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Sleek, swift and deadly, the famed X-Wing fighters have earned their reputation as the Rebel Alliance's ultimate strike force the hard way--first in battle, the last line of defense.  Now they must make a deal with the devil herself--an enemy whose ultimate goal is their total annihilation.

It's the kind of mission only Wedge Antilles and the Rogue Squadron would dare to undertake.  Against impossible odds they will stage a daring raid into an enemy stronghold--only to be rescued from certain destruction by an unexpected ally.

Ysanne Isard, the ruthless Imperial commander, has appeared on the scene seemingly from out of nowhere.  Now she proposes a most unusual alliance, offering to help Wedge rescue his captured comrades from Imperial Warlord Admiral Krennel's sadistic prison camp.

But her offer is not without a price.  Wedge must lead Rogue Squadron in Isard's deadly struggle against an enemy made in her own image.  It's an offer Wedge would love to refuse, for Isard is certain to betray them.  But how can they leave their comrades at Krennel's mercy?  The answer is: they can't--even if it means being caught between Krennel's ruthlessness and Isard's treachery.

Features a bonus section following the novel that includes a primer on the Star Wars expanded universe, and over half a dozen excerpts from some of the most popular Star Wars books of the last thirty years!

352 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1999

About the author

Michael A. Stackpole

412 books1,511 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 123 reviews
May 6, 2021
The penultimate X-Wing novel actually makes for quite good reading; great writing and plenty of action and suspense, with a little drama and romance in the mix. However, the ending (which I won't divulge here) is slightly disappointing, if only because I'm unsure how they could continue the story afterward. I know there is just one more, because I own it; we shall see whether it's any good.
Profile Image for Daniel.
221 reviews
June 25, 2013
This book is especially hard to read after coming off Wraith Squadron's adventures. Character growth! Humor! Dialog! Pranks! Now it's back to Rogue Squadron, where everyone is perfectly logical, the humor is forced or refers back to something we've forgotten, and we'll rehash the first three books' plots.

There is no character development in this book. The dialog doesn't sound like any kind of real conversation; it's like everyone is just a floating plot point. It's very stilted, and even butler and maid at points. Gavin and Asyr's conversation about adopting was particularly painful and pretty much came out of nowhere. Every time we meet a new pilot, they open up and tell their entire backstory and motives, and then never talk again. I shouldn't be blindsided by dialog and monologue that comes out of nowhere. That's lazy. We don't care. Make us care about these people. And for heaven's sake, SHOW, don't TELL.

Instead there's just... plot. And it's hard to follow plot when you don't care about the characters that should be driving the plot. Furthermore, there's plot points here and there that are unrealistic and seem like a pretty big stretch. It breaks immersion, which would really help make up for this book's flaws.

The good? The story actually gets pretty cool when you hit page 200. That's 200 pages of slogging through all the stuff I just mentioned, but everything gets more interesting, the characters start to solidify, and the plot picks up the pace. It's still not perfect, but it gets much better. The action shines here.

Okay, I think I'm done now. This book might be worth skipping if you've made it this far in the X-Wing series.
Profile Image for Keith.
727 reviews4 followers
December 18, 2023
Stars: 3
Re-read: Like 50.1% It depends on if future books build off this one.
Recommend to: If you loved the first four Rogue Squadron books so much you would be interested in a less addition to the series.

I found decent enjoyment out of this book, but it failed to grip me like the first four books in the series. It isn't necessary to read the Aaron Allston books from this series if you don't want to, even though there are obviously some spoilers relating to them. Stackpole also repeatedly references events that I believe happened in the comics. I think it is safe to say he spoils some of those events, so read those first if that matters to you. It was a little confusing when Stackpole would reference something we are clearly supposed to know about, and I would have to guess that it came from the comics.

The plot of this one was much weaker than Stackpole's previous works. The worst part of the book for me was

Stackpole committed one of the gravest sins in the book.

The entertaining parts of this book were evened out by the annoying parts.

Some of the dialogue was pretty bad:
- This line was hilarious:
- Why do writers think this line is so powerful. "I expected you to be taller." Followed with, "I expected you to be dead." I imagine the first person to use that line was pretty proud of themselves, but now it has been used to death and immediately makes me lose respect for any writer that uses it unironically.

I'd say the book is decent at best. I don't regret reading it, but I won't be in a hurry to read it again.
129 reviews1 follower
February 21, 2024
Wow
Nie spodziewałam się wielu rzeczy, które się tutaj wydarzyły.
TIE Defender istniał juz tutaj 🤓 miło
Admirał Ackbar 🫶
Ciekawie było przeczytać jak Imperialcy podchodzili do Gwiazdy Śmierci. Jednak niektórzy z nich mają jakieś ludzkie uczucia.
Potrzebuję więcej żartów Wensona na temat Ewoków. Nie obchodzi mnie, że Wegde nienawidzi tych żartów.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for TheGeeksAttic.
168 reviews30 followers
April 19, 2024
Star Wars: Isard's Revenge was written by Bestselling Author, Michael A. Stackpole. This Expanded Universe tale takes place during the New Republic Era, nine ABY (9 years after the battle of Yavin).

SUMMARY: Wedge Antilles finally accepts a promotion. He and Rogue Squadron.

Somehow… Isard has returned. Turns out the Isard that was believed to have been killed, was a clone. With Thrawn out of the way, the real Isard is ready to establish herself as the successor to the Emperor.

