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DarthSpoiler
No, I am your spoiler warning!
Obi-Wan never told you what happened in the Jedi Apprentice series, but this article does. Before you read it, search your feelings: you know you'll be spoiled if you do.
It was said that some Jedi Masters could see all the way to the end of a mission just by taking a few short steps on a new world.
— This page aims to be your a few short steps.[MOTC 1]

The Jedi Apprentice series was published between 1999 and 2002 and written by Jude Watson except for The Rising Force, which was written by Dave Wolverton. Its 20 installments add up to almost 508,000 words. Yes, that's half a million.

At Jedi Apprentice, you can find links to exhaustive summaries which cut each book down to approximately a fifth of its actual length, but that's still a lot! So this page is more concise (the first 153,000 words of Jedi Apprentice boiled down to only 6,600 words!). It just has a timeline; for other things like profiles of the planets, cast lists and frequently asked questions, go to the main page. Flashbacks to years before Obi-Wan's apprenticeship are placed approximately where they occur in the book rather than in chronological order. These summaries do cut out entire plotlines and simplify events; don't use them for the details!

These summaries also don't really cover Qui-Gon's relationship with Obi-Wan. If you want to know more about that, you can go here.

Content Warning/Trigger Warning: The book series (and this summary) contains murder, violence towards children by adults, depression-related suicidal ideation (The Uncertain Path) and suicide of the "fuck you, you'll never take me alive, coppers!" kind (The Day of Reckoning).

This page, like the main page, is incomplete, and only has summaries through the Melida/Daan arc.

OOU overview[]

All dates in this section come from The Essential Reader's Companion.[1] Click the book name to be taken to the part of the timeline where the main action of the book begins. The square brackets after each book's title identify which mission/story arc occurs.

44 BBY (Obi-Wan age 12)
The Rising Force [En route to Bandomeer]
The Dark Rival [Bandomeer]
44 BBY (Obi-Wan age 13)
The Hidden Past [Phindar]
The Mark of the Crown [Gala]
The Defenders of the Dead [Melida/Daan]
The Uncertain Path [Melida/Daan, Coruscant Temple Crisis]
The Captive Temple [Coruscant Temple Crisis]
The Day of Reckoning [Telos]
The Fight For Truth [Kegan]
The Shattered Peace [Rutan and Senali]
43 BBY (Obi-Wan age 14)
The Deadly Hunter [Jenna Zan Arbor]
The Evil Experiment [Jenna Zan Arbor]
The Dangerous Rescue [Jenna Zan Arbor]
41 BBY (Obi-Wan age 16)
The Ties That Bind [New Apsolon]
The Death of Hope [New Apsolon]
The Call to Vengeance [New Apsolon]
The Only Witness [Frego]
The Threat Within [Vorzyd IV]

45 BBY (Obi-Wan age 11)[]

  • Obi-Wan accidentally trips Bruck Chun. Bruck gives him a new nickname: "Oafy-Wan".[TRF 1]

44 BBY (Obi-Wan age 12)[]

The Rising Force[]

Full summary

  • Four weeks before his birthday, Obi-Wan is goaded into fighting with Bruck, and receives orders to be sent to Bandomeer early as punishment for the fight,[TRF 2] despite Yoda knowing Bruck framed him by claiming that Obi-Wan had attacked without provocation and injured him.[TRF 3]
  • Yoda allows him to compete in the initiate exhibition, and Obi-Wan hopes to be chosen by Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn. He wins his duel against Bruck with aggressive moves, and Qui-Gon rejects him, saying he's too dangerous.[TRF 4]
  • Obi-Wan has a disastrous time on his transport to Bandomeer, getting severely beaten up by a Hutt as part of a conflict between two mining companies: the Arcona Mineral Harvest Corporation (AMHC)[Note 1] and Offworld Corporation.[TRF 7] He also makes a friend, an Arconan named Si Treemba.[TRF 8] The ship is then attacked by pirates. He flies a ship for the first time outside of simulations while defeating the pirates, using the ship's weaponry to fire on the pirates' ships. He kills for the first time, blowing up a pirate ship and venting a compartment full of pirates. This is all the same day he left Coruscant.[TRF 13]
  • With the ship falling apart around him as a result of the fight with the pirates, Obi-Wan does an emergency landing on a mysterious ocean planet.[TRF 13] His chance of finally getting some sleep is scuppered by Offworld's representative Jemba the Hutt stealing all the dactyl on the ship, which the many Arconan passengers need to survive.[TRF 14]
  • The rising tide forces everyone to evacuate the ship.[TRF 18] Unfortunately, the planet's native wildlife, draigons, are hostile to outsiders and attack everyone. A bunch of Hutts and Whipids die, the dactyl is retrieved, and the day is saved.[TRF 23] During the fight with the draigons, Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon have a very strong mental bond, allowing them to communicate across distances. Qui-Gon chooses to ignore the fact that they have a bond,[TRF 19] because he has trauma about his last Padawan, and doesn't want another one.[TRF 24]
  • The ship gets repaired by the crew and three days after leaving Coruscant, they successively arrive on Bandomeer, where Qui-Gon receives an ominous note from his former padawan, Xanatos, about meeting him again.[TRF 24]

The Dark Rival[]

