• new omnibus of The Fall of Reach, The Flood, and First Strike, with new cover art by Isaac Hannaford ✅
• new horror novel Parasite's Wake focusing on the Flood during Combat Evolved, written by Tim Lebbon ✅
seen from China
seen from South Korea
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Italy

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
• new omnibus of The Fall of Reach, The Flood, and First Strike, with new cover art by Isaac Hannaford ✅
• new horror novel Parasite's Wake focusing on the Flood during Combat Evolved, written by Tim Lebbon ✅
“If you’re not with me, then you’re my enemy.”
"Only a Sith deals in absolutes."
I think it’s become kind of a Star Wars joke when Obi-wan replies to Anakin, “only a Sith deals in absolutes” because Obi-wan is making an absolute by saying "only." However, I honestly don't think this was a mistake. I think this line was very intentional, and I think George Lucas knew exactly what he was doing with this line.
I think Obi-wan's statement shows how far the Jedi have fallen from what they were meant to be.
In 25,800 BBY and before, the Jedi recognized the light and the dark within themselves, and life was a constant balancing act between the two parts of themselves. In Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi: Into the Void by Tim Lebbon, we see Lanoree (a Je'daii Ranger) even acknowledge the darkness in herself, and struggle to balance it with the light. She does not fight against her darkness, she does not even try to expel it from herself, she accepts it as an important part of her life, she just cannot let it control her.
This novel takes place long before there were Sith (the religious order, not the species) and I'm not sure but I feel like the Sith just existing really shifted Jedi priorities.
I think because the Sith chose Dark over Light, the Jedi began to choose Light over Dark, instead of balance. They still preached about balance in the Force, but I'm not sure they truly understood what that meant.
Even Master Yoda does not understand this until he meets the Five Priestesses and they put him through a trial to face his darkness (Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Season 6, Episode 12: Destiny) and he literally goes in like a warrior, expecting to FIGHT his darkness. He tells Dark Yoda, "Part of me, you are not!"
But Dark Yoda replies, "Part of you, I am. Part of all that lives!"
And Yoda is nearly defeated by his own darkness, simply because he continues to deny its existence.
Finally, Yoda says, "Recognize you, I do. Part of me, you are. Yes. But power over me, you have not." And he is finally able to reject his Dark Side, choosing not to give into it. He rejects it, but he does still recognize it as his own.
The fact that even Master Yoda did not at first recognize his own darkness, did not even acknowledge its existence, is a serious flaw in the Jedi Order of that time. The Jedi were so blinded because they refused to see the darkness even within themselves, and so were blinded to see the darkness that rotted at the heart of the Republic.
And so, when Obi-wan says, "Only a Sith deals in absolutes," he is, completely on accident, also revealing the flaw in Jedi thinking, the flaw that ends up destroying the Jedi. A Sith should be the only one dealing in absolutes, but the Jedi have begun to deal in absolutes as well. In denying their own darkness, in only recognizing the Light, they blind themselves, just as the Sith blind themselves with the Dark.
Btw… this is not an anti Jedi post, this is just an observation of one of the flaws of the Order.
Dawn of the Jedi by Tim Lebbon Dawn of the Jedi is not the typical lightsaber wielding and Force finessed focused books that we are used to in the modern knowledge of Jedi. Rather, we are brought along on a detective search for answers and people long believed dead. All while struggling with memories and destroyed hope that things can change.
We follow Lanoree Brock, a young Je’daii Ranger, on her journey to find her once thought dead younger brother, Dalen Brock, before he unleashes dark matter that could tear apart the Tython system as they know it. The book changes between the present, of Lanoree and her picked up Twilek companion, Tre, who are following the evidence of Dalen’s cult research and plans, to her childhood, where Lanoree first sees her brother’s fall to what he has become. Through their mission, we are introduced to many characters who have their own reasons for helping or hindering their search.
Despite being siblings and the children of 2 Force sensitive users, Lanoree and Dalen differ on many levels. For one, Dalen has no connection to the Force unlike the rest of his immediate family. He relies on blasters and brute strength as he gets older. He’s also quite intelligent, even if it leans to the side of fanaticism of something he doesn’t even know to be true. Meanwhile, Lanoree is seen as strong in the Force and, as she travels on the Pilgrammage to the other Temples, her skills in Force understanding, combat, and her interest in the scientific fields that this era of Je’daii show, become even stronger. She is the Golden Child while Dalen is constantly being pressured to become something he’s not…mostly from his sister.
This book has very polarized opinions by readers and reviewers alike, and many believe that it does not deserve the title of Dawn of the Jedi. However, I disagree. If you stay in the thinking of the modern Jedi age then I can understand where those feelings come from, but if you approach the book as the first and the start of the entire story of the Force, then I believe the title fits nicely. Let me explain.
Lanoree and the other Rangers and Masters are called Je’daii and have a clear belief that the light side, Ashla, and the dark side, Bogan, must be in balance with one another. To be fully Ashla, Je’daii cannot do what is necessary to rid the Tython system of dangers, and in this story that includes their own people. Meanwhile, dealing too much in Bogan leads to hurting for hurtings sake and not for the betterment of their society. That belief is not shared in modern day Jedi’s teachings. Any bit of the dark side is shunned. But the Je’daii use Bogan to excel their experiments and produce ways to perserve themselves and others, like in the sense of Lanoree almost dying and using her alchemy of the flesh to save her own life. I’d go so far to say that this creating life is millennia ahead of The Immortal Emperor in the Old Republic and even Darth Plageius’ abilities. Dawn of the Jedi gives us loose ties to how the Je’daii could split not necessarily because one side wanted to hurt people and be “evil” but because they wanted to continue their experiments that others deemed evil and wrong. It shows the start of the polarized beliefs of the Light and Dark side followings. I think, had it not been cut from canon, this line of thinking would have been helped with the following 2 books that were planned at the time, and either I’d be proven wrong or they would’ve given more hints to solidify this connection. I am aware of the comics that are alluded to at the end of this book, but my reading challenge and subsequent reviews will be pulling on strings and information from the novels alone.
In saying that, it’s disappointing to know that there were more books planned at the time of this one’s release, but were cut due to canon changes. Kara, a wealthy and collector of sorts, is someone I would have loved to read more about because all of her moves were calculated for something beyond what this single book was focused on. However, maybe that’s just me reaching for more history and answers to something that was always meant to be secretive.
Major Spoilers ahead:
The Darkest Night will be published in paperback and e-book on September 24 via Crooked Lane Books. The 320-page anthology of winter horror stories is edited by Lindy Ryan and includes an introduction by George C. Romero.
It features 22 stories by Josh Malerman, Eric LaRocca, Clay McLeod Chapman, Rachel Harrison, Christopher Golden, Tim Lebbon, Jamie Flanagan, Kristi DeMeester, Nat Cassidy, Darcy Coates, Tim Waggoner, Hailey Piper, Thommy Hutson, Gwendolyn Kiste, Sara Tantlinger, Christopher Brooks, M. Rickert, Cynthia Pelayo, Lee Murray, Mercedes Yardley, Stephanie M. Wytovich, Jeff Strand, and Kelsea Yu.
[PREVIEW] Mortal Terror #1 (November 22, 2023)
writer(s): Christopher Golden and Tim Lebbon | artist [penciller & inker]: Peter Bergting | colorist: Chris O'Halloran | letterer: Clem Robins | cover artist: Peter Bergting | publishing company: Dark Horse Comics
synopsis: A vampire-flipped Dracula in which mortality means life… and life means death.
Vampires Jonathan Harker, Lucy Westenra, and Mina Murray live in underground London, trying to keep the undead city safe from the rumored mortals above who seek to give them life, only to kill them. But when the authorities refuse to believe mortals, let alone the mysterious Count Dracula, are anything more than myth, they are on their own to keep their city eternally dead.
Christopher Golden, Tim Lebbon and Peter Bergting will inspire ‘Mortal Terror’ this November
The miniseries imagines an underground London filled with vampires.
The Silence by Tim Lebbon
im reading the silence by tim lebbon and it's so good and!!! I had no idea but it's set in wales. I was just reading and Monmouthshire was just thrown out there, and the family the story revolves around live in wales, which was a very pleasant surprise, I rarely find modern sci fi books set in wales. Will update with more of my thoughts later