OVERALL THOUHTS
I really hate to say it, but this book was such a boring read. After the excitement and thrills I experienced with the three Wraith Squadron books by Aaron Allston, this one was a sad let down. The book wasn't horrible, but it wasn’t near as fun as the Wraith Squadron trilogy. Corran Horn believed the hard battles would be over, that the New Republic just had some mopping up to do to snuff out the Empire, but he was wrong. The arrival of Thrawn had disrupted everything! I like getting into Rogue Squadron's thoughts of Thrawn and how they aren't buying into the belief that he's truly dead.

This book pivots back to Stackpole’s take/vision of the New Republic X-Wing squadrons. We spend too much time with boring characters and get a deeper look into the strange lifestyle choices of two, with their interspecies relationship. It's pretty gross and really stupid, the Bothans view relationships with non-Bothans is the Emperor winning.

Somehow… Isard has returned. With this book taking place after the Thrawn trilogy, where Timothy Zahn brings in the use of cloning, Stackpole jumps on the coat-tails of that idea and uses it as a way to reintroduce us to an enemy that was already defeated. However, that does seem to be a recurring issue in Star Wars... the dead enemy is resurrected. I believe that sort of thing can work, when handled appropriately, such as Palpatine in Dark Empire.

This book just feels like "things happen" and "more things happen." Just to get us to the back cover. The previous three books felt like a real structured story with satisfying arcs and conclusions. By the end of this book I was just tired with the characters.

Do I recommend you read this X-Wing book? No, too boring.

RATING
I give Star Wars: X-Wing" Isard's Revenge, a D.
Profile Image for Cian Beirdd.
Author 13 books
January 9, 2014
The title, including revenge and the character of Isard, suggested this was going to be the pinnacle of an, unsophisticated, series. It is not. There is a lovely set-up: Isard recruits Rogue Squadron to combat an old threat and save some POWs. But the execution was definitely lacking. Dialogue was embarrassing. Every important character is mechanically promoted all at once. The characters do nothing interesting, no development, no philosophy, no anything. The action is good, but this felt a lot like Ghostbusters 2 in a way; a half-baked plot that accomplishes nothing really. Admittedly, I like the more sophisticated plots, but I enjoy the Rogue and Wraith novels at their level; this is not on par with previous installments.
Profile Image for Jess Neuner.
182 reviews3 followers
July 11, 2016
I was warned when I first started reading this series that Ysanne Isard lingers. And oh, does she. Thought dead after the Bacta War, Isard returns, not just once, but twice. It turns out that not only did she survive her shuttle getting shot down, the Isard that survived that was actually a clone of Isard. Not yet realising that either Isard is alive, Rogue Squadron is tasked with taking out Prince-Admiral Krennel, one of the more powerful former Imperials who set himself up as a warlord. They're all nearly killed, but find themselves rescued by Isard (the original) and asked to help with a top-secret mission to take down Krennel and Isard (the clone).

I rather like that they have to cooperate with the Imperials and actually find that they work well together. The other side in any conflict generally isn't faceless monsters, but people just like you who happened to choose or get roped into a different organisation. Of course, that doesn't mean anyone should trust Ysanne Isard farther than they can throw her, as taking down her clone can't possibly be the only plot she's got in motion. She's certainly not going to be satisfied with simply stopping her clone's plans and then meekly disappearing again. She wants something much bigger.

Whistler was amazing. We've heard before that he's got extra programming thanks to his time in CorSec, but this is the first time we've seen it in action from Whistler's point of view. He single-handedly engineers an escape from Isard's clutches and makes his way back into friendly hands without Isard, the Queen of Intelligence, being any the wiser. I would totally read a book entirely about Whistler.

I think my only real quibble with this book (and really, it's with this series as a whole), is that no one actually seems to stay dead. Corran Horn's been thought dead twice, and most of the Rogues have been fake dead at least once. Not that I'm particularly opposed to characters I like being alive still. It just makes it difficult to believe that characters are actually dead when they die. Look what happened with Ysanne Isard. We thought she was dead, but now we've got two of her. Now if only we could have had this whole fake death trend in the New Jedi Order series.
Profile Image for Matthew.
104 reviews
July 7, 2022
Isard's Revenge was a solid addition to the X-Wing series. The action in this book picks up right as the Thrawn trilogy is winding down. I really appreciated this integration, as it gave great continuity to the story. It's hard to say much about the plot without spoilers, so suffice it to say that these missions encompass some of Rogue Squadron's finest undercover work. They take place in the Ciutric Hegemony, which is a fascinating and seldom explored region of the Expanded Universe (I first learned about these planets in a mod to the game "Empire at War"). The plot involving Isard has a huge twist and the political play between Warlord Krennel (at Isard's direction) and Mon Mothma is very realistic.

Although a solid and entertaining story, I disliked the way the capital ships were handled (the fighter combat was great, though!). The New Republic dispatched such a weak fleet to deal with the Warlord. I know that the NR navy had to be stretched thin, but a single Mon Cal cruiser (and several support vessels) is too paltry a force! And the Warlord only had one Impstar Deuce and two Victories? The smaller fleet sizes allowed the author to personalize and focus details on those ships and their crews, but it was simply unbelievable to me that the fleets would be so small. Even Zsinj had dozens of capital ships... Maybe I don't have the proper perspective on this, but the small number of capital ships did stick out to me.
Profile Image for David.
891 reviews22 followers
August 9, 2011
If, by and large, books can be compared to food - the classics being haute cuisine; the terrible books being dog-food - then the X-Wing series of Star Wars books (all written pre-Episode One, and based on the popular LucasArts games) could probably be best described as fast food: enjoyable enough in small doses but you wouldn't want to live on them and not always that memorable.

