
Our top 10 Star Wars books of 2010
Can’t end the year without a list, can we? Here are our staff’s picks for the ten best books of the year.
Be sure to check out more favorites at StarWars.com. They asked us to do the literature portion, but other contributers include Kyle Newman, Ashley Eckstein, TFN’s Eric Geller, Steve Sansweet, and Bonnie Burton!
10. Star Wars Year by Year: A Visual Chronicle by Daniel Wallace, Pablo Hidalgo, Gus Lopez, and Ryder Windham

9. The Old Republic: Fatal Alliance by Sean Williams

8. Millennium Falcon: A 3D Owner’s Guide by Ryder Windham

7. Fate of the Jedi: Vortex by Troy Denning

6. The Sounds of Star Wars by J. W. Rinzler and Ben Burtt

Out this week: Year by Year, Legacy

Tomorrow brings the final (or, not so much) issue of Legacy, #50. I’m pretty sure I heard that there were copies in Orlando, but… Well, let’s just say I barely got out that way. In any case, we can all pick it up in the comic store in the morning.
StarWars.com confirms Year by Year and Adventures in Hyperspace
Dan Wallace confirmed the book and shared some additional details on Year by Year with us yesterday, but now StarWars.com has an item on the book – including some early cover art and the addition of Gus Lopez as a writer. They also give us a short Q&A on Adventures in Hyperspace, which is being penned by Scholastic regular Ryder Windham.
We’re still waiting on word of Sean William’s The Old Republic novel – as yet, Sue Rostoni is “unable to either confirm nor deny.” (Don’t panic: That’s pretty standard.) Though audio versions have shown up on RandomHouse.com.
Gus Lopez tours Tatooine Tunisia
The noted collector found and photographed several Star Wars shooting locations in Tunisia, including the cliffs in the scene above. He even nabbed a sunset shot. (via)
Collecting with Gus and Duncan
According to TFN, Gus and Duncan’s Comprehensive Guide to Star Wars Collectibles is now shipping. Galactic Binder has an interview with Lopez, while the official site has a few pieces (Action figure stands, Smarties, Imperial Troop Transporter) from him and Jenkins.
The ghosts of Star Wars Christmas past
StarWars.com takes another trip into the Lucasfilm Archives to check out what fans would be getting (or least, asking for) way back in 1978.
And while collectors today may have a hard time getting their hands on those late-70’s gems, they can at least console themselves with Gus and Duncan’s Comprehensive Guide to Star Wars Collectibles, which can be pre-ordered from Paizo now.
More from Steve on the Force-Cast: Complete Encyclopedia, The Clone Wars, and a future project
I try to only listen to about one podcast a year – life, or rather, the amount of it I allot to blogging, is far too short – but I couldn’t avoid the latest Force-Cast since it’s basically an extended interview with Lucasfilm’s Head of Fan Relations, Steve Sansweet. (Yes, it was worth it, though the intro… I need to paraphrase Lorelei Gilmore: Shorten it, decute it.) Anyway, here’s what I learned:
- A bit about about Celebration Japan – and C5. (Listen for yourself, or see previous entry.)
- The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia is a project of not just Steve and Pablo, but an entire team – containing such luminaries as Dan Wallace, Bob Vitas, Mary Franklin and… Chris Cassidy!
- The Encyclopedia will contain “close to a million words” and their intention is not to create new canon (at least not on purpose) but to “take advantage of what’s out there.”
- Steve has another collecting book in the pipeline… Not a price guide, there’s one of those coming from Gus Lopez and Duncan Jenkins.
- There’s no Grievous in The Clone Wars movie – his presence in the trailer is due to tv show footage.
- Host Jimmy Mac sings Steve a song. It’s mildly amusing.
The podcast on the whole is a manageable 23 minutes, so I would recommend you listen to it yourself – at least if you want to hear more about Celebration Japan or the Encyclopedia.
Raiders of the Lost Prop
How did the original Death Star model end up in Missouri? And thus to Seattle with super collector Gus Lopez. (via Binary Bonsai)
Be sure to check out the rest of Neoto Coolville, which is counting down to the 30th anniversary.
It’s the Boba. Bobacabana.
Gus Lopez and Pam Green are geekier than you, and they have the house to prove it. (via SF Signal)