Full summaryPlanet profileCastFAQ section

  • Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan discover that there's been recent changes on Bandomeer that weaken Offworld's grip on the world, namely the creation of the Arcona Mineral Harvest Corporation that works with the government to rejuvenate the planet, which is mostly a polluted wasteland of mines.[TDR 2] Instead of getting to help with the negotiations between Offworld and AMHC, Obi-Wan is sent to the AgriCorps, which he hates.[TDR 3]
  • Obi-Wan discovers Offworld explosives and a strange box with a broken circle stored on AgriCorps land, which is illegal, but Qui-Gon tells him not to do anything about it.[TDR 6] Qui-Gon nevertheless goes to investigate Offworld and becomes convinced that Xanatos is planning something evil.[TDR 9]
  • While staking out the Offworld storage unit to learn more about the illegal explosives and weird box, Obi-Wan meets Xanatos, who tells Obi-Wan he's Qui-Gon's former Padawan. Obi-Wan then gets taken out by some Offworld guards.[TDR 8] When Yoda convinces Qui-Gon that keeping Obi-Wan in the dark is a bad idea, Qui-Gon discovers that Obi-Wan has gone missing.[TDR 10]
  • Obi-Wan is enslaved in a deepsea mine for approximately three days and three nights (see here for why we don't exactly know). While down there, he has an electro-collar that will explode if he leaves the platform, but his Force use is not restricted. He's too weak to disable his collar, though, because of his injuries from the Offworld guards and exhaustion of the mining work. He befriends a Phindian named Guerra, and doubts Qui-Gon will rescue him.[TDR 11]
  • Qui-Gon confronts Xanatos, who reveals he has kept his saber and also has Obi-Wan's. He uses the Dark side during the fight. Qui-Gon manages to get Obi-Wan's saber off him, and then flees the battle with the resolution that Obi-Wan is more important than his past with Xanatos.[TDR 12]
  • Obi-Wan discovers that there's another one of those strange boxes with the broken circle on it in the weapons storage of the deepsea mining platform, and sneaks in to investigate it. He's caught,[TDR 13] and the next day (which happens to be his birthday), the guards throw him off the platform in punishment.[TDR 14]

44 BBY (Obi-Wan age 13)[]

Full summary

  • On the fourth morning of Obi-Wan's time in the mines, Qui-Gon discovers that Obi-Wan must be on the deepsea mining platform, and races towards it only to see that Obi-Wan is being pushed off the edge to his death. As he watches, Obi-Wan is saved by Guerra rigging up a sling that catches him. Qui-Gon gets to the level where Obi-Wan and Guerra are, and manages to disable Obi-Wan's collar before the guards arrive, but not Guerra's.[TDR 14]
  • Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon escape back to the mainland, and on the way, Qui-Gon tells him about his history with Xanatos. Xanatos used to be his padawan, but in 53 BBY, they went on a mission which would be one of his trials for knighthood. The mission was on Xanatos's home planet, which was ruled by his father, Crion. His father fomented a civil war and convinced Xanatos to betray Qui-Gon and lead his father's army in killing those opposed to Crion's rule. During the fighting, Qui-Gon killed Crion in defence of another Padawan who was also on the mission. Xanatos became enraged and fought Qui-Gon. Qui-Gon defeated him, but was unable to strike the killing blow, and Xanatos escaped. Xanatos's enslavement of Obi-Wan was a way to get back at Qui-Gon for perceived wrongs.[TDR 15]
  • Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon successfully disable the electro-collars of all the enslaved miners, but are unable to physically remove Obi-Wan's. They are then pursued by Xanatos on a speeder. He chases them to the Home Planet Mine, where they had hoped to get allies with weapons, but nobody is above-ground. Instead, they flee into the mine itself, where Xanatos then chases them down into the lowest level of the mine and traps them down there, boasting that he's set the mine to blow, while he escapes.[TDR 16]
  • Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon can't work out how to get past the panel that has trapped them inside, so Obi-Wan decides to blow his collar, killing himself but allowing Qui-Gon to escape and save everyone else by evacuating the mine. Qui-Gon thankfully realises how to open the panel before Obi-Wan goes through with it. They hit the evacuation alarm, but before they leave, Qui-Gon sees one of the little boxes with the broken circle on it. He looks inside to find a bomb, and speculates that all of the boxes Obi-Wan has seen will explode at the same time, killing countless people all across the planet. With Obi-Wan's help, Qui-Gon disables the bomb and the day is saved.[TDR 18]
  • After wrapping up a few other plot threads by reporting back to the governor, Qui-Gon takes Obi-Wan as his Padawan, specifically citing Obi-Wan's willingness to kill himself as the reason he's decided Obi-Wan is worthy.[TDR 19] It's been four weeks since Obi-Wan was given orders to go to Bandomeer.[THP 1]

The Hidden Past[]