With regard to this book, which picks up from the end of Timothy Zahn's "The Last Command" (with the ending of that novel shown from a different perspective), it's also more than half way through before the jacket blurb begins to make sense.
Profile Image for Meggie.
523 reviews68 followers
November 17, 2021
For 2020, I decided to reread (in publication order) all the Bantam-era Star Wars books that were released between 1991 and 1999; that shakes out to 38 adult novels and 5 anthologies of short stories & novellas.

This week’s focus: the last of Michael A. Stackpole’s X-Wing books, Isard’s Revenge.

SOME HISTORY:

Michael A. Stackpole's The Bacta War left some loose ends dangling, primarily the fate of Ysanne Isard. Tycho Celchu destroyed her shuttle, but was she actually inside? (With a title like Isard’s Revenge, I would assume that she wasn’t!) While Stackpole’s previous four X-Wing books all made the New York Times paperback bestseller list, I couldn’t find any data that Isard’s Revenge did.

MY RECOLLECTION OF THE BOOK:

The events in this book felt familiar to me, but not to the extent that I experienced in the previous X-Wing books. I know that I read this one more than once, but I don’t think I reread it at the same frequency as some of the others in the series.

A BRIEF SUMMARY:

With Grand Admiral Thrawn defeated at the Battle of Bilbringi, the New Republic turns their focus on Prince-Admiral Krennel and the Ciutric Hegemony. But when the Rogues are ambushed, they must team up with an enemy they never imagined would be on their side.

THE CHARACTERS:

In 1996 Bantam approached Stackpole about writing four more X-Wing books, but as we know, he had prior commitments. Three of the books were handed off to Aaron Allston, and Stackpole wrote just one: Isard’s Revenge. IR feels like a conclusion to the Rogue Squadron arc. We get explanations for people’s rank changes, a satisfactory denouement for Isard, and a little bit of setup for future authors to play around with.

The main way that Stackpole filled in the gaps here was by explaining why Wedge Antilles is a general in the Jedi Academy trilogy. After dodging promotions for years, Wedge finally accepts the rank of General. He’s allowed to stay with his starfighter unit, but he’ll be accepting more responsibilities--perhaps taking on a role more akin to General Salm’s, where he heads up one starfighter unit but is an overarching supervisor of many others. (Which made sense to me, because Wedge can’t stay a commander forever! I would actually like for him to pass command of the Rogues on to Tycho, because he deserves it.)

We see Corran Horn again, before he undertook his Jedi training in I, Jedi. So while he has a handy lightsaber and gets flashes of insight or warning about situations and people, he’s not able to focus his Force powers like he can in later books.

I also loved Whistler and Gate’s escape from Isard���s hidden base. Whistler has loads of special programming from his time in CorSec, and it was fun getting to see him put it to use. It also made sense to me that the droids would be able to get a message out, because no one pays attention to droids.

Tycho’s here! That’s it, though. After The Krytos Trap, he hasn’t had much to do other than be an amazing pilot.

Gavin Darklighter and Asyr Sei’lar are going through some relationship stuff: they want to get married! They want kids! I know they’ve been dating for over two years, but Gavin’s only nineteen at this point so I thought they were moving too fast. (It didn’t help that Stackpole handles their scenes in such an awkward manner.) Asyr faces more pushback from Bothan officials, so she takes two tracks. The first is to be the absolute best, most amazing flyer ace so that her reputation will be so large that no one can tell her no. The second is one hundred and eighty degrees in the other direction. While Wes Janson returns to the Rogues and lets them know he’s not dead, Asyr decides to change her identity and change Bothan society from the inside-out. Which is a lofty goal, but feels excessively cruel to Gavin, who still thinks she’s DEAD.

We’re also introduced to some new Rogues, who are explicitly coded as red shirts. We learn a little bit about them, and then they DIE. But since I didn’t have an emotional connection to them, it was just like “well, shoot.”

Iella, Mirax, and even Booster Terrik get an intelligence-style plotline here. I love that Booster is able to “think like Isard” so easily, and that Mirax and Iella get to do important things here. Isard #1’s scheme would have never been foiled if it wasn’t for Iella and Mirax figuring things out.

And then we have our baddies. Prince-Admiral Krennel stayed out of the conflict with Thrawn, but is willing to join with Isard #2 to thumb his nose at the New Republic and grow his power base. One issue I have with Stackpole’s later Star Wars books, though, is that they rely perhaps too heavily on knowledge from the X-Wing comics. Admiral Tavira from I, Jedi originally appeared in the Rogue Squadron comic, as did Krennel. While I felt like Stackpole did an adequate job introducing him, you get a better sense of his character from two Rogue Squadron arcs: Masquerade and Mandatory Retirement. He’s not a nice guy.

