![]() ![]() It's not unlike the message of the Bendu, but this is the first time that "Gray" has been used to describe it. Following Star Wars: Aftermath and Star Wars: Life Debt, Chuck Wendig delivers the exhilarating conclusion to the New York. When the Star Wars Aftermath trilogy was announced, it instantly had baggage and blowback to contend with.As the first post-Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi novel in the new, official. The idea of balance has reigned supreme for the last year, and now there's even an in-universe, canon character recognizing that the Force is not just two sides, but there's a middle, an intersection where light and dark can meet. This follows a lot of "balance" talk over the course of the last couple of years in Star Wars, from Rebels to Rogue One, from novels to comics. Empires End is the third and final novel in the Aftermath trilogy by Chuck Wendig, following Star Wars: Aftermath and Star Wars Aftermath: Life Debt. They talk about the lightsaber, and the Kyber crystals, and those that were taken to power the Death Stars (the "legacy of Galen Erso, the legacy of Orson Krennic, of Tarkin and the Sith," incidentally).Īs Addar, the young pilgrim, resigns himself to his fate, it says, "where he will join soon with the living Force, all hail the light, the dark, and the gray." He listens to the holodisk again, the preaching of the Church. ![]() This devotee of the Church of the Force, on what he considers a holy mission, knows that he's now entered his final moments. ![]() From the same interlude chapter (told you those interludes are full of good stuff), when the final surviving pilgrim gets to the cave where the crystals belong, he gets trapped there. ![]()
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