Full summaryCast

  • Now that he's no longer in mortal danger, Obi-Wan has remembered it's his birthday. What's more, thirteenth birthdays are special for Jedi — they're supposed to get a fancy gift from their master. A gift that the master has thought hard about and possibly gone to great lengths to acquire.[THP 1]
  • Qui-Gon does know it's Obi-Wan's birthday, but given he only took Obi-Wan as a Padawan a few hours ago, he has not had the opportunity to find a fancy gift. Instead, he gives Obi-Wan a river stone that was in his pocket. Obi-Wan is... not that excited about it. It's a cool-looking rock (shiny black with red veins running through it), but it's still a rock.[THP 1]
  • They leave Bandomeer, but their ship has to make an emergency landing on Phindar instead of going straight to their next destination, Gala, where they're supposed to be helping the transition from monarchy to democracy.[THP 2] Phindar is not happy to have them, and they're greeted with assassin droids firing at them. Once they've dealt with that, they discover the pilot has disappeared, and begin to suspect that landing on Phindar was deliberate, because the vibes here are rancid.[THP 3]
  • The city is full of abject poverty. All of the shops are closed due to lack of supplies, and there are assassin droids monitoring the population. Everyone is terrified except for some people who are oddly blank.[THP 4]
  • Their pilot reappears and leads them to a café, where Obi-Wan's friend Guerra is hiding! The pilot is his brother, Paxxi Derida, and it turns out they're both designated shoot on sight for going against the criminal organisation that controls Phindar, the Syndicat, which is at fault for all the poverty and shortages.[THP 5] The Syndicat is run by Baftu and his assistant Terra.[THP 6]
  • The blank people have been mindwiped by the Syndicat; it makes them forget their entire life and family. They're called "the renewed", and sometimes the Syndicat sends them offworld for extra suffering.[THP 6]
  • The Derida brothers ask for help, which Qui-Gon helpfully summarises as: "You want two Jedi to help two common thieves steal a treasure from a bunch of gangsters?" They want to get to the Syndicat treasury, which contains the wealth of the Syndicat, and also the warehouses that have all the supplies they've manufactured shortages of.[THP 6]
  • It turns out that Prince Beju of Gala is working with the Syndicat, and has manufactured a bacta shortage on Gala. He's going to get bacta from the Syndicat to convince the Galacians that the Syndicat is benevolent, and then help the Syndicat take over the planet.[THP 7]
  • Qui-Gon agrees to help two common thieves steal from a bunch of gangsters, because this is now actually relevant to their real mission on Gala.[THP 7]
  • That night, they break into Syndicat HQ. The Derida brothers have someone on the inside: Duenna, who helps them avoid the guards and directs them to the storage area. Unfortunately, when they open it, the storage area is empty! They're then attacked by guards and droids, and deadly disruptor beams come out of the walls. Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan work together to defeat them, and finally, they destroy a speeder which crashes into a wall and activates a secret room.[THP 8]
  • The Derida brothers thank them for finding the secret room, which contains a secondary vault. Unfortunately, they can't get into the vault until they find their anti-registry device, which can override any security system. The Syndicat stole it, so it must be... somewhere.[THP 9]
  • They steal the guards' uniforms and as they're on their way out, Duenna says the treasury contents have been moved to a warehouse near the spaceport. On the way home, the brothers explain that Duenna is actually their mother, and she works for the Syndicat because Terra is their sister, who was mindwiped as a child. Duenna hoped that by working for the Syndicat, she could still give love to Terra and perhaps remind her of who she truly was, but it hasn't worked.[THP 10] Guerra says that some people are able to resist the mindwipe by focusing on a single memory or feeling, but that it's too late for Terra.[THP 11]
  • When they break into the warehouse near the spaceport the next day, they find the anti-register device and Guerra smuggles it out, but Obi-Wan is caught.[THP 11] He's taken to Baftu for judgement, and while he's waiting, he hears Baftu and Terra disagreeing about the plan with Beju. Terra thinks they've manufactured too many shortages and their power over Phindar is weakening due to increased rebel activity. Expanding to another planet risks losing control of Phindar completely. She also doesn't trust Beju.[THP 12]
  • Obi-Wan is sentenced to renewal by Terra, as Baftu leaves without seeing him. He's terrified, but as he sits in his cell awaiting his mindwipe, he feels something warm in his pocket. It's the stone that Qui-Gon gave him, and Obi-Wan can feel it hum! He concludes that it must be Force-sensitive. He remembers that Guerra said some people can resist the mindwipe, and he decides he can try resisting it by focusing on the Force.[THP 13]
  • Qui-Gon wants to rescue Obi-Wan as soon as he discovers he's been caught, but the brothers say it's impossible because the HQ is locked down for the night. When they speak to Duenna in the morning, she says Obi-Wan has already been mindwiped and sent off-planet, and Qui-Gon is devastated about it.[THP 14]
  • Meanwhile, Obi-Wan resisted the mindwipe and has been sent to Gala. He wanders around and ends up near a spaceport, which Prince Beju is going to be leaving from in just a few minutes. He looks just enough like Beju that he manages to trick the guards long enough for him to board the ship and get out of atmo[THP 15] before he defeats the guards and pulls a knife on Beju (who had boarded before him, unbeknownst to the guards), and locks him in the cargo hold.[THP 16]
  • When he arrives on Phindar, he reaches out to Qui-Gon in the Force to let him know he withstood the mindwipe. Qui-Gon, the brothers and other rebels are in position to break into the supply warehouses. Qui-Gon and co. break into the treasury warehouse first, steal everything and store it in a closet to take out later.[THP 17]
  • Obi-Wan, pretending to be Beju, orders Baftu to load the bacta immediately, instead of at night to stop the Phindians from seeing it.[THP 16] Unfortunately, Terra turns up and recognises Obi-Wan. Obi-Wan plays it as if he's insulted by Terra's accusation, and Baftu believes him. Baftu takes him to the treasury to prove that they have the wealth they claim to have, but when they get there, it's empty! Baftu assumes Terra has stolen it, and shoots her. Once Baftu leaves, Guerra runs to her side and holds her as she dies, and she reveals she has finally remembered Guerra is her brother.[THP 18]
  • Meanwhile, Paxxi opened the supply warehouses, creating chaos. Rebels fight the guards, and Qui-Gon gives Obi-Wan his lightsaber so he's able to throw off his disguise and join the fight. Guerra manages to arrest Baftu in the name of the people, and while our heroes are focused on that, Beju's ship takes off. Qui-Gon tells Obi-Wan to let him go.[THP 19]
  • Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan stay just long enough to see the Phindians set up a provisionary government. Obi-Wan tells Qui-Gon that the river stone helped because it was Force-sensitive, and Qui-Gon says he just thought it was a pretty rock.[THP 20]

