The First Star Wars Book I Loved

Jason Fry | October 4, 2012

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I saw it in the fall of 1979 at our local mall: a paperback, sky blue with red lettering in a familiar font, with a message that seemed like a miracle — Han Solo at Stars’ End.

I was 10 years old, and this was media’s Jurassic era, with the proto-Internet yet to escape from universities. Today, books arrive after strategized previews and months of discussion and debate; back then, you found out about new releases by stumbling across them on the shelves of B. Dalton or Waldenbooks.

As far as I was concerned, our mall trip was over. I paid my $1.95 for Han Solo at Stars’ End, wondered briefly about the author (who’s Brian Daley?) and started reading my new book in the car on the way home. Thirty-three years later, the corners are round, the pages have turned the color of weak tea, and the half-attached endpapers still have my ancient drawings of Darth Vader and a warning for interlopers: JAY FRY — HIS BOOK.

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I have loved this book three-quarters to death over who knows how many readings. I read it as a kid, as a teenager, then consulted it innumerable times as an adult and a Star Wars author, turning to it to check everything from the geography of the Corporate Sector (The Essential Atlas) to the fine points of fighter-pilot slang (The Essential Guide to Warfare).

Yet for all that, I hadn’t sat down and really read Stars’ End in years.

I returned to it because of Celebration VI. One of my favorite panels there was a remembrance of Daley, who died of pancreatic cancer in 1996 when he was just 49. At the panel, Daley’s longtime friend and collaborator James Luceno joined Pablo Hidalgo to read passages from the Han Solo books and recall his influence on today’s Expanded Universe. Afterwards, I went to dinner with a gang of writers including Luceno and his wife Karen-Ann Lichtenstein. There, I soaked up stories about Daley — an adventurer, wordsmith, and raconteur whose friends remembered his death with sorrow but his life with laughter.

Listening to the stories, I realized it had been a long time since I’d actually read Daley. So when I finally escaped the latest mob of deadlines, I pried Stars’ End out of my overstuffed shelves and started to read.

To be honest, I did so with a bit of trepidation. Sure, I remembered Daley’s books fondly. But I can think of at least three things that reliably diminish your pleasure in reading:

  • being a professional writer
  • being an expert in a given field
  • returning to a book you loved in childhood

As I gingerly opened the battered cover of Stars’ End, I knew I was risking all three dangers.

Happily, none of them mattered. Stars’ End was as nimble and fun as I remembered — and it had deeper shadings that had been lost on me as a kid.

The first thing that struck me was the challenges Daley faced. In 1979 the entirety of Star Wars was a movie, a TV special you already weren’t supposed to talk about, a novelization and another novel, a few kids’ tales, the Marvel comics, and rumors about Boba Fett.

That wasn’t much, but Daley was limited to Han, Chewbacca and the Millennium Falcon. No Luke Skywalker (though Stars’ End is billed as “From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker,” which was weird even then), no Empire, no lightsabers, none of the other stuff the first generation of fans clamored for. It’s easy to miss this now that we have an Expanded Universe built on Daley’s foundation, but at the time this was a Star Wars book without a lot of Star Wars.

If that fazed Daley, you sure can’t tell. His best writing and storytelling is subtle and smart. Surveying rag-tag fighter pilots before a battle, Han knows they lack combat experience because they don’t look worried enough. And Daley’s Corporate Sector Authority isn’t a gang of mustache-twisting villains, but a logical outcome of unchecked power combined with bureaucratic lack of accountability — one character describes a program to make dissidents disappear as the product of “power and paranoia. Where no real opposition existed, suspicion supplied one.”

Daley’s also genuinely funny, leavening tense fight scenes with wry observations and asides. A beastie attacking a loan shark is flung aside and lands “upon the dinner of a wealthy dowager, destroying the appetite of everyone at that table,” while a skimmer fleeing through croplands winds up with its grill and trim covered with stray stalks of grain, looking “like a strange agricultural float.” Star Wars has always used a well-placed laugh to relieve the tension, whether it’s an “it’s worse” in the trash compactor or a battle droid leaning too far and toppling off a butte.

Like any good writer, though, Daley is generous to his characters, giving the best lines to them rather than saving them for himself. Han’s dialogue wouldn’t be out of place in a 1940s movie, particularly when he’s paired with one of Daley’s fast-talking heroines. (And why not? Han and Sam Spade would have got along just fine, trading tales over a long cantina night with both of their backs to the door.) In Stars’ End Han’s main foil is Jessa, a hard-bitten, grief-stricken starship engineer, though Han also gets in his licks (and takes a couple) in conversations with the ancient labor droid Bollux. All of their scenes are memorable, even without blasters crackling or lightsabers humming.