And while Krennel thinks that he’s teaming up with Isard, she’s actually a clone! Isard #1 created Isard #2 to relocate the Lusankya prisoners then shot her in the head, but #2 survived. She has memory loss from the events on Thyferra, and legitimately believes that she is the true Isard. I’m not crazy about the presence of Isard #2, though, because it seems to de-rarify clones. Rather than being a forgotten technology until Thrawn found the Spaarti cylinders on Wayland, everyone makes themselves a clone: Isard, the Emperor, even Thrawn himself. Two Isards ends up being one Isard too many.

And then we have the original flavor Isard; she was not on the shuttle that Tycho shot down, she’s been hiding out ever since she fled Thyferra, and now that Thrawn is dead she wants to take out Krennel and her clone and (possibly) retake her Super Star Destroyer.

ISSUES:

I felt like the part where Rogue Squadron had to work with Isard’s forces was the best part of the book. (Obviously, Bantam thought so too, because the back cover blurb only talks about that subplot.) The problem is that pivotal event doesn’t start until Chapter 20 out of 38. It felt like you had to wade through a lot of...setup...before you got to the crucial, exciting parts.

We see the Battle of Bilbringi from Rogue Squadron’s POV in the first chapter, then they return to Coruscant and Corran reunites with Mirax. They have a party; one of the Lusankya prisoners shows up--and dies when Corran says his name. They raid the planet that they traced the prisoner to; find more prisoners but hit a dead end; get assigned to the actions against Krennel. They’re dealing with Krennel; Mirax and Iella investigate stuff and realize IT’S A TRAP; it is, in fact, a trap; nine members of Rogue Squadron are picked up by Isard’s forces, two die, and two get rescued by Booster on the Errant Venture. And then it’s the exciting stuff! But that is an awful lot of plot to wade through before we get to the main crux of the novel.

I also felt like the apparent death of various members of Rogue Squadron weren’t dealt with in any emotionally nuanced way. The nine members with Isard believe that Wes Janson and Asyr Sei’lar are dead. We get one chapter where Gavin feels really bad and Corran talks to him, and Wedge briefly thinks about Wes’s death. Wedge’s sadness over Wes felt less about Wes as an individual, and more about “another member of Rogue Squadron gone.” But we don’t get anything from Hobbie Klivian, the other half of the wonderful Janson/Klivian bromance?? And on the Errant Venture, we get nothing about Wes’s grief over the loss of his friends.

And when they’re reunited, we see nothing?? We hear from Corran that Wedge was excited to see Wes alive and well, but that’s it. No firsthand response from Wedge, and once again, nothing from Hobbie about the miraculous reappearance of his best friend?? I think this was maybe the reason why I didn’t reread IR with the same frequency as the other X-Wing books, because I felt like Stackpole didn’t want to deal with the emotional ramifications of all these supposed deaths.

When they first started talking about Pulsar Station, my eyes rolled back in my head. Another attempt at the Death Star? But I enjoyed learning that it was all a fake: that Isard had her finger on what precisely would get the New Republic all riled up, and was able to deploy her ruse in a timely manner.

The ending felt too abrupt to me. The prisoners from Lusankya are fine--no virus!--and the ship is being inducted into the New Republic Navy. Rogue Squadron might be stationed on it? Stackpole throws off another allusion to I, Jedi, and that’s it. Since Isard’s Revenge was Stackpole bidding farewell to the Rogues, I expected the ending to be a bit longer and more complete. (I wasn’t expecting multiple endings like in the film of The Return of the King! Just something a little longer than 8 pages of wrap-up.)

And finally, a petty issue: I don’t understand what people see in Bothans? They sound like bipedal cats with (aside from Asyr) nasty attitudes. I don’t get it.

IN CONCLUSION:

Isard’s Revenge is a nice conclusion to Stackpole’s Rogue Squadron arc. From Chapter 20 onwards was really exciting, but unfortunately you have to wade through a lot of the book before you get to that pivotal point--and I also felt like Stackpole wasn’t willing to deal with the emotional ramifications of that pivotal point, which was a bit disappointing.


Next up: the third book in the Bounty Hunter Wars trilogy, Hard Merchandise by K.W. Jeter

My YouTube review: https://youtu.be/c7DfurxgPY0

Ryshcate attempt #3: https://youtu.be/fLRoTlxamuc
Profile Image for Herdis Marie.
461 reviews35 followers
August 16, 2024
Welll, hands up if you were convinced there was no way Stackpole could possibly get any worse and you are now somehow both disappointed and the tiniest bit impressed.

description

Not to be extremely dramatic or anything, but how in the name of the almighty Force does something this unbelievably crappy get published?

I'm genuinely curious.

Now, at this point I would normally give you a small plot recap, but I genuinely don't quite know what the plot of this book was supposed to be.

It had something to do with Isard. And revenge .... presumably.

description

Let's get into the plot though, and why it's so bad.

Plot

First of all, let me say that I honestly had some hopes for this plot. Isard is one of the cooler characters Stackpole has invented, and I thought some fun might be had from resurrecting her.

But instead of focusing on Isard, Stackpole chooses to spend time on Warlord Admiral Krennel, who is apparently included in some comics, but has never before been introduced in the X-Wing series. So, if you've only read the books, like me, he's a completely new character, and he is, I kid you not, completely pointless.

Seriously. Take him out of the book, and nothing changes, except for the fact that you get fewer boring scenes with him in them.



Secondly, Stackpole has way too many plot threads, and most of them are left dangling, and some of them don't actually make any logical sense (see, for instance, spoiler above).

