxy for the stories. A place that's not exactly the Empire, but is definitely a corporate run shithole. Perfect for a somewhat gray protagonist, but with plenty of room to be better than the other guy, so to speak.

Here, his primary motivations are money, his ship, and, after several things go very wrong, saving Chewbacca. This involves some very cinematic (and at times humorous) action sequences, a bit of cleverness, and an overall satisfying story.

billyjepma's review against another edition

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3.0

This was fun! Nothing special, just a quick space-adventure with (a noticeably more selfish, crasser Han, since this was written before Empire even came out and started to develop the character past his pure-scoundrel origins). It’s got heavy DnD vibes, actually, just in terms of how the plot gets going, the way the supporting cast contribute; it all adds up to an enjoyable read that’s, for better and for worst, fairly forgettable. Definitely gonna see what Daley’s other Han Solo stories have in store, though!