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Adam Christopher’s Mandalorian Novel No Longer Happening

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Adam Christopher’s Mandalorian Novel No Longer Happening

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Adam Christopher’s Mandalorian Novel No Longer Happening

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Published on March 10, 2021

Screenshot: Lucasfilm
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Star Wars, The Mandalorian, chapter 12, The Siege
Screenshot: Lucasfilm

Last year, Lucasfilm and Del Rey announced a wide-ranging Mandalorian publishing program (something that typically accompanies most big Star Wars releases), which would have included a new novel by Adam Christopher, and a visual dictionary for the series.

Yesterday, Del Rey announced that the novel was now no longer being published, but that Christopher was working on a new Star Wars novel.

In a Tweet, the publisher noted that “due to the ever-expanding world of The Mandalorian, we will no longer be publishing THE MANDALORIAN ORIGINAL NOVEL at this time, as the story continues to unfold on screen,” and that Christopher is already at work on another novel.

DK Books issued a similar statement for its upcoming The Mandalorian Ultimate Visual Guide.

The specific reasons for the novel’s cancellation aren’t clear, given that we didn’t know anything about the plot of the novel, or where it sat in the timeline in relation to the series. The book was set to come out last December, but was eventually bumped back to the fall of 2021.

The move does highlight the complexity of storytelling in a big, multimedia franchise. Last fall, Lucasfilm unveiled a big expansion for the Star Wars franchise on Disney+, which included not only a third season of The Mandalorian, but a handful of spinoff shows: The Book of Boba Fett, (set to come out December 2021), The Rangers of the High Republic, and Ahsoka, all of which will apparently “intersect with future stories and culminate into a climactic story event.”

Clearly, there’s a lot of organization and planning that goes into writing those shows and figuring how how to move the action forward, and film has always had an overriding priority for canon in the Star Wars universe—it’s likely easier to shift a book out of the way and start fresh once the story is a bit more firmly laid down. After all, most of the Expanded Universe was created after the “final” Star Wars film, Return of the Jedi.

With its cancellation, Christopher’s book joins a rarefied collection of unpublished Star Wars novels, which includes an early EU book called Heart of the Jedi by Kenneth C. Flint (which you can read in its entirety here), a handful of books slated for the New Jedi Order that never came to fruition (from Michael A. Stackpole and Michael Jan Friedman), an Imperial Commando sequel and a Boba Fett novel by Karen Traviss, a Clone Wars-era novel by William C. Dietz called Escape from Dagu, post-NJO novel Blood Oath by Elaine Cunningham, and KOTOR-era book Mandoria by Alex Irvine.

Hopefully, we’ll learn more about Christopher’s next book before too much longer.

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Andrew Liptak

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kayom
4 years ago

The blew up the visual guide’s main spread, and the novel needs to work around the fact that a major character self destructed IRL.

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Mr. Magic
4 years ago

@1,

Yeah, given the timing of this cancellation coming mere weeks after Carano’s firing, I think odds are high the book was focused on Cara Dune and LFL is doing damage control.

jere7my
4 years ago

Cara Dune would, at most, have taken up a page in the visual guide, and the cancellation was rumored before she was fired. It’s more likely that the runaway success of the show and the three spinoffs it spawned made them rethink their tie-ins. If the show was initially expected to end after two seasons, a visual guide this year would make sense, but it makes less sense to release one before the show wraps up. A novelization would constrain Favreau in ways they might not want publishing to do.

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kayom
4 years ago

@3. My fault for not being specific. The Visual Guide is probably pushed back because they blew up the Razor Crest, not Carano imploding her career. The Razor Crest was probably a big, big, part of the Visual Guide, so with it in bits and no obvious replacement until we find out what the deal with The book of Boba Fett is about in Dec, then it has a problem. That is probably why that once got pushed back.

The novel was almost certainly a tie-into the Rangers of the New Republic stuff, but that was gonna be Cara-centric, and with Carano imploding in the mess like she did, that is why the novel is gotta be on hold. They gotta replot that roadmap. The novel doesn’t have to constrain the showrunners, but it does have to complement the show and that is what is still being redone right now. So push that back until they have the new focus worked out.

 

And now to see how many captcha screens this takes to get posted. The captcha doesn’t know what traffic lights or crosswalks looklike. And if the image takes up more than one square, it doesn’t know how many squares it is asking for. It is insane.

jere7my
4 years ago

: Blowing up the Razor Crest was not a surprise. The second season started filming in October 2019, which meant scripts were locked well before that. I think Pablo said he finished writing the Visual Guide around September 2020. The Visual Guides have plenty of entries for things that then get blown up in the movie; the destruction of the Razor Crest had nothing to do with it.