The Mark of the Crown[]

Full summaryPlanet profileCast

  • Gala is currently ruled by a monarchy. There are three tribes: the city people, the sea people and the hill people. The sea people are basically irrelevant, but the city people hate the hill people. The hill people are exiles who don't recognise the authority of the palace.[MOTC 2]
  • Our heroes are here to oversee the transition from an absolute monarchy to democracy, because there's rank corruption in the palace and the people are unhappy. In order to stave off a full on revolt, the queen is stepping down and holding elections.[THP 2]
  • The royal family roll call: Queen Veda (called the election, dying of a mysterious wasting disease), King Cana (corrupt, recently deceased, and his death is the catalyst for Veda calling the election),[MOTC 2] Prince Beju (unhappy about the election because he wants to be king in the future, very corrupt, caused a bacta shortage on Gala).[MOTC 1]
  • Election candidates: Prince Beju (he/him, will keep the monarchy if elected), Deca Braun (he/him, populist), Wila Prami (she/her, more realistic in her goals and projected to lose)[MOTC 2]
  • Unfortunately, there's also a wildcard. Before King Cana married Veda, he fell in love with a hill person and got her pregnant. The Council of Ministers forced him to leave her and go through with the arranged marriage to Veda instead. This means that Cana's firstborn is actually a hill person called Elan; she bears the Mark of the Crown, a mysterious mark that only the Council can identify, and is the true heir to the throne of Gala.[MOTC 2]
  • No one can contact her, because the hill people are reclusive and don't talk to anyone. Veda wants the Jedi to contact her, but the Council of Ministers doesn't want the Jedi to leave the palace without accompaniment, so they're going to have to be sneaky about it.[MOTC 2] They're assigned a guide: Jono Dunn, a boy about the same age as Obi-Wan.[MOTC 3]
  • Beju arrives and tries to spin what the Jedi did on Phindar as wrong, but it's not very convincing because it's hard to claim the people who overthrew a violent evil regime are bad. The Queen decrees that they're staying, despite Beju's protests.[MOTC 3]
  • When they're alone, Qui-Gon tells Obi-Wan that he's going to sneak off to the hill country to meet with Elan, which Obi-Wan says isn't in their mission mandate. Qui-Gon says you can bend mission mandates if necessary.[MOTC 4]
  • Obi-Wan covers for Qui-Gon by telling anyone who wants to meet with him that Qui-Gon has just gone somewhere else on the grounds, and no one bothers to call his bluff. He makes fast friends with Jono, who tells him about how proud he is to serve in the palace and how much he wants Deca Brun to win the election.[MOTC 5]
  • Meanwhile, Qui-Gon finds the hill people, and their leader is the very person he's trying to find: Elan.[MOTC 7] She doesn't want to talk to him, because she doesn't recognise the Queen's authority and doesn't want to hear what the Queen has to say. She tells Qui-Gon to go away, but a big storm is coming, so she allows him to stay until the storm passes.[MOTC 8]
  • When Qui-Gon says she's the true heir to the crown, Elan says that's bullshit, because she knows her parents. They never left the hills, so the Queen's claims are impossible. When Qui-Gon says that the hill people should participate in the election because their endorsement could swing the election, Elan refuses. She doesn't like any of the candidates, and if they went into the city to vote, they'd probably be arrested or killed.[MOTC 8]
  • Back in the city, Obi-Wan talks to the Queen about her illness, and she says that it had got better when she retired to the countryside for a little while, where she didn't have any of the Ministers or palace servants, but as soon as she got back she fell ill again. She also says it's worse at night.[MOTC 5]
  • Obi-Wan thinks this sounds suspiciously like poison, not a wasting disease. He takes samples from her nightly tea, and the next day, he gets away from Jono and finds a substance analyser. There's nothing wrong with the cake, but there is something weird about the tea. The scientist with the analyser needs more time to work out exactly what it is, though. Obi-Wan has to get back to Jono before Jono gets suspicious.[MOTC 6]
  • Qui-Gon calls Obi-Wan to tell him that he'd failed to convince Elan to come to the city. Obi-Wan shares his poison theory, and Qui-Gon tells him to be careful. It's probably someone in the palace: who has the most to gain from the Queen's death?[MOTC 9]
  • Obi-Wan goes to the Queen's room and smashes her cup of tea, telling her he thinks she's being poisoned. Beju and a Minister who is on his side (named Giba) turn up and say that's impossible, and the Jedi have done nothing but lie since they got here. They've finally realised that no one's seen Qui-Gon in ages, and he's not even in the palace.[MOTC 10]
  • When the Queen explains that Qui-Gon has gone to get Elan of the hill people, who is the true heir to the crown and Beju's half sister, Beju refuses to believe it. When the Queen asks the Minister to confirm it, because he was there when it happened, the Minister says the Queen is lying. Beju goes to call the guards, and the Queen distracts them long enough for Obi-Wan to get away.[MOTC 10]
  • Jono arrives and says he knows a safe place for Obi-Wan to hide: Deca Braun's election HQ. When they get there, Obi-Wan sees a file on a desk that has the name "Offworld". There are plans for a "Galacian Mining Corp" which will destroy Gala through mining, and is clearly a front for Offworld.[MOTC 11]
  • When Obi-Wan tries tell Jono that they need to leave and alert Qui-Gon, Obi-Wan is attacked by guards and locked in an industrial freezer.[MOTC 11]
  • Meanwhile in the mountains, royal guards with tanks attack the hill people's camp. The hill people use their knowledge of the area to send all the tanks into a ravine full of snow.[MOTC 12] One of the soldiers they capture says that it was Giba who ordered the attack, not the Queen. Qui-Gon finally convinces Elan to come to the city with him.[MOTC 13]
  • In the city, Jono breaks Obi-Wan out of the freezer and says that the other Council members have formed an alliance against Giba, and they want Jono to bring Obi-Wan to them to discuss what to do. Obi-Wan stops by the substance analyser first, and discovers the poison is a herb that grows in the sea plains. He buys the antidote, and then Jono takes them to a part of the palace he's never been to. Obi-Wan tries to work out who has access to the Queen and the gardens, which is the only place the herb grows in the city, and realises... it's Jono. Jono serves her meals, has access to the garden, and he'd said before that his family lives near the sea.[MOTC 14]
  • He escapes from Jono, and ends up in a room with Beju instead. Beju tries to kill him, but Obi-Wan disarms him, and another Minister appears — this time, it's one loyal to the Queen, named Viso. He says that he can prove the Queen is telling the truth, and leads Obi-Wan and Beju to a chamber that has an intricate design on the floor. When Beju stands on the middle square, beams of light wash over him and cast shadows on the floor and walls, but not on Beju. This proves that he does not have the Mark of the Crown, and isn't the true heir.[MOTC 15]
  • The hill people arrive in the city, with Elan and Qui-Gon at the head of the group. Obi-Wan tells Qui-Gon that Beju put out an order to arrest Giba and sent the antidote to the Queen.[MOTC 16] When they arrive in the Queen's reception area, though, Giba is there! The Queen tells the guards to arrest him, and in response, Giba pulls out Obi-Wan's lightsaber and tries to attack Qui-Gon. Qui-Gon disarms him immediately.[MOTC 17]
  • The only way he could have got Obi-Wan's lightsaber is if he's in league with Deca Brun, since it was confiscated when Obi-Wan was attacked at Brun's HQ. It turns out that Giba was funding Brun's campaign in return for a position in the new government, and he's also responsible for the evil Offworld plans. The guards arrest him for real.[MOTC 17]
  • Beju drops out of the race, and with the support of Beju and the hill people, Wila Prammi wins the election in a landslide. Beju, Elan, Obi-Wan and Viso go to the the chamber with the fancy floor and Elan stands in the middle. The shadow of a crown forms on her chest, proving she has the Mark of the Crown.[MOTC 18]

