Great story. Book was described as "Very Good". SEVERE creases on cover and pages. Part of description missing on back where it looks as if a sticker was placed and then removed. Disappointed and angry with the false descritption of the condition!
A Very Good Story
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
This is the second book in a new series and it's a good story. It starts out with Obi-Wan and Anakin on a training mission. Both of them are worrying about their relationship, with Obi-Wan wondering if he will be as good a master as Qui-Gon was and Anakin wondering if Obi-Wan will ever care for him. As usual, things don't go as planned and the two find themselves on the run from bounty hunters. By the end, both manage to resolve their issues, to a degree.Now, I am well out of the age range for these books, but I enjoy reading them. I like how they flesh out the background that takes place between movie installments.
Jedi Quest #1:The Way Of The Apprentice
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
This book is a spectacular work of art.The depth at which Watson explores and explains the characters makes you feel as if you really know them.She goes along with the whole Jedi teachings,and the Masters and Padawans have just the right serene Jedi attitudes.There is a perfect dose of humor and plenty of suspence.The characters are well formed,and the small signs of Anakin's eventual destiny are scattered throughout.The way she explains the Jedi's actions and lives is very well done,and she shares the thoughts not only going through Anakin's mind,but through the Obi-Wans as well,so you realize that he often doubtfull of his own ability to be the master.I all in all loved this book,and can't wait to read the others.
A worthy Star Wars book!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
To Tell the truth, I didn't read Jedi Apprentice series. It never looked to exciting. Don't worry I'll try when I see it. This one didn't look exciting either. Then I saw Episode 2 and wondered how they got to this point where Anakin says to Obi-Wan "Your the closest thing I have to a father." to is getting mad and saying to Padme "This is all Obi-Wan's fault!" and I saw the book again and said the heck with it and gave it a shot. It was actually quite good. Obi-Wan was worried about Anakin because he didn't have aby friends. Although Anakin befriended Tru Veld, a fellow padawan, he didn't seem to like Ferus, who isn't to much of a padawan himself. This book is worth reading.
A worthy successer for Jedi Apprentice!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
Anyone who loved Jedi Apprentice, and even those of us who didn't (yeah right, is there anyone who didn't adore those books?) should definitely, definitely check out this new series! More like an extension of Jedi Apprentice than anything else, it's already at least as good as that series was at it's height. Anakin Skywalker is now fourteen years old, and has been apprenticed to Obi-Wan Kenobi for several years (duh). Even at this age, Anakin is more than a handful, almost more than Obi-Wan can handle, and we can already see the seeds of many of their later problems sewn. Because of his brilliance and his intense connection to the living Force, everything has come easily to Anakin, and his abilities have taken him far above other students of his age, which has earned him grudging respect from teachers and students alike, but few if any, real friends. This doesn't seem to bother introverted Anakin too much, but Obi-Wan privately worries about his padawan, who has grown from a cheerful and open child, to a quiet and disturbed young man. The council decides to send them on a rather complicated mission to a planet plagued by a toxic disaster, where they will have to work with three other master-padawan teams, including Siri Tachi (whom most of us remember from Jedi Apprentice) and her padawan Ferus, whom Anakin doesn't get along with too well. Anyway, to avoid spoiling the story I won't say anymore, but trust me, these are definitely worth the time you spend reading them. For fans of all ages.
My First Favorite of Jedi Quest!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
"The Trail of the Jedi," written by Jude Watson, begins on the planet Ragoon-6. Obi-Wan Kenobi, a Jedi Knight, has gone there for a training mission with his his Padawan, Anakin Skywalker. (Readers of the Star Wars Jedi Apprentice series may recognize this planet from book 14: "The Ties That Bind." Qui-Gon Jinn, Obi-Wan's deceased Master, took Obi-Wan there for a training mission when he was only a Padawan. It was there that Qui-Gon received his disturbing visions of Tahl, a Jedi Knight that would die after Qui-Gon pledged his life to her.) Wren, a Jedi Knight, leaves Obi-Wan and Anakin on Ragoon-6 and goes off to hide, leaving clues so that the Master-Padawan tem can track him. While on the trip, Anakin feels that he and Obi-Wan are not close and he feels "left out" when his Master does not share his feelings with him. Wren's clues lead Obi-Wan and Anakin to near-death experiences, including a flooded cavern and a den of malia -- savage beasts. While the Jedi are tracking Wren, they stumble upon Floria -- a girl about Anakin's age who cannot find her teacher and friends, whom she lost. The Jedi offer their assistance to Floria and head for their ship to contact someone for assistance. But as the Jedi are walking on their ship, they feel a surge in the Force and quickly run off the ship, right before the bomb that was planted on the Jedi's ship explodes. As Anakin rushes after a figure he saw sneaking around the ship, Floria -- the young slender girl -- used some complicated holds to keep Obi-Wan from moving . . . almost like an assassin. When Anakin pulls back the mask of the figure, he is discovered to be Dane -- Floria's older brother. The Jedi demand an explanation and are shocked at the response: Floria and Dane are bounty hunters. They, along with four other hunters, were dismissed by a being named Granta Omega and were instructed to bring the Jedi to him -- dead or alive. And by now Obi-wan has discovered something that is another problem: training mission clues are not supposed to be deadly, which leads Obi-Wan to the conclusion that Wren was captured. The Jedi's training mission has turned into a survival challenge. Now the Jedi must resuce Wren, and avoid several bounty hunters. Will the Jedi find Wren? Will they encounter Granta Omega? But most importantly: will they survive?
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