Customer Review

Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2022
Tarkin is a novel that is essentially a followup to the same author's great Darth Plegeius novel, which was really about the rise of Palpatine. This novel is mostly set a few years into the Empire 14 years before the events of A New Hope, details Tarkin's rise through the ranks of the Imperial Army. The story does flashback to Tarkin's childhood on the Outer Rim world of Eriadu and to his early days working for Senator Palpatine in the Republic, but the bulk of the story involves a mission that Tarkin is sent on with Darth Vader to investigate a cache of communications devices on the planet Murkhana which suggest a plot to take down the Imperial holonet.

While the novel is centered around Tarkin, Vader and Palpatine appear quite a bit and we see the seeds of the early rebellion against the Empire being planted. We do find out that Tarkin suspected Darth Vader's real identity, having worked with Anakin before during the Clone Wars, but he keeps that to himself. In the end of the book, the construction of the Death Star above Geonosis is mentioned.

This novel is interesting in that it was written just before Disney's takeover of Lucasfilm and was grandfathered into the canon, whereas the prior book, Darth Plageius was not. This book does have a couple of tie-ins to the Darth Plageius novel, however, so some of that novel is brought into the canon by this one. Of course, at the time this novel was written, characters like Orson Krennic and Galen Erso were not yet created, so some of Tarkin's control over the Death Star project hinted at in this book was changed by Rogue One because the events of the movies trump the books. Overall, I do not necessarily think the book is a must-read if you are a person who picks and chooses which of the Star Wars books to read. If you read all of them then you will read this anyway, but if you read some, but not all, of them, you will not miss anything critical if you skip this, but it is a very good story and one that I think is worth reading at least once.
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