The Defenders of the Dead[]

Full summaryPlanet summaryFAQ sectionCast

  • Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon go straight from Gala to a planet called Melida/Daan. They're there to rescue another Jedi called Tahl, who has been captured and tortured by the Melida, one side of the civil war she was supposed to help negotiate a peace for. The two ethnic groups, the Melida and the Daan, have been at war for so many generations that nobody knows how it started.[DOTD 1]
  • One of the Melida, Wehutti, has agreed with Yoda that he can smuggle Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon into the capital city, Zehava, to rescue Tahl. Yes, he's a member of the same group that captured her. No, it's not clear why Yoda trusted him.[DOTD 1]
  • Wehutti claims that he's convinced the Melida council to release Tahl, and gets Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon into the city.[DOTD 5] He takes them to meet the Melida council... which promptly captures them,[DOTD 5] intending to use them as a bargaining chip with the Senate to get the Melida recognised as the rightful government.[DOTD 7] Yoda is a genius.
  • Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon escape, and just as they're wondering how to get out of the Melida compound, a sewer grate opens and a small hand waves them over. The sewers can't be worse than getting imprisoned and tortured.[DOTD 6]
  • As they walk through the sewers, their rescuer, Cerasi, reveals that she's a member of the Young, a third faction in the war that's formed out of the children of the Melida and the Daan. They want the fighting to end, and the Melida and the Daan to live in peace. They refer to the Melida and the Daan as "the Elders".[DOTD 7]
  • They reach the area of the tunnels that the Young live in, and meet their leader, Nield.[DOTD 7] He says that the Young will help retrieve Tahl, if the Jedi help the Young in turn. Obi-Wan is already totally convinced that the Young's cause is just, but Qui-Gon is uneasy, and doesn't want to takes sides in the conflict.[DOTD 8]
  • The next morning, Obi-Wan, Cerasi and Nield use fake weapons and toys that make the sounds of blasters and missiles to make the Daan think they're under attack. Other Young do the same to the Melida.[DOTD 10]
  • Under the cover of the chaos, Cerasi helps them rescue Tahl. Tahl is clearly terribly ill and has been blinded during her torture. They get her to the tunnels while the other Young destroy the weapons stores of both sides.[DOTD 11]
  • As Qui-Gon is tending to Tahl in the main chamber, Obi-Wan, Cerasi and Nield burst in, and Nield announces that the Young have won the war. The Elders no longer have weapons stores, so they can't fight. They've sent a message to both sides that the Young were behind the attacks, and that they've stolen their weaponry. This is the first step towards peace.[DOTD 12]
  • Nield and Cerasi pull Obi-Wan up onto the tomb they're standing on, and the Young touch his tunic in gratefulness for his help. Qui-Gon thinks that it looks like Obi-Wan isn't a Jedi at all, but one of the Young.[DOTD 12]
  • Qui-Gon calls Yoda to ask if they can return to help the Young once they've brought Tahl home, but Yoda refuses. When Qui-Gon tells Obi-Wan this, Obi-Wan argues that Qui-Gon was perfectly happy to go against the mission mandate on Gala, so why is he so insistent on following it now? Qui-Gon says that he believes Yoda is right to refuse to help the Young, so they'll be leaving tomorrow.[DOTD 13]
  • Obi-Wan realises that the cause of the Young is so important to him that he's willing to disobey Qui-Gon. When Cerasi and Nield tell him that there's something he can do to help them, he agrees, despite knowing Qui-Gon would forbid it. They want Obi-Wan to use the ship they arrived in to shoot out the deflection towers that surround the city. Since the Elders didn't respond to their messages of peace, the Young have declared war on the Elders, but still don't want to kill anyone. If they take down the deflection towers, the Young who live outside of Zehava (the Scavenger Young) can march on the city and the Elders will have to surrender.[DOTD 14]
  • Cerasi, Nield and Obi-Wan sneak out before dawn the next day, and Obi-Wan flies the ship and Cerasi and Nield shoot out the towers with its laser cannons. They see children streaming in from the countryside towards Zehava.[DOTD 15]
  • Meanwhile, Qui-Gon also wakes before dawn. He's sent a message to the Melida and Daan to meet him, and when they do, he says that if they band together into a coalition government, they can defeat the Young. He thinks that this is the best way for a lasting peace, and is doing this for Obi-Wan, because he's seen how much the cause of the Young means to his Padawan.[DOTD 16]
  • Neither side is convinced, but during the meeting, the deflection towers are destroyed. Now with thousands of children marching on the city, it's clear that they can't win this on their own. Finally, they agree to peace talks as long as Qui-Gon is their emissary.[DOTD 16]
  • Cerasi and Nield refuse to accept the Elders' surrender, arguing that it must be a trick. Qui-Gon asks how they destroyed the towers, and realises it was Obi-Wan. Obi-Wan stole the ship even though he was risking getting shot down and leaving them stranded on the planet. He's furious, but Obi-Wan says that he doesn't care, because the cause of the Young is right. Qui-Gon says that what Obi-Wan needs is distance and reflection, and they're still definitely leaving. Obi-Wan reluctantly agrees.[DOTD 17]
  • Nield announces that the surrender was a trick, and the Elders have attacked. Children are getting shot above ground by starfighters that the Elders must have been hiding somewhere.[DOTD 18]
  • The only way for the Young to win is for Obi-Wan to use the Jedi starfighter to shoot down the Elders' starfighters. He doesn't want to disobey Qui-Gon, but children are being slaughtered on the street, and he can't turn his back on his friends.[DOTD 18]
  • Obi-Wan races towards the starfighter, but he's too late — Qui-Gon has already loaded Tahl on board. Obi-Wan asks if he can borrow it, but Qui-Gon refuses. Obi-Wan ignites his lightsaber, and Qui-Gon lights his in response, but Obi-Wan immediately realises he can't possibly attack Qui-Gon and they both lower their sabers at the same time.[DOTD 19]
  • Obi-Wan has a choice: to leave with Qui-Gon, or stay here and resign from the Jedi Order. He's heartbroken, but Obi-Wan knows that he has to stay. "I have found something here more important than the Jedi code. Something not only worth fighting for, but worth dying for," he says.[DOTD 19]
  • He hands over his lightsaber and Qui-Gon flies off. Obi-Wan is officially no longer a Jedi.[DOTD 19]

The Uncertain Path[]