There is also so much in this plot that is clearly not properly worked through. There are inconsistencies and plot holes everywhere, and some truly enormous leaps of logic.

It is very clear that Stackpole has been inspired by the much, much better Thrawn trilogy, and is trying, in some measure, to emulate it. The trouble with his attempting this is, of course, that Timothy Zahn is a much better writer and can make a convoluted plot with lots of twists and turns work so that it actually feels like a logical, coherent unit of writing, whereas Stackpole doesn't have the talent, or the skill, for it.

Prose

Everything that was wrong with the first X-wing book is wrong with this one, and somehow even worse.

The fight scenes are so mathematical and convoluted that they lose every ounce of actual tension, leaving you to try to do calculus in your head in order to figure out which X-wing is currently doing what.

The conversations are beyond painful to read. Most of them are so stilted and unnatural sounding that I am left to seriously question whether Stackpole isn't actually from a different planet. In this volume, Stackpole also attempts to insert some philosophical elements in the musings of his characters, and for the most part a kid in primary school could probably do a better job philosophising.

The only really interesting aspect of this are the conversations between Asyr Sei'lar and Gavin Darklighter regarding their future as a couple and the possibility of adopting children, and this is, sadly, just left to fizzle out into nothing.

Additionally, Stackpole tries to insert humour here, but he always, always drags the joke on a line too far, so that instead of being funny, the jokes just feel overworked and fall completely flat.

He has also created a lot of weird Star Wars similes that he throws out here and there, often in the middle of a tense situation where said simile ends up lending a comical air to a situation that should be frightening, or sad.

The prose also frequently reads as though English isn't Stackpole's first language (which it is, I checked). His use of language is often so stunted and odd that it doesn't sound properly fluent, and there are also a lot of errors.

Characters

The characters are much as they ever have been. There is little to no character development in this volume, instead we're just rehashing a lot of the same stuff as before (the notable exception being Asyr and Gavin, as mentioned above).

There are few new characters in this, and I actually don't even remember most of them (which goes to show how interesting they were).

The chief new character (new if you haven't read the comics) is the abovementioned Krennel, who is about as interesting as wet cement.

Seriously, his most interesting trait is that he has a bionic arm, and even that is never used to full effect. I mean, I was at least expecting to see him strangle someone with it, à la Vader, but we didn't even get that.

description

There is so much more I could complain about here, but I think you all get the point: I really, really didn't like this.

The worst Stackpole yet, which is saying something.

Seriously, if you're doing a read-through of this series, just give this book a miss. I don't think anything happens in this book that is going to have much impact on the series later.

There are, sadly, three more Stackpole books in the Legends universe, and at this point I'm considering battling my OCD and skipping them.

Have any of you read them, and if so, are they worth reading, like at all? Let me know.
91 reviews
June 28, 2024
There are some books I feel badly about giving 3 stars, because they were very enjoyable but just didn't break "4 star" territory. This....isn't one of those books.

The plot is just a little too far fetched, which becomes a bigger problem because it feels like we're revisiting stories that were already settled, creating loose ends where there were none. In fact, this might be the first book I've ever read that would have been better without a plot. The first 50 pages or so were excellent, focusing on where the story left off, and life after the thrawn trilogy. The book should have stuck with that, and elaborated further. Other than that, the book was ok, pretty good writing outside of the combat (which took up too much space and was far too hard to follow/get into)
The other problem is, this was a dissapointment after the previous 3 books. Allstons trilogy were all masterpieces. They were a tough act to follow, and this story didn't step up at all, instead becoming the worst of the series so far.
59 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2021
I would say this is a high three for me, because I did really enjoy it, but unfortunately I think it's my least favorite X-Wing novel. Maybe it's that Aaron Allston's run is so good, but this just wasn't hitting for me. I love characters like Wedge, Corran, and Mirax, and I was happy to spend some time with them, but this book just didn't really excite me. The Isard clone plot was interesting, but not much was done with it, to the point where I probably could have done without her in this book at all. The resolution of the prisoner rescue was satisfying, because that's one thread from The Bacta War that annoyed me to leave hanging, and I think it sets up Corran for I, Jedi very well, but overall I was sort of left just wanting to go read that book now. Worth the read if you like the X-Wing books, but nothing super special.
Profile Image for Eric Fritz.
352 reviews10 followers
June 5, 2023
This one is a lot of fun, even if it is the "somehow, Palpatine returned" of the legends era. Great scenes of Mirax and Iella working together, Wedge leading Rogue Squadron, and Corran both flying and getting some lightsaber action.
Profile Image for Seth.
214 reviews
June 19, 2020
It was fun seeing the characters from the first 7 X-Wing books again, and now dealing with the aftermath of Thrawn's campaign.

But another clone? Blech.

Profile Image for Thomas.
2,043 reviews80 followers
April 14, 2021
Man, the Star Wars Expanded Universe is lousy with clones. Lucas opened that door with the idea of the Clone Wars, and writers will depend on them to make their plots work until the heat death of the universe.

I mean, it's not really a surprise that Isard returns to the X-Wing series; even when she crashed in The Bacta War, nobody said anything about finding a body, so I knew then she was going to come back (irrespective of the fact that I already knew a future book in the series was called Isard's Revenge). So ... surprise!

