To navigate a precarious life in Crimson Dawn, Qi’ra must rebuild herself into the cunning, ruthless survivor she perhaps once was—before Solo.
Though Han did manage to escape the Corellian spaceport, Qi’ra did not, so back she plunges into the Coronet City tunnels with the thieving gang of scrumrats known as the White Worms. Punishment for her disobedience soon follows as crime boss Lady Proxima sells Qi’ra to a cruel trafficker. Still, she uncovers a path forward: “There would be no more reckless plans, no more trust.” Qi’ra’s remaining days on Corellia and harrowing time with the trafficker prove short when Crimson Dawn recruits her. The powerful crime syndicate represents another means of survival in a harsh galaxy, but her keen ingenuity swiftly attracts the attention of Dryden Vos, the gang’s cruel, enigmatic leader. At first resistant to Vos’ influence, as well as the comparative comfort the notorious syndicate affords her, Qi’ra nonetheless steps further into Crimson Dawn’s twisted games of power and survival, with visions of the boy “who’d always had stars in his eyes” in the recesses of her memories. An exquisite portrait of an intrepid character in the Star Wars universe, Johnston’s latest richly plots Qi’ra’s ascent through Crimson Dawn with verve. Though certain characters’ motivations sometimes get muddled amid the action, the overall arc of the novel’s reluctant antihero as well as some delightfully baddie villains prove to be major draws.
A propulsive read for fans of a galaxy far, far away.
(Science fiction. 12-18)