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Loading... Daze of Hate, Knights of Suffering (Star Wars: Knights of the Old…by John Jackson MillerSeries: Star Wars (3963 BBY), Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic (volume 4), Star Wars: the Old Republic era (3963 BBY)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is essentially two separate stories. The first, Daze of Hate, wraps up the exogorth and Adascorp storylines from Volume Three. Camper gets a nice end, but other than that, this is pretty perfunctory. It almost suffers from character/faction overload, the story feels somewhat muddled, and the exogorth threat was always more goofy and abstract than anything else. Bong Dazo's dreadful pencils and inks don't help much, either. Fortunately, things pick up in Knights of Suffering, which sees the return of the fabulous Dustin Weaver to the art chores of the series at long last (even if the trade does credit Dazo for his work!). This is a return to the KotOR of previous volumes, in no small part thanks to Gryph, whose presence had been sorely lacking. Zayne gets some good romancing, and there's thrilling hijinks aplenty as he faces a member of the Jedi Covenant down back where the series started so long ago, on Taris. A bit of a mixed installment overall, but KotOR is still one of the best Star Wars comics ever published. In the fourth volume, we find trouble with Arcanian mad science and Mandalorean ambition. Zayne Carrick has to worry about a weapon that can devastate entire solar systems as well as the invasion of Taris. I'm sufficiently hooked that I read the whole thing the day it showed up from Amazon. Removing the constraint of setting stories in the era surrounding the movies seems a great way to unleash the creativity of authors; this series is just as engrossing as the game. no reviews | add a review
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Knights of Suffering is almost the exact opposite - a weak story about an underground resistance cell on Taris with much impoved artwork that is both suitably subtle when it needs to be and show the scope of the planet when it needs to. To be honest, I struggle a bit with jedi in romantic storylines (probably because of the strict rules regarding jedi and love as preseted in the movies) so the scenes with Zayne and Shel don't realy work for me. The story also suffers from the resistance being filled up with some dull characters (the fantasic Doomo brothers aside) and from the almost complete absence of established characters like Jarael, Camper, Rohlan and Elbee. Without wishing to spoil things for any readers there is a also a scene where a character gets run straight through the torso and not only survives but also seems to recover from it far too quickly.
Overall, not the best installment but KOTOR is sill a fantastic series and I've already ordered Vector volume 1 (which includes KOTOR volume 5). This series isn't just a prequel but a wonderfully self-contained Star Wars universe in its own right. It has a level of continuity that you just don't find in most other Star Wars novels and comics. (