Reviews

Star Wars: Knight Errant by John Jackson Miller

crystalstarrlight's review against another edition

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3.0

Kerra Holt is stuck in Sith space (for how she got there, see [b:Star Wars: Knight Errant, Volume 1: Aflame|11099746|Star Wars Knight Errant, Volume 1 Aflame|John Jackson Miller|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1328007521s/11099746.jpg|16021815]). Isolated from fellow Jedi and deep in enemy space, Kerra struggles to stay alive and try to do her Jedi duty. But things get complicated when she attempts to kill Daiman, a Sith lord at war with his brother, Odion.

I've been wanting to read this book pretty much since it came out. It is the first Star Wars novel to follow a female main character (whose name isn't Leia or Mara). There are definitely not enough female protagonists in Star Wars, so I was excited. Actually reading the book, however, I started to run into troubles.

Kerra Holt is our female protagonist; only, in the first 119 pages, she appears in a mere 55% of them. And that includes other people mentioning her by name or as the "female Jedi". Not very encouraging, when your supposed lead female character takes a backseat to other characters. But besides that disturbing fact, I couldn't wrap my head around who Kerra was. She felt like a very typical Jedi and not a remotely interesting one at that. In my review of Deceived, I found Aryn's Jedi story to be rather stereotypical; after reading "Knight Errant", I wish Kerra's journey could be half as interesting as Aryn's. Towards the end, Kerra undergoes some conflict, but it is very minor and pretty much obscured by the huge action sequence, that I'm not quite sure what, if anything, Kerra learned or overcame. This does not mean I hate Kerra as a character; I just wish that Miller had pushed her a little harder and brought out more uniqueness (for instance, other than a comment she makes about how she isn't well-endowed when donning a stealth suit, there is nothing that distinguishes her from a male Jedi).

But while Kerra didn't really gel with me, I found other characters did. Brigadier Rusher was awesome; I thought he was interesting, clever, and likeable. His affinity for history and canes made him stand out; I loved his neutrality, but I also liked how he and Kerra worked off each other. Their banter was fun, without any sexual tension or messy romance to ruin it. And while it might have been "cute" to see Rusher and Kerra pair up, I'm glad they didn't. Not every frakkin' story has to be a romance after all (ESPECIALLY when it stars a female lead).

Kudos also to Miller for including a major Bothan character, Narsk. If you read many of my Star Wars reviews, you will probably be familiar with my complaining how human-centric it is. Miller definitely is NOT guilty of that at all. Narsk was a well-written character; he had skills, he was clever, and he was NOT stereotypical for a Bothan (double yay!). I will say that some of the twists in the plot concerning him got to be a LITTLE convenient and/or confusing, but overall, I liked Narsk.

My last favorite character is Beadle Lubboon, a Duro side character. He ends up the butt of the joke a lot for being a klutz, but I found him adorkable and sweet. One of the funniest scenes involves him and Kerra: Kerra tries to get him to speak Duro to a fellow Duro couple, but Beadle doesn't even know the language! I definitely wouldn't mind seeing more of Beadle in the future.

Before I complain much more, I want to congratulate Miller on making this book feel like it takes place WAY before "A New Hope". A problem I've had with The Old Republic books (Fatal Alliance and Deceived) is that they don't feel like they are thousands of years in Luke's past; they feel concurrent. Not so with this book; Kerra is stuck in Sith space with no outlet. The way the Sith act feels very much like the Darth Bane books (which is good, because KE happens before Bane). And I know this is silly, but the way Daimon paints himself as a god felt like something that would happen in an older setting.

As for the plot...oh, boy, did I have problems with it! It takes a good 250 pages before the plot really kicked into gear and I really got invested into the story. Fifty pages? No sweat! One hundred pages? I might be tempted to call it quits. But 200+?! That is just nuts! The entire book felt like three short stories, honestly, and while this format might work for a graphic novel trade paperback, for a novel, I'd like more cohesion. I need to start getting connected to the characters, I need to start seeing where the plot is going to come in (and the real plot does not appear until that 200+ page mark), and I need to start feeling there is a reason why the author wrote the book and why I need to spend time reading it. As for KE, I had to force myself to read it, and even then, I only usually read a few pages at a time. Up until that 200 page mark, I had no desire to know what was happening, where our characters would end up. If I hadn't been reading it for book club (and because I am a completest), I would have given this book up long ago.

What is the plot that was so problematic? Well, it's this: the book opens with Kerra on Darkknell trying to kill Daimon, a Sith. She travels to Gazzari to kill him, only she arrives in the middle of a battle. After rescuing a bunch of children and escorting them to Rusher's ship, they travel to another world run by Sith twins. After Kerra kidnaps one of the twins, a Sith Lord, Arkadia (who is a woman, so shouldn't it be "Lady" like it always has been?), escorts them to Syned. And THAT is where the real plot takes off. So that stuff before answers how Kerra and these people got to Syned...but WHY did we need to see it in such detail, I have no clue.

