Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The Star Wars Trilogy



What perfect timing regarding recent developments that have happened.  If you have perused Barnes & Noble only casually in the last three to four years, you'll notice tables that have been ever-burgeoning with collection of classics, old and modern, that are bound handsomely in stylish leather with pages gilded in gold or silver leaf.  These are part of their Leatherbound Classics Editions.  Their website touts well over 50 titles ranging from Shakespeare and Jane Austin to Douglas Adams and Neil Gaiman.  For the book lover, these books are irresistible.  If I had room and the money, I would buy them all just to have them on my shelf.

Most recently, I went to graze the familiar table and, to my surprise, found an iconic face staring right back at me.  In the quintessential font, shining brilliantly, was "The Star Wars Trilogy."  I literally gasped as I lifted the tome to inspect it.  There they were, all three books, names I don't even need to say because you should know them already.  I held the book while a blocky, monotone voice played in my head on repeat, "MUST. OWN.  BOOK."

Not only is this the most unique addition to their collection but it is also the coolest culturally speaking. Most people don't know about the Star Wars novelizations and if it's any Star Wars books people are aware of it's the many novels that range from zipped up fan fiction to quasi-canonical additions to the lore.  Originally published a few months before A New Hope arrived in theaters, the books served to introduce people to the characters that would soon become cultural icons that still loom large today. They were credited toward George Lucas but it was later revealed to be ghostwritten by Alan Dean Foster, the man who would be the first to expand the Star Wars universe in print with Splinter of the Mind's Eye.

The rest is, as you say, history.  History that many of us are well aware of.  This handsome volume would look great in the collection of your favorite Star Wars nerd or someone looking to liven up their shelf that is sagging from the weight of dark and dusty classics.  Go to your local, brick and mortar B&N or find it online here.

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