“From
a Certain Point of View” has a concept so interesting, one wonders how it has
not been done before. Essentially the book is a retelling of the original 1977
Star Wars film, but told from the perspective of side characters. The 40
stories are written by 43 authors and I will be covering 10 per week until the
end of the month.
Raymus
Antilles is quite an obscure Star Wars character, but he has been played by 3
different actors in 3 different Star Wars films. He is the captain of the
Tantive IV and this story bridges the gap between the last scene of Rogue One
and the first scene of A New Hope. The story, if nothing else, tells why
Tantive IV is being pursued in sublight speed rather than just warping right to
Yavin IV. Antillies meets his end when he is choked to Death by Vader in the
opening scenes of A New Hope, which is where this tale leaves off and the next
tale begins.
The Bucket by Christie Golden
The Bucket by Christie Golden

This
story is full of wit and sarcasm and its purpose is to explain why the Death
Star trooper does not blast R2 and 3-PO’s escape pod to smithereens when it was
determined that it had no life signs. Apparently the Empire was rewarding
employees on a shot-to-kill ratio, meaning if a rebel didn’t die, the shot
would count against your record. The story also focuses on bureaucratic paper-pusher
who is a master of her trade and is one of the highlights of the first quarter of this collection.
Stories in the
Sand by Griffin McElroy

Rerin by Sabaa
Tahir

This
story tells the tale of R5-D4, the red droid with the bad motivator that Luke and Owen
almost purchased from the Jawas before settling on R2. While listening to this
tale, I noticed immediately that it was very similar to the 1999 comic “Skippy,
the Jedi Droid”. Both stories insinuate that R5-D4 self destructed on purpose
to help R2 on his quest.
Rites by John
Jackson Miller

A’Yark was the female Tusken warrior in Miller’s novel Kenobi, which I read in August and is a part of the Old Expanded Universe. “Rites” seems to insinuate that everything that happened in his novel “Kenobi” is accepted in the New Disney Canon. By extension of that you could also accept into Canon the events of Star Wars: Outlander (A prequel-era comic) and probably many other connected comics.
I’m very surprised that keeper-of-canon, Pablo Hidalgo, would allow Miller to blur the lines between the new Disney Canon and the Old Expanded Universe Canon, especially with the prospect of a Kenobi prequel film in the works.
Still, it is very cool for fans of Miller to see A’Yark back in the fold. Especially since she’s the only character I know of, after Grand Admiral Thrawn, to be “Re-Canon-Ized”.
After writing three Star Wars novels in the past few years, Grey brings us a short story focused
on the Force Ghost of Qui-Gon Jinn. While Luke looks on over the dead bodies of
his Aunt and Uncle, Qui-Gon appears to Obi-Wan to talk about the boy’s familial
past, and the destiny that shapes his future. Jinn seems to actually be able to
see the future. It’s nice to see this Master/Apprentice pair interact with eachother after 20 years since
Phantom Menace. The character of Qui-Gon has been mostly absent from Star Wars
since Disney took over.
A
brief story told in first person by Beru Whitesun Lars, who is
reflecting on her life after she was killed in a Stormtrooper raid. Blue Milk
and Bantha Cheese are frequently mentioned.
The Luckless
Rodian by Renée Ahdieh

That’s
all for now. I’ll be back next week with 10 more stories
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