And then the REAL plot gets so convoluted at the end! First Arkadia is bad...but then she isn't...but then it's someone else... And Narsk is now working for Arkadia (the convenient arrangement I brought up earlier), but no, his real boss is someone else... GRRRRRRRRRRRRR! I got so confused! And then the last 5 pages totally turns it around AGAIN!

And now it's time for yours and my favorite: NERD NITPICKS!!

1. At Syned, we find out there is a much bigger family feud happening. Instead of making me feel creeped out and intimidated, I felt like I was watching Mr. Snow Miser and Mr. Heat Miser from "A Year Without a Santa Claus":


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPrbccEdI5o

Ooooh, Scary Sith! I am so afeared!

2. Maybe I've been out of the loop or perhaps I've not been paying attention, but this book seems WAY more violent than most Star Wars novels. We have your typical battles--blaster, lightsabers, Force powers, etc.--but then Kerra describes pulling her lightsaber out of one guard and into another and what a challenge it is. Maybe it is also because Kerra had just finished saying these guards weren't 100% complicit in the evil-doing, but I found the whole thing a little bit violent for me (and typically, I don't even blink an eye at lightsaber fights or whatnot).

3. Where is the character list? With all the brand-new characters (TONS of new species, occupations, names), this book would have been LOTS easier to read with a character list. So publishers: Stop putting Character Lists in books that contain only Skywalker and Solos and start creating them where they are really needed!!

"Knight Errant" is a mixed bag for me. It had an incredibly slow start, and it was a challenge to become invested in anything--story, characters. It did perk up at the end, but should it really take 200 pages and a mountainous action scene to make me moderately interested in how the confusing story should end?

If you are considering reading the Knight Errant comics to prepare for this book, don't feel like you have to in order to understand the story. Volume 1 only introduces you to Kerra, Odion, and Daimon, and while it does answer how Kerra got to be in Sith Space, the novel doesn't make a huge number of mentions of the comic. Of course, I have other complaints about the comic, which you can follow the link to read.

If you are dying to read about a female Jedi that kicks some @ss, then this isn't a bad novel. However, don't be surprised if you find yourself snoozing halfway through the book.

agnewjacob120's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional hopeful tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

kb_208's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a pretty interesting read with some good events taking place. But since this is kind of a stand alone novel, I don't know much about the surrounding history or time period. I don't read the comics, and this was taken from those. It was still a decent book, though.

jaredkwheeler's review against another edition

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3.0

Star Wars Legends Project #33

Background: Knight Errant was published in January 2011. It was written by [a:John Jackson Miller|20028|John Jackson Miller|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1272316895p2/20028.jpg], , whose other works of course include the excellent [b:Star Wars Omnibus: Knights of the Old Republic, Volume 1|17705149|Star Wars Omnibus Knights of the Old Republic, Volume 1|John Jackson Miller|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1364740474s/17705149.jpg|24753104] comic series (my review) and unique [b:Lost Tribe of the Sith: The Collected Stories|13023324|Lost Tribe of the Sith The Collected Stories (Star Wars Lost Tribe of the Sith)|John Jackson Miller|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1326407357s/13023324.jpg|18186079] (my review).

Knight Errant is set 1032 years before the Battle of Yavin (or 1000 years before The Phantom Menace). The novel begins a month or two after the events of [b:Aflame|11099746|Aflame (Star Wars Knight Errant Comic, #1)|John Jackson Miller|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1403209180s/11099746.jpg|16021815] (my review), with the return of protagonist Kerra Holt and rival Sith Lords (and siblings) Daiman and Odion. The action takes place across several previously unmentioned planets in Sith space.

Summary: Jedi Kerra Holt, still stranded far behind Sith lines with no hope of Republic support, remains torn between her obligation to help downtrodden Sith subjects and her desire to wage war on their masters. Meanwhile, she knows that any action she takes may have grave and unexpected consequences. But she doesn't know that, behind the state of permanent conflict between rival Sith in the sector, darker forces are pulling the strings, and they may have plans for her, as well.

Review: I really wanted to like this more than I did. So much so that I kept trying to convince myself that I was enjoying it until I finally realized near the end that I really wasn't very much. As I said of the comic that precedes this story, the set-up has a lot of potential, and I still love how unique it is among other Star Wars stories. The things I like about this premise (and at least some of the execution) are just as true of this novel as they were of that comic.

It may be that some of my problems have to do with this not being a comic, itself. Given that it continues a story begun in a comic, and is continued in further comics, I wonder why the decision was made to write this portion of Kerra's story as a novel, instead. There is an episodic quality to the story that would probably have been better served by the multi-issue comic format. And a lot of the new characters, particularly the diverse variety of Sith Lords that appear throughout the story, are practically begging for a more illustrated depiction.

