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Help picking out fun star wars novels for my 8 year old son. Options
darthbinks1
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 8:31:39 AM
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Hi. What star wars novel would you recommend for my 8 year old son to read? He just finished A New hope and I know there are a lot of option in the EU, but I have never sad any of them so I was looking for a best of the best list from all of you out there. I was going to get him the Darth Plageuis book (I've heard good things), but wasn't sure if any of the EU books had more adult content in them then the movies do.
harryg
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 8:37:25 AM
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Well to start I would have him read or watch empire and Jedi just so he knows what's going on. THEN phantom menace, attack of the clones, revenge of the Sith. Then I reccomend the thrawn series.
Sithborg
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 9:08:53 AM
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I would recommend the Young Jedi Knight series. After that, I think the Heir to the Empire Trilogy and the Jedi Academy Trilogy are good places to start with full novels.

Darth Plaguis is a good book, but a little bit dark for the age. Along with being very, very continuity heavy.
darthbinks1
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 9:20:06 AM
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harryg wrote:
Well to start I would have him read or watch empire and Jedi just so he knows what's going on. THEN phantom menace, attack of the clones, revenge of the Sith. Then I reccomend the thrawn series.


He has seen all the movies.
EmporerDragon
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 9:53:06 AM
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The novelizations do go into a bit more detail and have scenes not in the movies. They'll also be easier to follow for him since he already knows the overall plot. I do consider the Revenge of the Sith novelization to be one of the better novelizations out there (my personal second favorite, losing only to Star Trek V: The Final Frontier).

For other suggestions, I'd go with the Tales books as they're collections of short stories rather than full-fledged novels and would be easier to digest.

And for reading in general, for a kid his age, I highly recommend a book series known as the Great Illustrated Classics. Basically, the books take the big classics like Oliver Twist, Huckleberry Finn, War of the Worlds, Hunchback of Notre Dame, etc., etc. and condense it down to a 200-some page book at the 3rd/4th-grade reading level with every other page being an illustration of what's happening. I credit those books as what ignited my interest in reading back when I was a kid. For more full-fledged novels, I'd suggest the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and Discworld books, as they are rather funny and thus fun to read.
Gungan Batman Clone
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 10:39:21 AM
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You could do the young jedi knights or the junior jedi knights. I know those are for younger readers, although I personally never read any of those and I know they require knowledge of other books. I thought the Jedi Apprentice, Jedi Quest, and Last of the Jedi were good.
pegolego
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 11:32:24 AM
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The Last of the Jedi (and other Jude Watson books) were quite thrilling for myself when I was younger LOL
Makosharkz
Posted: Saturday, May 3, 2014 8:12:08 PM
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I would suggest comic books as an easier start point than novels for an 8 year old. There are some nice options found in the collected Omnibus editions.

http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Omnibus

The link has a list of all the current Omnibus collections that may be obtained. Amazon has very nice prices for all this as well.
trappedslider
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 12:43:48 PM
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I'd need to know what the kid's reading level is...because at that age I was reading and understanding Stephen King's The Stand.
darthbinks1
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 3:02:08 PM
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He just finished reading and liked the Hobbit.
Deathwielded
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 3:44:57 PM
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Gungan Batman Clone wrote:
You could do the young jedi knights or the junior jedi knights. I know those are for younger readers, although I personally never read any of those and I know they require knowledge of other books. I thought the Jedi Apprentice, Jedi Quest, and Last of the Jedi were good.


Jude Watson is a great Author. I highly recommend Jedi Apprentice series as they were the star wars books I read when I was 8.
Deathwielded
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 3:45:45 PM
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darthbinks1 wrote:
He just finished reading and liked the Hobbit.

A good young reader then. ThumbsUp
Echo24
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 5:02:16 PM
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The Junior Jedi Knights or Young Jedi Knights series are both fantastic (Young is a slightly more advanced reading level than Junior), and it would introduce a lot of the major characters that are involved throughout later books. It's where I first read about the Solo kids and their friends.
trappedslider
Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2014 8:11:05 PM
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darthbinks1 wrote:
He just finished reading and liked the Hobbit.


good good...*rubs hands together* I recommend the novelizations, The bane trio for now...
PrimeClone
Posted: Monday, May 5, 2014 4:59:35 PM
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Jude Watson, Jedi Apprentice. The stories have so much emotion. You will be able to actually get to talk about evil and good, war or piece, what is good what Is evil...? The action is amazing, the adventures too. The friendships are very hart warming. It's the best series for that age. I read it with all three of my sons. It will take you some time to get through it all. Take your time, put some good star wars music in the background. Do the voices and he will never forget Obi and Qui-Gon. For all the good reasons nobody will ever understand the Jedi Order without reading Jedi Apprentice.

Cheers
darthbinks1
Posted: Tuesday, May 6, 2014 3:28:40 AM
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Thanks to all that answered. We will be choosing a few of these from our public library!
adamb0nd
Posted: Tuesday, May 6, 2014 5:32:07 AM
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Galaxy of fear! It's like Goosebumps meets star wars. Made for young readers.
atmsalad
Posted: Tuesday, May 6, 2014 6:05:43 AM
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Once he get older I would recommend the Darth bane books, I would say not now just because they do really explore the dark side and the sith. I just read the fate of the Jedi the first two books. Those really emphasize lukes relationship with his son and the importance of a good father son relationship in general. Obviously those books give away a lot from the new Jedi order, dark nest and the legacy of the force series... So if he plans on reading more that would be a good idea. Champions of the force and the others in that series's are good and if he was able to follow the hobbit will be cake. There are a lot of good books out there, but with you being the parent obviously only you can really know what you want him reading and what he will enjoy. I have a brother that is 11 years younger than me, so I sort of know what that is like. Good luck, I hope you find a good one for him!
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