Star Wars Announces Six New Titles to Tie In to Galaxy’s Edge

Many fans Star Wars fans are looking to dive into he Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge with as much knowledge about Black Spire Outpost and Batuu as possible. Soon they’ll be able to learn as much as they want with the release of six new Star Wars titles.

What’s happening:

  • StarWars.com has announced the upcoming release of six Star Wars books that will introduce fans to the planet of Batuu and the Black Spire Outpost.
  • These stories will have a direct tie-in to the Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge lands opening at Disneyland and Walt Disney World.
  • Readers will:
    • Meet Meet Dok-Ondar, the infamous Ithorian who deals in rare antiquities
    • Find out why General Leia Organa takes an interest in Black Spire Outpost
    • Indulge in myths and fables from a galaxy far, far away, plus other stories set on the Outer Rim locale.
  • StarWars.com is pleased to announce the first six titles that will help introduce fans to the planet of Batuu:
    • Marvel Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge miniseries
    • Black Spire
    • A Crash of Fate
    • Star Wars: Myths & Fables
  • In addition to these books, fans will be able to enjoy even more fantastic stories this fall including a, Galaxy’s Edge kids comic
  • Finally, there will also be an official Galaxy’s Edge cookbook featuring some of the exotic cuisine created for Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge as well as dishes drawn from the saga’s history.

Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge books:

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge Marvel comic.

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Marvel comic.

Marvel Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge miniseries

Written by Ethan Sacks

Art by Will Sliney

Issue #1 available: April 24, 2019

Black Spire Outpost has long been frequented by smugglers, merchants, and travelers from every corner of the galaxy looking to make their score on the infamous black market — or experience the exotic thrills the remote world of Batuu alone has to offer. Aliens like the infamous Dok-Ondar, a proprietor of rare and one-of-a-kind antiquities, thrive on the unique opportunities which abound on the lawless outpost at the very edge of Wild Space in this all-new miniseries from Marvel writer Ethan Sacks and artist Will Sliney.

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge Black Spire.

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Black Spire.

Black Spire (Del Rey)

Written by Delilah Dawson

Available: September 3, 2019

In this novel, a prequel to the Disney Parks experience, General Leia Organa dispatches her top spy to Batuu in a desperate search for Resistance allies.

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge A Crash of Fate.

The cover for Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge A Crash of Fate.

A Crash of Fate (Disney Lucasfilm Press)

Written by Zoraida Cordova

Available: August 6, 2019

In this Young Adult novel, Izzy and Jules were best friends until Izzy’s family abruptly left Batuu when she was six. Now she’s back, and Jules, the boy who never left, is unsure what to make of her. While on the run from vengeful smugglers and an angry pirate, the two friends will come to terms with who they are, and what they mean to each other.

The cover for Star Wars: Myths and Fables

The cover for Star Wars: Myths and Fables

Star Wars: Myths & Fables (Disney Lucasfilm Press)

Written by George Mann

Illustrations by Grant Griffin

Available: August 6, 2019

In this middle grade novel, hear the thrilling space tales, fables, and myths that are told in a galaxy far, far away. The book features two stories that take place on the remote Outer Rim world of Batuu, plus many other untold tales from the edge of the galaxy, lushly illustrated in a style that pays homage to real-world children’s classics.

Read an exclusive excerpt from the tale “The Knight & the Dragon” below:

A Tusken raider is seen in an illustration featured in Star Wars Myths and Fables.

A Tusken raider is seen in an illustration featured in Star Wars Myths and Fables.

There was once a tribe of nomadic people on the distant, dusty planet of Tatooine who, for many months, had been terrorized by a fearsome dragon.

These were a simple people, with simple needs, who had for generations eked out an uncomplicated existence on the harsh desert sands, trading with the other tribes for water and sustenance, salvaging the wreckage left behind by those careless few who shared their world—those others whose lives unfolded in the noisy cities and spaceports, who tried ineffectively to hold back the sand rather than embrace its gifts.

The desert folk had little cause to visit those teeming cities, however, and although they had once roamed the rolling dunes in great caravans, they had found a place to settle. They were at one with the land and knew that the desert itself would provide them with everything they might need.

So it was that these Sand People came to establish a village of their own, a place they might call home.

For many months the village flourished, and food and water proved bountiful as the desert offered up its gifts. The villagers, once so used to their endless migration across the sands, grew complacent and comfortable. Yet in their ignorance, they knew not that they had awoken the wrath of a great dragon, Krayt, that made its nest amongst the nearby dunes and called that domain its own.

Krayt was sly and knew that the people of the sand were in no way its equal in battle or cunning, so it devised a plan to rid itself of them. Just as the desert had provided for the villagers, it would provide, too, for the dragon. The people of the sand were numerous, and the dragon ever hungry; if it rationed them carefully, the villagers would sustain it for many months to come. Soon enough, it would reclaim its domain from those interlopers—once they were all inside its belly—but dragons are long-lived and lazy, and Krayt saw no need to hurry.

Thus, it chose to begin with the villager’s plump livestock, which they held in large corrals on the outskirts of the village. Only then, when the entire herd had been consumed, would the dragon enjoy the taste of that which it so craved: people.

So began a campaign of nightly terror as the dragon—so large that the beat of its wings alone was enough to stir the sand into great storms that ravaged the villagers’ tents—descended upon the village to snatch at the mewling beasts in their pens before hurrying away, back to its sandy lair, to feast. The villagers cowered at the mere sight of such a terrible beast, and in their fear, they made no move to try to prevent the dragon’s attacks.

On the fifth day, however, the villagers were growing desperate, for they knew that if the dragon continued, soon there would be no livestock left in the pens to feed their children. That night, ten of the village’s most trusted warriors took up their arms and went to stand guard over the pens, in the belief that, together, they might prove strong enough to scare the beast into fleeing, or even to slay it.

As it had each night before, the dragon came with the setting suns—a vast and horrifying silhouette, stark against the reddening sky. On huge wings it soared, sweeping low over the heads of the villagers, wheeling above them as they raised their weapons and took aim. Yet their weapons were ineffective and did not so much as scratch the beast. Far from dissuaded, it brushed the villagers aside with a flick of its wing and once more sailed away into the night with a squealing animal for its supper.

In such a way it continued for many days, until the villagers’ livestock had all been consumed, and the Sand People themselves lived in fear of what the dragon Krayt might do when it returned to discover the pens empty.

Krayt, though, had planned for such an eventuality and had secretly willed that day to come, because to a dragon, there is no sweeter meal than a helpless villager.

That night the dragon returned to the village to find the livestock pens had been abandoned. With a cackle of malicious glee, it turned to the village and beat its wings until the tents were swept away in a blizzard of sand and the people cowering beneath were revealed. For a moment the dragon seemed to linger, and then, licking its lips, it selected a young boy, whom it plucked from his mother’s arms and carried away into the night.

The boy was not the last of his peers to be lost in such a fashion, for Krayt soon developed quite a taste for children. The villagers took to hiding their young in pits beneath the shifting sands, but the dragon was wise and had seen such tricks before. It dug up the children like wriggling worms, one to feast upon each night.

The villagers could stand for this no longer and elected a warrior from amongst their number, whom they armed with their most precious weapons, adorned with their strongest armor, and sent out into the desert to stir the dragon from its nest. This warrior carried vengeance in her heart, for she knew the dragon must pay for the lives it had stolen, and she boldly claimed that she would soon return with the beast’s head as a trophy of her victory. The villagers cheered as she strode off toward the horizon, and in their hearts, for the first time in months, they carried hope for the future….

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