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Reviews
Star Wars: Galactic Maps: An Illustrated Atlas of the Star Wars Universe by Lucasfilm Book Group
michaelclorah's review against another edition
2.0
Nice art, but the content is less engaging - erratic snippets of data dumps from (I suppose) various Star Wars cartoons. It might be more interesting if I'd seen more than the films and knew what the hell is being talked about. My little kids borrowed it from the library and they're asking lots and LOTS of questions. Sadly, I know as little as they do, so it's been a little frustrating for everyone.
sassypants859's review against another edition
3.0
More of a cute picture book than an actual atlas for diehard Star Wars fans. I enjoyed the art and was happily surprised to see it included information from the Clone Wars animated series.
wanderlustlover's review against another edition
5.0
Summer 2019;
Another gorgeous piece picked up from First Book. I am utterly enamored with this piece. I thought at first it would "just be another map book," but I had to amend my assumptions from the second I opened the front cover. It starts, of course, with the galaxy at large, but instead of going straight into the planets, the book makes a fantastic detour.
First, there's an entire (new) Star Wars timeline, starting in 32 BBY and going all the way through to 4 ABY. Every single section is summarized succinctly, and each one has its different piece of art next to it. After four pages of that, you turn over to the Historical Figures pages, where you're introduced, with illustrated head bust shots, to 50 of the most essential characters in the franchize with small summaries under them as well.
From there we move into our Atlas proper, with each section starting with the Star Systems (as their own illustrated two-page spread) and then planets within them (each world getting it's individual two pages, as well). There are four star system layout pages and twenty-five planet/location layouts. On each of the location pages are small scenes from all across the canon that took places in these locations, with summaries and minute depictions of the characters or most important actions/events that happened there.
It's truly stunning and riveting, and you'll spend forever looking at every single page. My personal favorites had to have been not expecting Mortis to be in it, but it's so gorgeous, and the Trinity is laid out in the artwork of land even. You will find pieces for every single one of your favorite characters sprinkled throughout these pages with such care and artistry.
The last two-page spread is, also, "a beastiary" with the animals from the two-page world spreads, naming them, as well. The very last page and back cover, also, has a before and after of The DeathStar. This is an absolute must buy for the Star Wars buff in your life, and I have absolutely no regrets about scoring myself a copy.
Another gorgeous piece picked up from First Book. I am utterly enamored with this piece. I thought at first it would "just be another map book," but I had to amend my assumptions from the second I opened the front cover. It starts, of course, with the galaxy at large, but instead of going straight into the planets, the book makes a fantastic detour.
First, there's an entire (new) Star Wars timeline, starting in 32 BBY and going all the way through to 4 ABY. Every single section is summarized succinctly, and each one has its different piece of art next to it. After four pages of that, you turn over to the Historical Figures pages, where you're introduced, with illustrated head bust shots, to 50 of the most essential characters in the franchize with small summaries under them as well.
From there we move into our Atlas proper, with each section starting with the Star Systems (as their own illustrated two-page spread) and then planets within them (each world getting it's individual two pages, as well). There are four star system layout pages and twenty-five planet/location layouts. On each of the location pages are small scenes from all across the canon that took places in these locations, with summaries and minute depictions of the characters or most important actions/events that happened there.
It's truly stunning and riveting, and you'll spend forever looking at every single page. My personal favorites had to have been not expecting Mortis to be in it, but it's so gorgeous, and the Trinity is laid out in the artwork of land even. You will find pieces for every single one of your favorite characters sprinkled throughout these pages with such care and artistry.
The last two-page spread is, also, "a beastiary" with the animals from the two-page world spreads, naming them, as well. The very last page and back cover, also, has a before and after of The DeathStar. This is an absolute must buy for the Star Wars buff in your life, and I have absolutely no regrets about scoring myself a copy.
unread1975's review against another edition
4.0
Очень красиво. По тексту тут попланетное изложение событий номерных эпизодов 1-7, Изгоя-1 и мультсериала+полнометражки "Войны клонов", "Повстанцы". Очень удобно, если надо быстро освежить какие-то основные события, разве что формат не карманный, а A3 примерно😄. Из нового для себя — представление о расположении небесных тел в далёкой-далёкой галактике относительно друг друга. А ещё я подзабыл, что Рилот — родина тви'леков.
carter1315's review against another edition
adventurous
informative
lighthearted
- Plot- or character-driven? N/A
- Strong character development? N/A
- Loveable characters? N/A
- Diverse cast of characters? N/A
- Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A
3.5
andystehr's review against another edition
4.0
Great maps! It's a wonderful resource for the role playing game!