In the film “A New Hope” viewers see
a single shot of Alderaan before it is obliterated. They also get a short
description from Princess Leia that it is peaceful and has no weapons and Ben
Kenobi saying that, “Millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were
suddenly silenced,”
Fans have heard all this before, and are probably
quite numb to the fact that The Empire has just wiped out an entire planet.
That is why the following stories are quite important. These tales remind us of
the individual people who were affected by the Death Star and the individual
people who actually made the decision: the decision to blow up Alderaan.
The middle stories of the collection "From A Certain Point of View" ask some very tough questions about the destruction of Alderaan and some dark themes emerge.
The middle stories of the collection "From A Certain Point of View" ask some very tough questions about the destruction of Alderaan and some dark themes emerge.
"Laina” by Wil Wheaton

“Laina” seems to be a simple story at first. A father (a rebel) is making a video recording for his baby daughter. He tells her of her mother’s death. He tells her of the Rebellion Against the Empire. He tells her that he is making the recording because he might not make it. He tells her that she is going to a safe place.
The
story seems simple as first, but the twist ending is as terrible as anything
I’ve read since “Cujo”. It will make the reader’s eyes bulge out in panic and
think “No! No! This can’t be what is happening!”
Kudos
to Wil Wheaton for making me feel such a raw emotion and terror- the way everyone should probably feel about super weapons.
"Fully
Operational" by Beth Revis

General Tagge sees what his superiors do not. The Rebellion is dangerous. The Death Star is a step too far. The Rebellion will continue to gain sympathy and support among the common folk of the galaxy. The Death Star is not indestructible.
General Tagge is able to see all this because he is young compared to the old proud Admirals and Moffs that have already won their Clone Wars and are ready for retirement. Tagge comes in with a healthy dose of skepticism, maybe it is this that skepticism leads to his survival while his superiors perish.
This story is basically a rehash of the Imperial Staff Meeting from “A New Hope”. The fact that Tagge survives the Death Star, was established in the comic series “Darth Vader”. Why Tagge wasn’t on the Death Star when it exploded is explored further down in this article.
"An Incident
Report" by Mallory Ortberg

Oddly enough “Conan Antonio Motti” received his first and middle name on the set of Conan O’Brien. In 2007, O’Brien asked Lucas what Motti’s first name was and I guess Lucas’ on-the-fly response was "Conan Antonio". But how Lucas came up with the name… Conan… is a mystery for another day.
Told from a “second person” point of view, the reader assumes the role of an Imperial Navy Trooper who witnesses the torture / interrogation of Princess Leia and then the destruction of Alderaan. The trooper is able to see things that Vader and Tarkin cannot, namely that Leia is lying about the Rebels being on Datooine. Eventually the trooper has a “change of heart” about his position in the galaxy. Get it? It's in the title.
"Eclipse" by
Madeleine Roux

“Eclipse” tells the story of Bail’s return to Alderaan and the bad news he carries with him: the fact that Leia is missing. Breha and Bail have little time together before The Death Star appears in the skies above. Breha attempts to start an evacuation, but by then it is too late.
"Verge of
Greatness" by Pablo Hidalgo

17 years ago, Pablo Hidalgo was a Star Wars fanboy like the rest of us. He ran a Star Wars index called echostation.com where he would sometimes post his fan art. Today, however, Pablo Hidalgo has more power over Star Wars than anyone.
Hidalgo is Lucasfilm’s creative executive in story development. He is famous for maintaining the Canon of Star Wars, making sure everything is consistent. But he also carries out the development of every single Star Wars project- which means he is constantly juggling films, books, comics, video games.
Hidalgo’s contribution to this collection centers on Wilhuff Tarkin. Tarkin famously did not evacuate the Death Star in “A New Hope” and fans can guess why. Not only is Tarkin overconfident in the technological terror he has constructed, he is quite married to it. Tarkin is seen overlooking the very beginnings of the Death Star in the final moments of “Revenge of the Sith”, which means he has been working on the project for nearly 20 years.
This story also focuses on Tarkin’s relationship to Orson Krennic (the villain of Rogue One) and explains why Tarkin finds Krennic lacking.
"Far Too Remote"
by Jeffrey Brown

