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Chargement... Queen's Hope (Star Wars) (édition 2022)par E. K. Johnston (Auteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreQueen's Hope par E. K. Johnston
Books Read in 2022 (2,390) Fantasy/Science Fiction (187) Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. I think what upsets me the most about this trilogy is that it really had potential! You see it shining here and there in some of the scattered scenes and I don't know if those little bursts of interest save the book a bit or just make me mad. There is, at the same time, too much and too little going on. Hoping around povs is justifiable if they are adding important information or perspectives but here just happens because...I guess the author wanted to? And "I guess the author wanted to" perfectly sums up every aspect of all three books. She just goes through the motions and it seems like it didn't get trimmed around the edges at all. There's a one page random scene with Anakin on the front solely to present a trans clone. Who has one line. That is "hi, I'm different, I'm a girl". Like there isn't a clone character who actuality is integrated on the story? Who could've provided the representation without the blatant grab for cookie points? How did this pass the editoral process?? And that's exactly why this book is so... Meh. It doesn't bother me enough to be bad, but I don't think I enjoyed a single moment of the experience. Sure there's some interesting representation. Some small points that could've become good plots. But she never picked one so there isn't really a story? At all? If you skip this book there isn't a single thing you miss for the overall story of the galaxy or the characters portrayed. It's 100% irrelevant. Isn't this the biggest fail a story could ever achieve? PS: and again we have a reference to the tuskan massacre as just like "oh well a bad thing happened. Never really got around talking about it tho" ???? Padmé??? I thought this was a thoroughly satisfying conclusion to the trilogy about Padmé Amidala. I loved seeing how this story fit into the gaps of the movie stories, how Johnston fills in little backstory stuff. We get to see her again as Senator but also, more tellingly, as fiancée and wife to Anakin. Love it! I also adore how the author writes poetic fairytale-like interludes ("Once there was a girl who...") about other female characters of the saga. Those made me smile and also tear up a little. And the story is just as much about her handmaiden and best friend Sabé as it is about Padmé, which was cool. I want more books about Padmé! aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieQueen's Shadow (3) Star Wars: Canon - chronological order (22 BBY, Republic Era)
Juvenile Fiction.
Juvenile Literature.
Science Fiction.
A peace-loving senator faces a time of war in another thrilling Padmé Amidala adventure from the author of the New York Times best-sellers Queen's Peril and Queen's Shadow! Padmé is adjusting to being a wartime senator during the Clone Wars. Her secret husband, Anakin Skwyalker, is off fighting the war, and excels at being a wartime Jedi. In contrast, when Padmé gets the opportunity to see the casualties on the war-torn front lines, she is horrified. The stakes have never been higher for the galaxy, or for the newly-married couple. Meanwhile, with Padmé on a secret mission, her handmaiden Sabé steps into the role of Senator Amidala, something no handmaiden has done for an extended period of time. While in the Senate, Sabé is equally horrified by the machinations that happen there. She comes face to face with a gut-wrenching decision as she realizes that she cannot fight a war this way, not even for Padmé. And Chancellor Palpatine hovers over it all, manipulating the players to h Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyÉvaluationMoyenne:
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This novel didn't give any substantial information or explore any further into Padmè's married life with Anakin Skywalker (these are the most iconic couple in the galaxy). This is just the same repetitive notion of going on a mission and the ex-shadows filling in the gaps and the pages of things happening in their lives.
If you do not know about the Star Wars universe . . . then skip this series - as it has so many time gaps with no growth of the characters. The book mentions how much they love each other, but we have no proof or 'growth' of their relationship due to the author not exploring it in the prequel and not mentioning other instances.
You would have to have watched the movies or read the movie novelizations.
Book one - A Queen's Peril, was a nice intro to the Padamè, the election and how the queen's shadows operate. Lacking in inner thoughts when she first met Anakin - iconic moment, but no . . . we received "A boy thought he saw an angel."
Book two - Queen's Shadow, was so good as we did not know how she had transitioned from Queen to Senator, and once again, there was no mention of her thoughts or feelings towards Anakin in those years . . . just a 'small' token of trying to free his mother.
I felt no depth in their relationship - their interactions were so cringe. (I will still keep this on my bookshelf due to the pretty covers.)
If you had hoped for an intriguing story about the galaxy couple . . . this is not the series you were looking for. ( )