Full summaryPlanet summaryFAQ sectionCast on Melida/DaanCast in the Temple

  • It's been at least fourteen days of above-ground open warfare between the Young and the Elders. (It may have been more; the text is unclear.) The Elders have five starfighters and use them to strafe and bomb the Young, but they refuel them all at the same time, so the Young disable the starfighters and destroy the spaceport during refueling.[TUP 1]
  • Nield announces to everyone in the city that they've just won the war, because the starfighters were the only thing stopping the Young from overwhelming the Elders with numbers.[TUP 1]
  • A little while later in the Temple, Qui-Gon talks to Yoda. No one has questioned Qui-Gon about why he left Obi-Wan on Melida/Daan, but finally, over twelve days since he returned, Yoda asks him what happened. He criticises Qui-Gon for sticking to the mission brief when he's been perfectly willing to bend it in the past. Qui-Gon responds that he doesn't care if Obi-Wan dies in the conflict because he deserves it for betraying him. Yoda tells him that the Young have won the war, and Qui-Gon brushes it off.[TUP 2]
  • The Young set up a government: Nield is governor, but he's beholden to a council of ten Young, and Cerasi is the head of the council.[TUP 3]
  • The Young find that it's difficult to agree on the priorities for rebuilding. Nield wants to destroy the Halls of Evidence first, large mausoleums where recorded messages of the dead stoke the flames of hatred for the next generations. He says that all the problems stem from the endless war, so he wants to destroy the things that helped the war continue for so long.[TUP 3]
  • The first Hall of Evidence he destroys is the one that houses his own family's relatives. "The remnants of these stones will be used to build new housing for Melida and Daan to live together in peace. Today, a new history is born!" he shouts to a rejoicing crowd of Young.[TUP 3]
  • Meanwhile, there's been thefts in the Coruscant Temple! Qui-Gon and Tahl are assigned to investigate. Tahl is now permanently blind, and has a personal navigation droid called TooJay that she hates.[TUP 4]
  • They don't have any luck investigating who had access to the stolen items, so they're reduced to interviewing everyone. Bruck Chun, notable for being Obi-Wan's bully before Bandomeer, says he Definitely Didn't Do This. They believe him.[TUP 6]
  • There's also a rumour going around that there's an intruder. Since security is on high alert, this probably means they have someone on the inside letting them in. There's also another theft, and this time, it's the healing crystals of fire! Were they under the highest security or were they in a meditation chamber that everyone could access? Jude Watson says both. Regardless, they're very important.[TUP 8]
  • Qui-Gon and Tahl go to his quarters to pick up his investigation notes, and Tahl notices that someone has been in his quarters because it smells different. Are you thinking what Qui-Gon's thinking?[TUP 8] That's right: it's time to smell everyone.[TUP 10]
  • They smell everyone, and realise that what Tahl smelt wasn't a person, it was the lake. They recruit Bant to help them search the lake because she's Mon Calamari, and they find a crate in the lake that contains most of the stolen items (but not the crystals). They put the crate back and decide to lie in wait for the thief the next time something goes missing.[TUP 10]
  • Meanwhile on Melida/Daan, things are falling apart. Nield's obsession with destroying the Halls is getting in the way of things everyone needs to survive, like food and shelter. The next big demolition he's planning is the Hall of Evidence on Glory Street, which is the one where Cerasi's family rests. She's the daughter of the leader of the Melida, Wehutti, so that's also a big problem for him.[TUP 9]
  • When Cerasi and Obi-Wan reach the scene, there's a standoff between the Elders and Nield's squad. The Elders have made a human chain around the Hall, and Nield can't use violence against them without invalidating their whole government. Cerasi and Obi-Wan publicly question Nield's obsession with the Halls and beg him to take it to the council for a vote.[TUP 9]
