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Star Wars: The High Republic: Escape from Valo

By: Daniel José Older, Alyssa Wong
Narrated by: Todd Haberkorn
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Summary

Star Wars: The High Republic, the New York Times best-selling series, continues....

For light and life! Journey to the embattled Occlusion Zone in this action-packed adventure set hundreds of years before the Skywalker saga! It’s a dark and dangerous time for the galaxy in which communication has been rendered nearly impossible in Nihil-controlled space as the nefarious pirates continue to threaten the Republic’s very existence.

Join Jedi Padawan Ram Jomaram—and some Jedi younglings—as they plot their escape from enemy territory. Hopeful Jedi younglings will have to work together to overcome their fears in order to survive—and help save the galaxy.

©2024 Lucasfilm Limited (P)2023 Lucasfilm Limited
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What listeners say about Star Wars: The High Republic: Escape from Valo

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Loved it

Fun story. I think I'll definitely read the other High Republic books now. Great stuff

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  • Overall
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Love this book

This novel in phase 3 was super interesting compared to the other phases in children or young reader books

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Pronouns over story

A young reader book aimed at 8-12 year olds, but with a forced agenda.

A story centred on a group of young Jedi aged around 10-12.. One turns out to be a Trans girl, and the other 2 Gay and in love with each. Plus a 4th joins them who is non-binary. What are the odds of that? And is this really appropriate when the book is aimed at 8 year olds?

It also makes no sense since Jedi are taught to block emotion from a very early age. You wouldn't have trans Jedi because gender identity would not be a thing if you removed all emotion.

And the character Zyle Keem being Zabrak is the most unlikely candidate to be non-binary if you know anything about their species.

It all just felt like a forced agenda pushed by the authors and/or Disney onto this book. And not appropriate for the age this book is aimed at.

it also made the book a bit confusing when it's taking about a group of people. Sometimes referring to one as he/she and then another as they/them. Using terms that are normally used to mean a group of people as a pronoun doesn't work in a book conversation happening between a group of characters as you could equally be referring to them as a collective.

Disappointing.

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