This review is about Star Wars: Maul: Lockdown, due to be released on January 28. The book has been marketed as an adventure starring Maul and an interquel to Darth Plagueis. Enjoy!
Maul: Lockdown was a book I
anticipated with a mix of hope and dread. Maul is one of my favorite Prequel
characters and I was also excited to see Darth Plagueis again. However, Joe
Schreiber is best known to Star Wars fans for his Deathtrooper horror novels,
which might suggest that the book would be a shallow bloodfest. While Maul:
Lockdown isn’t a perfect Star Wars novel, I was relieved to find that it
succeeds more often than it fails.
VIOLENCE
WARNING
Joe
Schreiber comes to Star Wars from a background in horror novels and as expected
this novel is pretty violent. I’d definitely not recommend it for younger
readers. The fights are pretty gruesome, not just because of the deaths but
graphic detail with which those deaths are depicted. We see prisoners
bludgeoning each other to death and even pulling out the bones. I think
Schreiber does a decent job setting expectations and pointing out that the
prison, Cog Hive Seven, is supposed to be a brutal environment, but, if you’re
not into horror and violence, think twice about this book. I found myself
barely able to tolerate some scenes.
PLOT
The
plot is fairly basic. Darth Sidious tasks Maul to track down a weapons dealer,
Iram Radique, who is allegedly hiding within a prison aboard a space station,
Cog Hive Seven. It’s a bit of a contrivance, but that’s how Schreiber manages
to get Maul deep inside a prison. If you can accept that stretch, I actually
think the idea of throwing Maul into a prison works pretty well. It’s a brutal
environment in which everybody is out for him or herself. The dystopian setting
almost reminded me of one of Alien 3 (and, yes, there’s even a monstrous alien
in Maul: Lockdown that goes around killing prisoners).
For
the first few chapters, Maul: Lockdown seems like it’s going to just focus on a
series of fights between Maul and a variety of different opponents. Cog Hive
Seven also conveniently forces its prisoners to engage in gladiatorial matches,
allowing Schreiber to throw some bloody death matches in there. Fortunately,
the novel is more than just death matches. By about halfway through the book,
the plot thickens and the search for the weapons dealer is in full force.
There’s still plenty of action, but I think Schreiber does a decent job making
it serve the story rather than gratuitous violence for violence sake.
My
problems with the book’s plot came more with how it was wrapped up, which I
discuss separately in order to avoid spoilers.
CHARACTERS
Again,
for a book that could have just been about gore and violence, some of the
characters really do shine. Schreiber is good at creating pathetic characters
who ironically feel well-rounded and believable. Too often, when Star Wars
authors need a “scum & villainy” character, they create one-dimensional
characters who are obviously mere plot devices. Schreiber’s characters are certainly
not the best I’ve ever read in Star Wars, but one does get the sense that they
at least possess two or three dimensions. Sadistic characters also have
families and fears while pirates and inmates are not just boneheaded numbskulls
– although those surely do exist as well. Sadiki Blirr, the warden of the
prison, stood out as a female character who defied many stereotypes about
female characters in Star Wars novels.
That
said, with the possible exception of Sadiki and possibly one father-son pair of
inmates, I don’t think I found myself caring about any of Schreiber’s new
characters. They more than serve the story, but I viewed them as I view most
characters in an Alien movie. Which ones are going to survive? How will they
die? Will they help or hinder Maul?
Which
brings me to Darth Maul. It’s actually been over a decade since we’ve gotten a
book centered around Maul (Michael Reeves’ Shadow Hunter). Reeves’ Shadow
Hunter used Maul as a largely silent antagonist lurking in the background,
almost a personification of fear itself. However, Maul: Lockdown is definitely
a book about Maul. Maul is the primary protagonist. This is his story. We see
him in action a lot. I think Schreiber does a decent job incorporating what we
now know about Maul’s intelligence and leadership skills from The Clone Wars
into this pre-Phantom Menace version of Maul without eroding the mystique of
the character. We even get to see Maul act as a gang leader, a nice nod to his
role in The Clone Wars Season 5 episodes. Overall, this generally does feel
like Darth Maul.
