1.87k reviews for:

Ahsoka

E.K. Johnston

4.04 AVERAGE

adventurous dark emotional hopeful sad tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

What happened to Ahsoka after the Clone Wars? How did she become the person that appears in Rebels?

This book gives a glimpse into her life after escaping Order 66.

I liked the book and would happily read more of her life. This book was made even better because Ashley Eckstein, who voiced Ahsoka in the cartoons gave her voice as narrator of the audiobook.

All I can say is, if you liked Clone Wars the series - I would recommend this book to you.

If you followed the star wars rebels show, this book is a perfect tie-in. I really enjoyed it. I'm hoping for a sequel.

This was narrated by Ashley Eckstein (voice of Ahsoka in The Clone Wars.

I usually don’t read fiction via audiobook but I knew I would enjoy this. The story was engaging and exciting. The narration was perfect.

I might recall future Star Wars books this way.

I was glad to find this book that is supposed to be canon for what happened to Ahsoka between the time of her leaving the Jedi and reappearing as Fulcrum. Although I enjoyed the story I felt like the story didn't fully utilize its potential.

3.5ish stars. Not great, but not bad either. Some of the writing is a little flat.

Ahsoka was an enjoyable read, and I felt Johnston captured Ahsoka's personality well - it *felt* like a slightly older (not too much older) Ahsoka. I had been hoping for a little more in the way of broader lore-expansion, but I enjoyed that this story focused on Ahsoka making a decision about who and what she wants to be.

Eh, it’s fine. I love Ahsoka as a character, but this was a pretty dull, generic story. Also, I realize that the final season of “The Clone Wars” was released several years later, but the inconsistencies in the descriptions of Ahsoka’s time on Mandalore and after Order 66 bugged me, too.

If possible, this made me love Ahsoka even more! It gives a lot of really good insight into what it would be like to suddenly lose a connection to thousands that you had never been without, while simultaneously trying to avoid their fate.

Ahsoka became one of my favorite Star Wars characters in The Clone Wars and Rebels. This book fills in the gap of her activities in the years between the CW and her work in the Rebellion. Unfortunately, I found the story boring and forgettable.