The book's portrayal of the Sith in general remains it's greatest strength. We often don't get a lot of variety when it comes to Sith Lords in Star Wars. They all kind of want the same things, and they all kind of go about getting them in the same ways, just with different-shaped lightsabers. This really feels like Miller took a step back and said, "Wait a minute, evil can take a lot of forms. Let's explore some of those." There are half a dozen or more Sith that play a significant role in this story, and every one of them feels totally unique and fresh and distinct from the others. I loved that.

Unfortunately, I'm just not as excited about the protagonist. Not only is she far from being the most interesting character, she never feels very interesting in her own right at all. Miller leaves all the scheming and plotting and ambiguity and nuance to his other characters. Kerra is just a standard-issue hero Jedi. And even though she finds herself dealing with no-win scenarios on a scale that no other hero Jedi has to face, her unique circumstances don't make her any more unique as a character. She ends up playing second-fiddle to the other two semi-protagonist anti-heroes: Rusher, an independent mercenary with a crack force of artillery for-hire to the Sith with the deepest pockets, and Narsk, a Bothan spy and saboteur whose true motivations and allegiances remain shrouded in mystery for much of the novel. But they aren't really interesting enough (or developed enough) to carry the entire story, either.

And, while several other characters are sporadically engaging, the story moves forward a bit at a time without developing any recognizable greater arc until quite late in the book. I noted in my review of Aflame how mystifying it is that Kerra failed to kill a Sith that was at her mercy, without any explanation as to why. This bizarre decision is rendered even more annoying when Kerra spends the first half of this book attempting to assassinate the same Sith she spared before. But that just ends up feeling like an attempt to give her something to do until the rest of the plot could develop.

Trying to pinpoint exactly why this novel didn't work for me, even though so many elements of it did, I keep coming back to Kerra herself. Miller doesn't really do anything with her. It's almost as though, after making her the central character of this series, he lost interest and spent all of his attention elsewhere. She doesn't seem to grow a great deal as a character over the course of the book. She rarely seems to have any agency, always being used or manipulated by those around her, and generally lacks any meaningful choice in how to proceed. This is exacerbated by her stubborn black-and-white attitude towards anyone she regards as morally-compromised (which is basically everyone in Sith space). Even though she is constantly confronted with the complicated moral realities of negotiating life among the Sith, she remains weirdly inflexible towards several characters who are just doing what they have to do to survive.

There's still enough payoff and potential here that I'm looking forward to the remainder of the series, but there are too many obvious flaws for this really to work the way it should.

C+

graff_fuller's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging informative mysterious sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.25

You know...I enjoyed the story...as I read it, but it really didn't pull me in.

It's got a lot going against it. The only thing that we know...that ties it to Star Wars are the Jedi and the Sith, oh...and lightsabers.

The rest is nebulous (honestly). It was well written, as much that the author does, but I guess I wanted more Sith inspired history spread in and out of the plot. There was a LITTLE, but not nearly enough IMO.

I also thought that it would be slightly darker (in tone). There were dark moments, but I think if he'd punched that aspect of the storyline...a bit, it would've been better.

AND, I do believe that more world building should've been done (in the way that it connects this to the earliest Jedi/Sith confrontations. Like the big named Jedi and Sith stories sprinkled in. I don't know. I just wanted to revel in the earlyness of the story, but it was meh.

I'm moving forward in this time period, having already read the Darth Bane trilogy (Path of Destruction, then Rule of Two, then Dynasty of Evil), Dawn of the Jedi - Into the Void, then this story. Next one is Lost Tribe of the Sith - The Collected Stories, then Red Harvest, then reading the four book Old Republic series (Revan, Decieved, Fatal Alliance and Annihilation). I will then be done with the Old Galactic era. 

hstapp's review against another edition

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3.0

Kerra Holt. A Jedi born into an age when Jedi are warriors. She's on her own trapped in Sith Space.

It's quite an interesting story, and it's pretty cool that they included a bit of a comic that takes place before the book at the end as well.

I found the book to be well written and interesting. Junky cobbled together ships always seem to be a big hit, and I liked the conflict and differences among the sith lords in this region of space.

mtaylor414's review against another edition

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3.0

All in all I enjoyed it. It kind of felt like Stargate SG1 with all the Sith Lords. I always thought there was only one at a time. Shows you how much I know. I probably would have given it more than 3 stars, but this was my first sci-fi book and it took some getting used to. I would have enjoyed it as a movie.

justin_wong's review against another edition

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adventurous dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.25

medea_jade's review against another edition

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5.0

I absolutely love all the books about the ancient Sith empire. This one was exceptional. Great plot, well written, added so much to the mythology.

kecresser's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark funny mysterious sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0