“Far Too Remote” consists of a single panel depicting Cassio Tagge arriving on Dantooine to find an abandoned “Rebul Base”. Well, this solves the mystery of why Tagge wasn’t on the Death Star when it blew up, and it feeds directly into the next story.
"The Trigger" by
Kieron Gillen
It
was an amazing surprise to discover that Doctor Aphra, gets her own story in this
collection. Doctor Aphra first appeared in the “Darth Vader” comic series which
eventually evolved into her own comic series.
Aphra is an intergalactic archeologist and is the "Indiana Jones" of the Star Wars universe. Aphra is a fun character and this is a fun story, but there are still serious themes here. Aphra questions exactly how the Empire was able to blow up an entire planet. Who pulled the trigger? Was it similar to a firing squad, where many people pull many triggers, so that no one had to live with the guilt? What kind of person could pull that trigger any way?
In this story Aphra finds herself at the wrong end of a trigger. Her life hangs in balance as she tries to reason with the person holding a blaster to her head. What kind of person is he? Is he the kind who can pull the trigger? Furthermore, what kind of person is she?
Aphra is an intergalactic archeologist and is the "Indiana Jones" of the Star Wars universe. Aphra is a fun character and this is a fun story, but there are still serious themes here. Aphra questions exactly how the Empire was able to blow up an entire planet. Who pulled the trigger? Was it similar to a firing squad, where many people pull many triggers, so that no one had to live with the guilt? What kind of person could pull that trigger any way?
In this story Aphra finds herself at the wrong end of a trigger. Her life hangs in balance as she tries to reason with the person holding a blaster to her head. What kind of person is he? Is he the kind who can pull the trigger? Furthermore, what kind of person is she?
"Of MSE-6 and Men"
by Glen Weldon

I’ll give this story points for effort. The narration is told through the head of MSE-6, whose thoughts are shown here in very basic computer code. Somehow MSE-6 becomes the unintentional messenger between TK-421 and an unnamed Imperial officer, who start to form a romance whilst they pass messages back and forth through the mouse droid.
Overall this tale tries to do too much and the results are truly bizarre. The finished product is truly a mess and in the end the most clever thing about this tale is probably its title.
"Bump" by Ben
Acker and Ben Blacker

The other Sandtrooper story in this collection “Born in the Storm” featured a Sandtrooper sick of his job and ready to leave the Empire. But in this story, TD-110 is the opposite. He wants nothing but to serve his Empire, but cannot stand the singe mistake he has made- letting Kenobi, Luke and the droids go.
I guess that mistake gets him thrown off of the Death Star because TD-110 reappears in The First Order years later and is featured in the junior novel “Join the Resistance: Escape From Vodran” which is also written by Ben Ackner and Ben Blacker
"End of Watch" by
Adam Christopher
"The Baptist" by
Nnedi Okorafor

When I say Omi was force sensitive, I don’t mean that she had a lightsaber or could levitate things with her mind. But Omi did receive visions of the future. It was these visions, more than anything, that led her to attack Luke Skywalker in the trash compactor, although to Omi, this attack is more of a ritual. That moment for Luke, as much as anything he experienced after leaving his tiny moisture farm, was a sort of baptism- in which he became a new person.
I know that a force wielding dianoga seems kind of silly and unnecessary, but in the end all that matters is whether or not the story works as a story. This one does. Kudos to Nnedi Okorafor for making us care about this seven-tentacled creepy crawler.
Until Next Time
Now that I am 75% of the way through this book, I can’t wait to read the last 25%. Not all these stories are winners, but there is enough good stuff to keep a reader interested. Happy Reading Star Wars fans.