Which
made me a bit disappointed that I felt like we didn’t learn much about Maul as
a character. We see him in action, but actually don’t learn much about his
history or psychology that we hadn’t learned in previous EU works. Of course,
most of the time Maul is his usual tough-as-nails self and frightens people
with a single glance. some one exceptions. Maul in Scheiber’s book does have
fears. He isn’t always confident of success. He worries. At first, I found
these character traits a bit off-putting. However, upon reflection, if the
spends so much time with Maul I think it has to show him occasionally off his
game. It makes him feel more like a real character. The important thing is to
see how he overcomes the challenges he faces.
INCONSISTENCIES
I’m
not a nitpicker for inconsistencies or gaps in logic when it comes to Star
Wars. But this book had quite a few that bugged me. First, how would anybody,
including the narrator, know what an amphistaff was? There is a Yuuzhan Vong in
the prison and the prison wardens can’t identify his species, and the narrator
never mentions the species, but does use the word “amphistaff.” Odd. Also,
Schreiber uses “coffee” instead of “caf” to describe Star Wars coffee –
something I am sure will upset many fans.
The
whole story depends upon the prison staff and prisoners not knowing that Maul
is a Sith. He avoids using the Force throughout much of the novel. However ,
this made me wonder why the prison wouldn’t have a midichlorian test to detect
Force-users. I’d think prison staff would want to know.
None
of these ruined the book for me, but they all occur early on and seemed a bit
sloppy on Schreiber’s part.
ENDING
There
were parts of the ending I hated and parts that I loved. I’ll try to provide a
relatively spoiler free discussion of my ending, but also feel that I have to
explain my rating for the book, so…
***
SPOILER WARNING ***
The
biggest problem with the ending is something that plagues many Star Wars
novels, namely a chaotic ending. Too many loose ends are tied up too quickly in
an unsatisfying manner. I think the book would have worked better if more of
the content had been spread out.
For
example, the search for Iram Radique ends with a whimper, not a bang. I won’t
say who he is or what happens, but it almost doesn’t matter because by the end
the book doesn’t even give the reader the opportunity to absorb the impact of
the conclusion to the mystery. It almost felt like Maul – and the reader – were
being tugged along for this search just for the sake of giving Maul something
to do in the prison but that Iram Radique himself and Maul’s mission were not
important to the Sith Grand Plan.
There
is a really neat tie-in to the game Bounty Hunter. We get to see another
character and that character has more than a cameo role. Schreiber actually
manages to give that character a bit of depth. But, again, all of this is
thrown into the last quarter of the book or so where it’s competing with too
much other action. I actually think the book would have been even better if
that character had been introduced earlier so we could see even more
interaction between Maul and that character. But overall I give credit to
Schreiber for going back and using some of that older EU material.
At
first I was very confused about the ending. We know early on he has to obtain a
nuclear weapon from Iram Radique and that he has to transfer it to a certain
group, but it’s not clear why Sidious would want this. Was this mentioned
somewhere else in the EU? Well, it turns out that it ties directly into the
Darth Plagueis novel in a very subtle way. In other words, Maul: Lockdown
doesn’t explain why Maul went on this mission! You need to read Darth Plagueis
FIRST in order to make sense of it and then to see why the mission was so
important. It actually adds a really neat twist to Darth Plagueis.
***
END SPOILERS ***
CONCLUSION
Overall,
I found myself liking Maul: Lockdown more than I'd expected to or feared. It’s
important to go into this book knowing that it’s pretty dark and bloody.
However, I think it should satiate Darth Maul fans and fans who want tense
action scenes. I would have preferred the plot to have unfurled a bit more
gradually and more emphasis on certain characters, but also appreciate that the
characters felt more real than they had any right to be for this type of novel.
Overall, I’d say if you like the Alien movies and you like Darth Maul, you’ll
probably enjoy this novel.
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