As for the rest of the story, it's just okay. I know this series is well-liked and well-regarded, but at best, it just feels serviceable to me.
Profile Image for CS.
1,239 reviews
September 27, 2010
“The way we rebuild the galaxy is by making lives better one at a time”
The New Republic is hot off the battle with Thrawn. Admiral Ackbar forces Wedge Antilles to accept a promotion to General so they can deal with the remnants of the Empire and the Prince-Admiral, Krennel, and rescue the remaining Lusankya prisoners. Little do they know that Isard is back and wants revenge.
NOTE: Listened to audiobook.

I Liked:
I don’t know if this audiobook was better edited, or I was paying attention better or the book was just better, but I definitely have been better involved with this book than my other forays into the X-Wing series.
I love how Stackpole seamlessly wove his narrative into so many sources. Zahn’s Thrawn trilogy; Allston’s Wraith Squadron books, and, of course, his own novels. I think it was cool to have Stackpole write the ending of the Thrawn trilogy from a new point of view. I like the consistency of Luke encouraging Corran to train as a Jedi. And I enjoy seeing how our characters end (Gavin and Asyr, the budding relationship between Wedge and Iella, Mirax and Corran).
The characters are good. Wedge, Mirax, Booster, Corran, Wes Janson, Iella, and many more return in their brilliance. Stackpole also deftly uses Talon Karrde, something that many other authors have been unable to do. I love this little conversation Gavin and Asyr have...where I got my quote, in fact. How change is made on an individual, personal level. It was very insightful, almost a key to what the Star Wars galaxy needed (and only a few authors, unfortunately, tried to show).
The story is good. While I typically don’t like the clone scenario (see below), I do like having Isard return to give Rogue Squadron one final run for their money. I felt her “death” in Bacta War was just not quite right. I also liked how Iella and Mirax went investigating with each other. Corran’s partner in CorSec and his wife. It just seemed cool, and I liked how they didn’t have to dress up sexy or act like courtesans or some other stereotypical “sexy woman” thing in order to investigate Commenor.

I Didn’t Like:
I do not like the convention of bringing back a character using the “clone” excuse. “Oh, so-and-so had a clone and that clone died.” Overused. Silly. And almost like a person has run out of ideas (“Dang, can’t think of a new enemy…wait! I’ll have a clone made of my best enemy and he/she can come back!”).
Coupled with this is the other cliché Stackpole is fond of: “returning from the dead” sequences. Stackpole did this with Corran, but somehow, I didn’t mind it. Here, there are two people who return from the dead…stretching credibility (I was actually looking forward to one of the deaths, it was a real heart-tugger).
And then the other stereotypical Star Wars cliché…yes, you know it’s coming! Superweapons! Dum dum dummmmmmmmmmm! Fortunately, this proto-Death Star is much smaller scale, and Ackbar mentions scoping out the rest of the superweapons quickly. I am just keeping my fingers crossed that this is the last of these stupid superweapons.
Also, more than a little tired of New Republic = Good, Empire = Bad. The villains are competent, don’t get me wrong, but could we please have a wee bit more balance?

Dialogue/Sexual Situations/Violence:
“Sithspawn” is about as harsh as it gets.
Gavin mentions to Asyr that Bothans and humans aren’t compatible.
Isard has scars from when she was blown up. Dogfights, Wedge stuns people while under cover, Corran gets to use his lightsaber…you know the drill.

Overall:
I was scared listening to this audiobook. The previous X-Wing novels just seemed lacking. So I was afraid I wouldn’t like this book as well. Fortunately, I was proven wrong.
However, I was a little disappointed with Stackpole. Superweapons, near-death experiences, and clones? Were they really necessary?
Ah, well, I had a good time, and that’s more than I can ask for. Four stars.
Profile Image for Ian Reay.
100 reviews5 followers
December 5, 2016
THE STORY:
Five years after 'Return of the Jedi', the New Republic, victorious over Grand Admiral Thrawn, turns it's attention to the brutal dictatorship of the Ciutric Hegemony. But Rogue Squadron are not the only ones gunning for Prince-Admiral Delak Krennel; Ysanne Isard is alive and well and plotting avidly, for Krennel is being advised by her clone, another Isard.
WHAT'S GOOD:
The opening of this book is awesome, throwing us into the deep end of the Battle of Bilbringi (from the end of 'The Last Command' by Timothy Zahn), threading the X-Wing series even deeper into the weave of the Star Wars saga. This book resolves the plotlines established in the X-Wing comic 'Mandatory Retirement' and also involves the rescue of the Lusankya prisoners featured in Stackpole's earlier X-Wing novels. I liked the idea that the Rogues have to ally themselves with their most hated enemy in order to eliminate the greater threat, flying side by side with Imperial pilots. P>WHAT'S BAD:
Depicted on the cover is the scene in which the Rogues destroy two AT-ATs. Since they do it so easily with their X-Wings you are forced to wonder why they bothered with Snowspeeders in 'The Empire Strikes Back'. I already knew (from the end of 'The Bacta War') that Isard would've miraculously escaped her 'death' (which was depressingly cliched enough), but here Stackpole claims that TWO Isard's escaped death at Thyferra! I can't honestly remember a bit of the book in which he sufficiently explains this nonsense and that's what detracted a star from this book's total. This how not to handle the cloning of a major character.
558 reviews3 followers
October 27, 2017
The Rogue Squadron series is still one of my favorite Star Wars series, but I would have to rank this as my 2nd least favorite book in the series. Here is my issue: Ysanne Isard is just not a good villain. I was glad when they killed her off, so bringing back TWO of her made it worse. Why is she considered a good villain? It just seems like lazy writing. Also, the whole plot of going after an Imperial Warlord on a murder charge seemed thin. Stackpole continued his main problem of not fleshing out any of the Rogues past the main 3 or 4. Inyri Forge has been in almost the entire series and you know next to nothing about her. I knew immediately that the two new characters would die and that the fakeout with Wes Janson was easily seen with hindsight. As always, the battle scenes are well done, but I've noticed more inconsistencies. How is it that Mon Calamari cruisers hold their own against the Iron Fist, a Super Star Destroyer, but then in this book struggle against the smaller Imperial Star Destroyers.
Profile Image for Bryan.
43 reviews
October 7, 2014
Anything that puts Wedge Antilles in a TIE Defender gets 5 stars from me.
40 reviews
November 28, 2021
2 / 5

