skygiants: clone helmet lit by the vastness of space (clone feelings)
[personal profile] skygiants
Broadly speaking, I liked Star Wars: The Mask of Fear, the first book in a planned trilogy of Star Wars Political Thrillers pitched as Andor Prequels, For Fans Of Andor.

This one is set right after the declaration of the Empire and is mostly about the separate plans that Bail Organa and Mon Mothma pursue in order to try and limit their government's whole-scale slide into fascism, with -- as we-the-readers of course know -- an inevitable lack of success. It is of course impossible not to feel the weight of Current Events on every page; the book came out in February '25 and so must have been complete in every respect before the 2024 elections, but boy, it doesn't feel like it. On the other hand, it's also impossible not to feel 2016 and Hillary Clinton looming large over the portrayal of Mon Mothma as the consummate politician who is very good at wrangling the process of government but whom nobody actually likes.

That said, as a character in her own right, I am very fond of Mon Mothma, the consummate politician who is very good at wrangling the process of government but whom nobody actually likes. With her genuine belief in the ideals of democracy and her practiced acceptance of the various ethical compromises that working within the system requires, she makes for a great sympathetic-grayscale political-thriller protagonist. I also like the portrayal of her marriage in this period as something that is, like, broadly functional! sometimes a source of support! always number three or four on her priority list which she never quite gets around to calling him to tell him she's back on planet after a secret mission before the plot sweeps her off in a new direction, oops, well, I guess he'll find out when she's been released from prison again!

Anyway, her main plot is about trying to get a bill passed in the Senate that will limit Palpatine's power as Emperor, which involves making various shady deals with various powerful factions; meanwhile, Bail Organa has a separate plot in which he's running around trying to EXPOSE the LIES about the JEDI because he thinks that once everyone knows the Jedi were massacred without cause, Palpatine will be toppled by public outrage immediately. Both of them think the other's plan is kind of stupid and also find the other kind of annoying at this time, which tbh I really enjoy. I love when people don't like each other for normal reasons and have to work together anyway. I also like the other main wedge between them, which is that both of them were briefly Politically Arrested right before the book begins, and by chance and charisma Bail Organa joked his way out of it and came out fine while Mon Mothma went through a harrowing and physically traumatic experience that has left her with lingering PTSD, and Mon Mothma knows this and Bail Organa doesn't and this colors all their choices throughout the book.

Bail Organa's plot is also sort of hitched onto a plot about an elderly Republic-turned-Imperial spymaster who's trying to find the agents she lost at the end of the war, and her spy protege who accidentally ends up infiltrating the Star Wars pro-Palpatine alt-right movement, both of which work pretty well as stories about people who find themselves sort of within a system as the system is changing underneath them.

And then there is the Saw plotline. This is my biggest disappointment in the book, is that the Saw plotline is not actually a Saw plotline; it's about a Separatist assassin who ends up temporarily teaming up with Saw for a bit as he tries to figure out who he should be assassinating now that the war is over, and we see Saw through his eyes, mostly pretty judgmentally. I do not object to other characters seeing Saw Gerrera pretty judgmentally, but it feels to me like a bit of a cop-out in a book that's pitched as 'how Mon Mothma, Bail Organa, and Saw Gerrera face growing fascism and start down the paths that will eventually lead to the Rebel Alliance' to once again almost entirely avoid giving Saw a point of view to see his ideology from within. But Star Wars as franchise is consistently determined not to do that. Ah, well; maybe one of the later two books in this trilogy will have a meaty interiority-heavy Saw plotline and I'll eat my words.

(NB: I have not yet seen S2 of Andor and I do plan to do so at some point, please don't tell me anything about it!)

Date: 2025-09-14 06:33 am (UTC)
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)
From: [personal profile] cofax7
this sounds fascinating. Shall have to read!

Date: 2025-09-14 01:31 pm (UTC)
obopolsk: (Default)
From: [personal profile] obopolsk
I was so mad about the de-canonization of my beloved childhood Star Wars novels that I stopped following Star Wars book news, so I had no idea this existed! But it sounds good and like something I would enjoy reading, perhaps in a week when I am feeling less stressed by Current Events, if such a thing is possible.

Date: 2025-09-15 09:07 pm (UTC)
evewithanapple: jyn looking determined | <lj user="evewithanapple"</lj> (r1 | the foxes hunt the hounds)
From: [personal profile] evewithanapple
I think Star Wars in general struggles with Saw Gerrera as a character, because Star Wars in general struggles with depicting actual radical politics (and I'm including Andor in that) especially with a Black character. My ears continue to perk up whenever I hear his name invoked, because it gives me hope of my beloved Jyn Erso appearing, but it has not happened yet.

Date: 2025-09-15 09:56 pm (UTC)
ambyr: a dark-winged man standing in a doorway over water; his reflection has white wings (watercolor by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law) (Default)
From: [personal profile] ambyr
Yeah I think this is the general assessment I see most people making of the book: Mon! Bail! . . . also I guess Disney required Freed to put Saw in there somehow, huh, he doesn't seem to have been too enthused about it. (Or maybe Freed was enthused about it but Disney wasn't! I don't know. I just know Saw's inclusion was half-assed and Soujen is the least interesting character in the book.)

Both of them think the other's plan is kind of stupid and also find the other kind of annoying at this time, which tbh I really enjoy. I love when people don't like each other for normal reasons and have to work together anyway.

I love this aspect of the book so much, yes! It was such a delight, people in Star Wars don't get to disagree very often without one of them ultimately being Proven Right.

Date: 2025-11-27 08:14 am (UTC)
lokifan: black Converse against a black background (Default)
From: [personal profile] lokifan
Haven't even seen Andor but this sounds so intriguing!

I also like the other main wedge between them, which is that both of them were briefly Politically Arrested right before the book begins, and by chance and charisma Bail Organa joked his way out of it and came out fine while Mon Mothma went through a harrowing and physically traumatic experience that has left her with lingering PTSD, and Mon Mothma knows this and Bail Organa doesn't and this colors all their choices throughout the book.

:eyezoom: Wow hello that spoke directly to my id.

Profile

skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
skygiants

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 2nd, 2026 04:39 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios