Looking Back on the Micro Machines Action Fleet

I miss these things.

Usual story. You box up a part of your childhood, go to college, and come back home for the summer to find out that your parents went through your belongings and threw out everything they thought you didn’t need anymore. In one fell swoop, I lost a classic Atari 2600, an NES, a box of classic PC games, and worst of all, the Micro Machines Action Fleet toys I had since I was seven.

But this isn’t the post to mourn the loss of those toys (that would be odd and somewhat creepy). It’s to look back at one of the coolest product tie-ins the Star Wars universe has ever seen.

To the jump!

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EU Interview Roundup

Over at Club Jade, James conducted a video interview with Essential Guide to Warfare author Jason C. Fry.

To celebrate the release of Scourge, Roqoo Depot and EUCantina have interviews with Jeff Grubb. He also made an appearance last week on Star Wars Books’ official Facebook page to answer questions from fans. TFN has a lovely recap here. If the interviews have you curious, you can read a 50-page excerpt from the book over at Suvudu. Scourge hits bookshelves today.

Big Shiny Robot talks to Tom Taylor about his latest project, Boba Fett is Dead.

Buy a Cool Shirt, Support a Great Cause

Hey Twitter users and Expanded Universe fans, want to support a good cause and get a stylish new shirt for your wardrobe? EUCantina sultan and our Podfather Austin Blankenship is selling wardrobe with my favorite hashtag, #SWEU. Just the thing to take with you to conventions.

Profits will be donated to Reading is Fundamental, a nonprofit geared towards getting books in the hands of kids. A multitude of styles and colors are available, so head on over to Cafepress to get yours.

Check Out Nanci’s ‘Survivor’s Quest’ Retro Review at EUCantina

Our own Nanci has a new review over her other gig at EUCantina. This time around, she takes a look back at Timothy Zahn’s Survivor’s Quest.

As a self-contained story, Survivor’s Quest doesn’t add much to the main storyline. As a standalone novel, it could easily be passed over if one is trying to catch up with the main storyline.

However, skipping the book entirely would be a grave disservice.

SQ is a must-read for fans of the Chiss, the Empire of the Hand, the Fels, and the 501st Legion. In fact, SQ is the novel that first canonized the 501st, named for the fan costuming organization. We meet two new prominent Chiss, Formbi and Drask, and learn more about Chiss culture and hierarchy. This novel first identified the Empire of the Hand, the government established by Grand Admiral Thrawn in the Unknown Regions.

Check out the rest of Nanci’s review at EUCantina.

‘Star Wars Insider’ Short Story Updates

Who wants updates? You guys do! Or at least some of you do. There are lots of you. With many different tastes. I’m clearly stalling at this point so let’s just get into it. Star Wars Books released a list of upcoming shorts you can look forward to in future issues of Star Wars Insider.

-Issue #132 (on sale now) features Jason Fry’s short story “The Guns of Kelrodo-Ai” and stars the “Rebel Destroyer” Shea Hublin (with some beautiful art by John VanFleet!).

-Issue #133 will include the tale of Parella the Hutt, hunter extraordinaire, from Star Wars: Scourge author Jeff Grubb.

-Issue #134 is your first taste of post Fate of the Jedi action as author Christie Golden brings you a story starring Jaina and Jag.

-Issue #135 sees Karen Miller return to the SWEU with an exciting story starring Myri Antilles.

I’m definitely looking forward to issue #135. Myri Antilles as the lead of her own short? Yes, please.

If there’s a short you’d like to see, leave a comment on the announcement post.

Children of the Jedi, Part 4 and Conclusion

There are a few things that I expect when I’m reading a published book from a major series from a major publisher.

One of those things is editing.

Another one of those things is that when I read it, I don’t feel like I need to be proofing this for my fourteen-year-old brother for a freshman English assignment. The writer submitted this, which is one problem. The second problem is that someone then approved it.

And I just want to make this clear: at this point, I am not talking about the things I talked about before—story elements that don’t make sense, characters not acting like they should, etc. I’m talking about literal technical writing ability.

My expectations were obviously too high.

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Paul R. Urquhart Talks ‘Essential Guide to Warfare’

Were the endnotes from Jason Fry not enough for you? Suvudu has a lengthy piece from Essential Guide to Warfare co-author Paul R. Urquhart discussing all sorts of fun little details that went into crafting the book.

But what do you do when you’re writing a book that needs to describe the technicalities of how an Ewok defeats a Stormtrooper? You have to come up with straight-faced explanations that don’t seem completely crazy or compromise the inherent fun and lightness of the saga.

That’s the situation I found myself in when I was asked to co-write Star Wars: The Essential Guide to Warfare – a new guide to the warriors and weaponry of the Star Wars saga. Of course, I jumped at the chance, and thus, I became a sort of kilted Boba Fett sidekick to lead author Jason Fry’s baseball-bat-wielding Darth Vader.

And then I realized just what I’d gotten myself into.

How do you describe the technicalities of how an Ewok defeats a Stormtrooper?

The authors clearly had fun putting this book together and you do have to admire how they straddled the line between taking things too seriously and preserving the often amusing absurdities of the epic space opera. Occasionally the Expanded Universe feels like its too caught up in making itself edgy and dark. Essential Guide to Warfare is a lovely change-of-pace.

For more, head on over and read Paul Urquhart’s first Suvudu post.

Facebook Chat with ‘Scourge’ Author Jeff Grubb This Week

Another week, another Facebook chat with an Expanded Universe novel. This time, it’s Jeff Grubb to talk about his latest release: Scourge. 

We’re very pleased to announce that we will be hosting a chat with STAR WARS: SCOURGE author Jeff Grubb on our page this Thursday, April 19, at 4:00 EST. SCOURGE (on sale next Tuesday) is Jeff’s first STAR WARS novel and he’ll be answering all your questions about Hutts, Jedi, the galactic underworld, and what it’s like writing a galaxy far, far away for the first time. Please stop by and welcome Jeff to SWBooks

The chat will take place this Thursday on Star Wars Books’ official Facebook page. Once again, remember that this isn’t the place to ask about post-Fate of the Jedi plans or when Karen Traviss will come back to the EU (she won’t).

Via Star Wars Books

Revised ‘Star Wars: Ultimate Visual Guide’ Coming Soon

DK Publishing announced today that Ryder Windham’s Ultimate Visual Guide will be updated and expanded.

Among the new additions to the book is a foreword by Ashley Eckstein, voice of The Clone Wars’ Ahsoka Tano and the mind behind Her Universe.

For more information, visit the official Ultimate Visual Guide page.

Third Batch of ‘Essential Guide to Warfare’ Endnotes Hits

Over the last week, EG to Warfare author Jason Fry has been releasing notes from the book’s development. The trend continues this week as he posts a third batch of end notes.

Whenever an author is working on a comprehensive guide that has to seamlessly fuse together numerous eras and writings from other countless authors and publishers, things tend to go sideways as far as canon continuity goes. One area where the canon often contradicted itself was the tricky subject of just what constitutes a capitol ship in the Galaxy Far, Far Away.

All the systems agreed that capital ships began with corvettes (100m-200m), after which came frigates (200m-400m) and then cruisers. Above cruiser, things were fluid in terms of which names to use and where to divide the classes.

My first stab at the Anaxes War College System divided cruisers into three subclasses:light (400m-600m), medium (600m-900m) and heavy (900m-1,600m), followed by battlecruisers and dreadnoughts (4,000m and longer). In addition, I proposed a shorthand system of three generic classes – gunshipscruisers and battleships – that I imagined would be used by officers in the heat of battle. The generic classifcations were good cover for a host of contradictions from the movies and books (lots of things are called “battleships” in lots of sources), made the all-over-the-map use of “cruiser” slightly more sensible, and meant I could stop writing things like “big capital ships” in Warfare.

As a self-professed fleet junkie, I was thrilled to see Fry put together such a clear and concise classification system. Sure, this might trump some obscure canon in already-written books, but authors finally have a reference to go to moving forward.

For more tidbits from the third batch of notes, hop on over to Jason Fry’s Tumblr.