This delivers more of the same sort of escapist Star Wars entertainment as the previous seven novels in the X-Wing series. Stackpole’s formula for keeping the series fresh is for each installment to be a mashup with a different genre. This time it’s starfighter/espionage fiction. It is serviceable but suffers from a slow pace and unsatisfactory ending.

THE GOOD

The Bothan culture has a complex, thought-provoking, alien notion of honor and power. The Bothan/human interspecies marriage is interesting.

There are (brief) moments of effective espionage intrigue. (Who is the mole? Can we really trust Isard??...)

The Issorians are a sapient reptilian species that reproduces by laying eggs. This raises some juicy social-scifi questions. Without a birthing process, parentage is unclear, and consequently their notions of family and community differ. I wish this were developed further.

Darron soliloquizes an argument for Imperial ideals. These beliefs, while misguided, are indeed self-consistent. This adds some depth to the background Imperial characters, who tend to be one-dimensional villains.

THE BAD

X-Wing #5 through #7 are written by Allston and feature Wraith Squadron, a unit of original misfit characters. This book #8 is written by Stackpole and refocuses on Rogue Squadron. It is a rough transition. The Wraith books are vibrant and take creative risks; the Rogue books are comparatively staid and unmemorable. Maybe the established canon of the Rogues is to blame? Anyway, the Wraith books are more fun.

The book gets a sluggish start. I noticed around page 180 that we were still planning and discussing action. We should be doing something by then. The book is still slow after the action starts. Numerous scenes are filler that do not develop characters or advance the plot.

The ending...without getting into spoilers, all I can say is that it’s anticlimactic.
Profile Image for J.
163 reviews13 followers
April 25, 2018
Isard's Revenge continues the story that I had enjoyed in X-Wing books 1-4. Rogue Squadron and the New Republic have barely survived the Thrawn Campaigns (see Heir to the Empire, Dark Force Rising, The Last Command). The New Republic will now turn toward bringing justice back to the Galaxy. Soon they caught up in events and Ysanne Isard, their old enemy, has returned...

As usual with these Bantam abridgments the pace, music, and special effects are excellent. The complication during the second act (spoilers) sets up nicely the rest of the novel, unbalancing Rogue Squadron and forcing them to fight with un-trusted support. The return of Mr. Stackpole and his existing plot threads after the strange turn in the series of books 5-7 is also welcome.

As usual, and perhaps because of the abridgement, there are holes. No one explains why one of the main villains (spoiler) helps Rogue Squadron or how it helps their goal of stealing back their property. The idea that 1 intelligence person and 2 distraught family members would be allowed to be the only protection for that property is also laughable.

That said, it's fun, quick and a guilty little pleasure for this Star Wars fan.
Profile Image for Maria.
177 reviews2 followers
July 15, 2020
So, this reread ended up being done over the course of three months.
That was not planned, but I just haven't read much since March in general, so it's nothing against this book.

Anyway, I originally read these books when I was much younger, and I must admit I couldn't quite remember the details of them, this one included. Which made it for a more interesting read, I think.
I will admit it's a bit weird going back to Stackpole's detail-oriented writing style after three books of Allston's humor, but it was probably wise to intersperse my rereading of the X-wing series with The Courtship of Princess Leia and the Thrawn Trilogy.
In general I still like the book and the X-wing books are good action books. I also like how both Mirax and Iella gets some agency of their own and are shown as competent women.
So even though these books are clearly 90's books they still work. Just don't read them with the expectations of a more modern book, because some things have changed in storytelling and pace since then, and also in what is acceptable to write in a book for a large audience in a large franchise. As of this writing this book is 21 years old, but it does well for its age.

Next up is Starfighters of Adumar and that was always my favorite of the bunch, so I look forward to reading that. But first I should probably do something about the pile of library books on my table.