And that, finally, is what I appreciate most about Stars’ End — it’s above all else a great character study. Daley’s Han thinks himself allergic to causes, hiding behind a mercenary’s reflexive bluff and bluster. But his cynicism fights a losing battle with his loyalty to his friends and his distaste for bullies, cheaters, and oppressors. Stars’ End’s plot points involve Han doing the right thing after a determined effort not to — we enjoy his denials and evasions even as we root for him to come around. There have been a lot of worthy contenders over the years, but nobody — nobody — has ever written Han Solo better than Daley did way back at the beginning.

Sadly, I’ll never get to meet Brian Daley — he was taken from his friends long ago, and far too young. But re-reading Stars’ End, I realize he was one of my teachers — and man, did he ever teach me a lot.

And now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to re-read Han Solo’s Revenge.

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On Saturday, October 6, Star Wars Reads Day is coming to your galaxy. Join in a celebration of reading and all things Star Wars at over 1,200 bookstores, schools, and libraries nationwide, with giveaways and raffles, and authors and/or costumed characters appearing at select locations. Find an event near you!

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10 Responses
to “The First Star Wars Book I Loved”

  1. avatar Apophis_ says:

    I started with Expanded Universe 10 years ago and I didn’t had a chance yet to read this book. I think I have to do it now!
    Great entry, may the Force be with you!

  2. avatar sompeetalay says:

    Great choice ! It’s absolutely one of my favourites as well. Daley did a lot with the limited possibilities he had to work with.

  3. avatar RTso1978 says:

    Shadows of the Empire, it was a gift 8 years ago, & I will read any story taking place after A New Hope

  4. avatar Pablo Hidalgo says:

    Bravo. Also my hands-down favorite Star Wars novel for so many reasons. Han’s final scene with Torm is still one of the most powerful moments in any novel. To me at least. Ask Rekkon. :)

  5. avatar Hector Rios says:

    Great post! I just read Daley’s “Han Solo Adventures” a few weeks ago and he nailed Han’s character right on. When I read A. C. Crispin’s “Han Solo Trilogy,” there was something off about Han’s characterization. It was good, but it didn’t feel right. But, Daley’s Solo was spot-on.

  6. avatar Jeditommo says:

    My first Star Wars novel was the original movie novelisation which I actually read again recently. Since then I have read every main line novel right up to X-Wing mercy kill which I finished last night. There are highs and lows in the EU but overall it is difficult to pick a favourite book. If pushed I would say Heir To The Empire as it was the book that really started it all. I was lucky enough to get my 20th anniversary edition signed by Tim Zahn at celebration VI. Long may the books keep coming so I can continue living in that galaxy far far away.

  7. avatar Kasa says:

    Warning: some spoilers in my comment!

    Frankly, I prefer Crispin’s books because of the insight they give into Han’s background (including some famous Kessel incident, for instance :D ) and they’re on the very top of my SW novels list. Still, the Daley’s trilogy that I picked up shortly afterward (I know, this order was a mistake of mine) is not worse – it’s just different. And it’s also really underrated. I’ve heard fans claiming it’s to oldschool and thus less starwarsy than modern EU positions.
    Well, I can’t agree with them :D Those books were a real fun to read. Same as Jason, I enjoyed Bollux and Blue Max; Brian Daley came up with a lot of unique characters like Odumin, all those girls that Han hooks up with, great Gallandro… (in contrary to Ann Crispin, who digged a lot of characters from already existing sources – well, Daley didn’t have such an opportunity). And the plot itself has its memorable moments – my favourite ones being the destruction of Stars’ End (Han takes the whole structure almost single-handedly – that gave me a shiver), the pursuit on Bonadan and already classic final confrontation between Han and Gallandro.
    I regret that I hadn’t got a chance to meet the author too. Those books of him are somewhat different from any other Star Wars novel I’ve ever read.

  8. avatar Ed Erdelac says:

    Jason, I had a very similar experience to yours, but it was 1980 and Han Solo’s Revenge was on the spinning rack at Zayre’s. :)

    Daley’s Solo books are still to me the pinnacle of what the EU has to offer. As a western fan, I love Gallandro from Lost Legacy and the way Han took him out.

  9. [...] Star Wars Reads. Well, hopefully you have a good idea of what you’re doing tomorrow, but for today, the chat at GoodReads is on. Of particular interest may be Randy Stradley addressing continuity concerns people have been bringing up for Brian Wood’s Star Wars. Jason Fry, Ryder Windham, Jeffrey Brown and Timothy Zahn have answered fan questions so far. And on the Star Wars blog, Fry weighs in on his first Star Wars book. [...]

  10. avatar Jason Fry says:

    Yeah, Lost Legacy’s a treat too. I love how Daley gives you the “chill scene” of Han explaining that “the only real gunman within light-years is standing right in front of you.” It’s the scene where Hasti falls for him, but Daley immediately cuts to the arrival on-planet of Gallandro — a superior gunman Han actually fears.

    There’s a lot going on there, and Daley handles it all with aplomb and wit.

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