  • Cerasi calls a vote and it ends up split 5/5 with Obi-Wan as the deciding vote. Obi-Wan votes to stop demolition of the Halls, and Nield reacts by saying that Obi-Wan should be thrown off the council because he's not Melida or Daan. The meeting ends in a fight breaking out, and in the days afterwards, Nield won't speak to Obi-Wan or Cerasi. Obi-Wan suggests he resign to keep the peace, but Cerasi says it's already too late.[TUP 11]
  • A few days later, things escalate. Both Nield's group and the Elders are at the Glory Street Hall, and this time, both sides have weapons. Everyone in the city had been systematically disarmed, so this is Bad News. Nield and the Elders are all shouting and pointing weapons when Cerasi pops up from under the fountain in the middle of the plaza. She shouts for both sides to stop, and then immediately gets shot, though Obi-Wan can't work out where the shot came from. She dies in his arms.[TUP 13]
  • Back at the Temple, Qui-Gon lies in wait for the thief. They finally appear and guess what! It's Bruck! Qui-Gon tells Tahl so she can go off and tell Yoda, and Qui-Gon starts to follow Bruck. Unfortunately, before he can find out where Bruck is going, TooJay spooks Bruck from the treeline. When Qui-Gon asks why TooJay and Tahl were even in the trees when they were meant to be off telling Yoda, Tahl says that there had been someone else following Qui-Gon, probably whoever Bruck was going to meet.[TUP 12]
  • On Melida/Daan, things have collapsed, and both the Young and Elders are armed and patrolling the city. There's a banner at the plaza where Cerasi died saying "AVENGE CERASI CHOOSE WAR". When Obi-Wan goes to talk to Nield to discuss how this is the opposite of what Cerasi would want, Nield exiles him from the Young and tells him to get off the planet.[TUP 14]
  • Obi-Wan calls the Jedi and begs for Qui-Gon to return to the planet to help. Qui-Gon, suddenly realising that Obi-Wan is not an evil mastermind who deserves to die but simply a child in over his head, leaves immediately.[TUP 15] When he arrives on Melida/Daan, he decides they need to find out who killed Cerasi if they want to build peace. They visit Wehutti, who is devastated and clearly didn't shoot her, but also doesn't give them any other useful info.[TUP 17] When they go back to the scene of the murder, Obi-Wan remembers he'd seen a glint on the roof, even though the day was overcast — there had been a sniper.[TUP 18]
  • They go to the warehouse where they'd been storing the confiscated weapons before Cerasi's death, and there are two Young hiding there: Deila and Joli. They say that the leader of the Scavenger Young, Mawat, put snipers on the roof because he wanted a confrontation to pop off between Nield and the Elders, and he wants to seize power from Nield. He has a battle planned for today, and they're in the warehouse because they don't want to take part.[TUP 19]
  • Qui-Gon gives Obi-Wan back his lightsaber and they split up. Obi-Wan finds Nield in the Hall at Glory Street with Cerasi's memorial marker, tells him about Mawat, and Nield agrees that they can't let war break out again.[TUP 20] Meanwhile, Qui-Gon goes to Cerasi's sleeping place and finds a holographic message disc there.[TUP 21]
  • Nield and Obi-Wan discover the Scavenger Young have already started placing bombs around the Hall and end up in a battle with the Scavenger Young. Deila, Joli and Obi-Wan's only friend Roenni join with Nield and Obi-Wan to fight against the Scavenger Young and just when it's feeling hopeless, Qui-Gon turns up with a holoprojector. Cerasi recorded a message just before her death: "I made my decision after the war ended. I will no longer carry a weapon. I will fight no more in the name of peace. But today I might die for it. Do me a favor, friends. Don't build any monuments for me. Don't destroy any, either. History isn't in our favor, but that doesn't mean we should annihilate it. Don't let our dream of peace die. Work for it. Don't kill for it. We fought one war for peace. We always said that one war had to be enough."[TUP 21]
  • Everyone drops their weapons.[TUP 21] In the coming days, Qui-Gon helps form a peace agreement for shared power between the Young, the Melida and the Daan. Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon return to the Temple, but Qui-Gon says he won't take Obi-Wan back as his Padawan.[TUP 22]