So, all in all, a good read and we finally got the resolution to a plotline started in The Krytos Trap.
Profile Image for Kain.
519 reviews11 followers
November 12, 2020
Pokutuje trochę to, że "uzupełniam" teraz książki z serii, która ma akcję między innymi książkami.
Trylogię Thrawna już poznałem jakiś czas temu...wskakuję w tę książkę...no i potem jest Trylogia akademii, którą już też znam. No ale życie.
Jakoś tak jest, że chyba Widma mi się bardziej od Łotrów bardziej podobają, ale ciągle spoko.
Profile Image for Alan.
1,345 reviews89 followers
October 10, 2021
So, this entry in the series takes place a little later than the others, right about the time Thrawn dies in another part of the galaxy. This leads to new possibilities for Rogue Squadron as now they're charged with going after Warlord Prince-Admiral Krennel, who, unbeknownst to them, has been approached by the long thought dead Ysanne Isard for new plots to take out the New Republic.
But then the plot gets all caught up in subplots for the various X-wing pilots, their wives doing stuff and going on secret missions, the possibilities of adopting orphans and a whole lot of other things about which
description
Which is in ways good, because it's a good excuse to skim read through all the trivialities. But then comes the space battle with the shocking death toll I haven't felt since Chewbacca during the Yuzan Vong series.
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So I guess it's a good thing I didn't totally skim through THAT battle scene.
.....aaaaand following the battle we get what is supposed to be a shocking revelation, but is really just silly. 🙄 ....aaaanddd then more "shocks" as not all is as it appears. Ugh.
In the end, though it had some ridiculous turn of events, this was actually probably the best of the X-wing series, mostly because of the last 25-30%. It went in unexpected and different directions than most of the other books. But it still should have been about 1/3 shorter with a lot of the filler nonsense cut out.
Profile Image for Daniel Millard.
303 reviews18 followers
July 14, 2021
A nice bow to tie up the Ysanne Isard story, she who for a few novels has been one of Star Wars' greatest off-screen antagonists. Slippery, cruel, deceptive, inexplicably powerful and well-connected (in a good way), Iceheart is the best sort of villain, and Stackpole culminates his final entry in the X-Wing saga with killing her AGAIN. TWICE!

Yes, so this entry travels into the action drama of comic books, but in the best style of western space fantasy. The story revolves around Rogue Squadron's latest escapade: combatting Prince Admiral Delak Krennel (just one more Imperial Warlord) and his Ciutric Hegemony. There's only a minor amount of politicking, but it makes for good fluff. Familiar EU characters like Mothma, Ackbar, and Cracken get some time in alongside Stackpole's pet characters (Corran Horn, Mirax and Booster Terrik) and the rest of the Rogues.

This one's got more than the usual amount of strange domestic back-patting and social commentary (should characters get married? Should they have children? Who cares, it's Star Wars!), along with a fair amount of coping with tragedy. These create some soap opera elements that dig into my enjoyment of the book a bit.

That aside however, Isard's Revenge is an action-packed treat. There's a satisfying number of plot twists, combat sequences, and thrilling turns to keep the Star Wars nut well pleased. Always an enjoyable re-read.
Profile Image for Ben Savage.
245 reviews11 followers
July 4, 2022
I guess I like Alston a bit more than Stackpole. However it took me a chapter or two to realize this was a Corran Horn story.

Rouge Squadron proper is back. Not the Wraiths. The first. The Rogues.

A couple of series wide plot points were resolved within those first two chapters. Now General Antilles, promotions follow for most Rogues. The flying is still great.

At points it took me a slog to get through it. Stackpole never used 10 words he liked when he could use 20 short naval terms. Space made it difficult to actually picture the battles. The burning colors of fire makes me question what is burning. And Stackpole liked to have heavy sci fi and then light sci fi. Like " heres how the massive Star Destroyer maneuvers and sounds and tactical space battle. " Then the next paragraph is Corran Horn uses his lightsaber tee hee.

As always its amazing to read the novels before they figured all this out. The sounding out of the clones was very interesting to reveal.

The book suffers a small amount for referencing others novels and events, but nothing derails it.

Read it to continue the series.
Profile Image for Jack.
144 reviews
July 2, 2023
The biggest problem with Isard's Revenge is timing. If you're reading in chronological order, you've just finished the well written Thrawn Trilogy.

If you're reading in XWing order, you've just finished the Wraith Squadron trilogy. Unfortunately both options are so vastly superior to Isard's Revenge that it makes this book pretty disappointing.

While there's plenty of fun and interesting things done with the plot, overall it's the weakest XWing book by a mile. Too much plot armor, besides 3-4 characters everyone is just a background interchangeable red shirt.

The real issue with this book however is Isard. Isard's Revenge should've been something she set up post mortem, or some kind of plan. Bringing her back for one last adventure when she was always a meh antagonist was a pretty bad idea.

However there's enough to like about this book. Iella and Mirax get a fun side detective story. Gate and Whistler the two astromechs have a little side story that was easily the highlight. It also resolves Corran Horn's story set up in Krytos Trap and leaves him in the perfect position to be less pilot, more Jedi.
Profile Image for Luke Woolston.
50 reviews1 follower
March 12, 2024
Isard’s Revenge is yet another action packed, thrilling addition to the X-Wing series! I loved picking up these characters again, especially since it’s been a good while since I read the last Rogue Squadron books.

I would say the highlight for this book, which is usually the case with these books, was the character of Corran Horn, it was awesome seeing him in action again and how his relationship with Mirax has evolved since the last book. This makes me super excited to read I, Jedi in the near future.

The one gripe I had with this book is that the plot just felt a little bit repetitive after so many books of a similar format. Imperial bad guy doing Imperial bad guy things and the rogues go on a fun mission to stop the Imperial bad guy. Don’t get me wrong, I still enjoyed every page, but it’s left me excited for when I reach the end of the ‘Imperial remnants VS New Republic’ era of the EU.

I also have mixed feelings on the return of Isard and what that brought to the table, but I wouldn’t say it negatively impacted the story.
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