Ratings11
Average rating4
The #1 New York Times best-selling series continues...for life and light! A provocative and thrilling young adult adventure set in the world of the High Republic, 150 years before the storytelling of Phase I. Meet mysterious cult members, daring explorers, Jedi peacekeepers and more! Don't miss these other YA adventures of Star Wars: The High Republic! Into the Dark by Claudia Gray Out of the Shadows by Justina Ireland Midnight Horizon by Daniel José Older
Series
9 primary books120 released booksStar Wars Disney Canon Novel is a 120-book series with 9 primary works first released in 1976 with contributions by Terry Brooks, R. A. Salvatore, and Karen Traviss.
Series
1 primary book44 released booksStar Wars: The High Republic is a 44-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2020 with contributions by Charles Soule, Shima Shinya, and Daniel Older.
Series
47 released booksStar Wars (Canon and Legends) is a 47-book series first released in 1976 with contributions by L. Neil Smith, James Luceno, and Matthew Woodring Stover.
Reviews with the most likes.
This one took a bit for me to get into. The first half spends a fair bit of time developing the two primary characters. I found them both interesting, but the adolescent romantic wrestlings were not for me.
In the end, I enjoyed where the story goes and how it sets up this phase of The High Republic. I'm curious to see how The Path of the Open Path evolve into the Nihil and what appears to be an ancestor to Marchian Ro.
Contains spoilers
Path of Deceit is one of the first titles of Phase II of Star Wars High Republic. I decided to give the new phase a chance, knowing that I did not have the best experience with Phase I (I lost the desire to follow this series at the time thanks to the book Light of the Jedi, by Charles Soule), a book that was sold as being for adults, but was practically written as a YA book). This time I saw that Path of Deceit was written as YA, which helped me adjust my expectations. Compared to the themes of Phase I, Phase II seems much more interesting. The idea of explorers and Pathfinders is really cool and the threat to the established order makes more sense than the space bikers who are the Nihil. I intend to continue following Phase II.It's not easy to judge or analyze a YA book as an adult. We assume that some tropes are expected and others should be avoided.
There isn't much room (nor the intention) for the development of more three-dimensional characters, which means these books don't provoke some kind of connection with mature readers.With Path of Deceit it's no different. The characters are flat and do not show great development. For example, the character Marda Ro, who is a naive and fanatical teenager from the Path of the Open Hand sect, ends the book as a naive and fanatical teenager (perhaps even more fervently fanatical than before). Kevmo Zink, the Jedi padawan of the story, is the same: he appears and disappears in the same way he appeared, without significant developments.I have this impression that, unfortunately, the current Star Wars YA books follows the same formula, which focus on two teenagers of opposite sexes living a forbidden or impossible romance. This appears in Claudia Gray's Lost Stars, but perhaps because of its novelty, Lost Stars was better in this respect.
In Path of Deceit we have the same formulaic solution of the love-struck couple who cannot get involved, but ends up being the focal point of several major events happening in the background, such as the theft of Jedi artifacts on one side and a plan to destroy the Jedi Order on the other. As the goal of the story is to tell about this romance and not about everything else surrounding it, other characters and/or factions appear more or less unbalanced. If you expect to read a book with a Jedi adventure or something similar, perhaps this title will be a disappointment.
Despite my criticism, the writing is fluid and very well articulated. Tessa Gratton and Justina Ireland know what they're doing. I would have loved this book if I had read it at 15 years old. The book deepens some knowledge of the Star Wars universe and expands a bit more on canon. I confess that I am not excited to continue with Path of Vengeance by [a:Cavan Scott (mainly because of the author's writing style, which I am not very fond of).