Notes[]

  1. The acronym AMHC isn't used at all in the text, and every time there is an opportunity to actually shorten the name of the Arcona Mineral Harvest Corporation, it just gets called "our mining company". In contrast, Offworld Mining Corporation is consistently shortened to Offworld.

References[]

Jedi Apprentice books[]

The Rising Force (TRF)
  1. 1.0 1.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 1, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 1999 by Scholastic.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 2, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 3, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 4, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 5, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 6, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 7, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 8, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 9, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 10, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 11, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 12, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 13, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 14, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 15, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 16, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 17, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 18, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 19, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  20. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 20, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  21. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 21, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  22. Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 22, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  23. 23.0 23.1 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 23, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 Legends · The Rising Force, Chapter 24, by Dave Wolverton in the series Jedi Apprentice.
The Dark Rival (TDR)
  1. Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 1, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 1999 by Scholastic.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 2, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 3, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 4, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 5, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 6, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 7, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 8, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 9, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 10, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 11, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 12, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 13, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 14, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 15, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 16, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 17, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 18, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Legends · The Dark Rival, Chapter 19, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
The Hidden Past (THP)
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 1, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 1999 by Scholastic.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 2, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 3, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 4, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 5, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 6, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 7, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 8, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 9, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 10, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 11, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 12, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 13, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 14, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 15, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 16, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 17, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 18, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 19, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Legends · The Hidden Past, Chapter 20, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
The Mark of the Crown (MOTC)
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 1, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 1999 by Scholastic.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 2, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 3, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 4, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 5, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 6, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 7, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 8, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 9, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 10, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 11, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 12, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 13, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 14, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 15, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 16, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 17, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Legends · The Mark of the Crown, Chapter 18, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
The Defenders of the Dead (DOTD)
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 1, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 1999 by Scholastic.
  2. Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 2, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 3, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 4, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 5, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 6, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 7, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 8, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 9, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 10, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 11, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 12, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 13, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 14, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 15, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 16, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 17, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 18, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Legends · The Defenders of the Dead, Chapter 19, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
The Uncertain Path (TUP)
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 1, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice. Published 2000 by Scholastic.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 2, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 3, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 4, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  5. Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 5, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 6, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  7. Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 7, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 8, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 9, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 10, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 11, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 12, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 13, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 14, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 15, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  16. Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 16, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 17, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 18, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 19, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 20, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 21, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.
  22. 22.0 22.1 Legends · The Uncertain Path, Chapter 22, by Jude Watson in the series Jedi Apprentice.

All other references[]

  1. Legends · The Essential Reader's Companion, "The Height of the Republic", by Pablo Hidalgo.
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