It contained miniseries and one-shots along with plenty of shorter stories taken from the pages of Star Wars Tales, and these featured not only the heroes from the films, but also a couple of heroines from the prose novels (Mara Jade and Guru) and more minor characters from throughout the galaxy (including Boba Fett, Jabba the Hutt, various criminals, former stormtroopers and some Ewoks, Jawas and even an ex-Gamorreon guard).
This second collection, by contrast, is much more narrowly focused on a particular set of characters from a particular thread within the greater Star Wars saga, the result, I suppose, from there being so many comics focused on a particular franchise from within the franchise.
That is the adventures of the Rebel Alliance-turned-New Republic's Rogue Squadron, an elite group of pilots first mentioned in The Empire Strikes Back and then featured in the Star Wars: X-Wing series of prose novels that writer Michael Stackpole began in 1996. There was also a Star Wars: Rogue Squadron video game series that started in 1998.
The entirety of this collection consists of Rogue Squadron stories, all published between 1995 and 2005. The book is dominated by the first 16 issues of the 35-issue, 1995-1998 Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Squadron ongoing series, preceded by a 2005 miniseries (Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Leader), a 1995 one-shot (Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Squadron Special) and some shorts from the pages of Star Wars Tales.
Also unlike the first volume in the New Republic series of epic collections, this volume heavily represents the work of a single creator, as Stackpole plots all 16 issues of the ongoing that appear within.
Were one not terribly interested in the adventures of Wedge Antilles, a minor character from the films who assumes leadership of Rogue Squadron after Luke Skywalker moves on to concentrate on Jedi stuff, and his daring pilots dog-fighting TIEs in the air and battling various plots by Imperial holdouts on the ground, there's probably little to recommend this particular volume of Star Wars comics.
That said, it is certainly important both chronologically, for anyone wanting to follow the old, now obsolete "Expanded Universe" version of the Star Wars saga (i.e. that relegated to "Legends" status), and as an indication of where the franchise's focus was at a particular point in time. (I should perhaps note that the heroes of the films are almost entirely absent in this particular volume, with only Luke Skywalker appearing at all, and even him only in the first three stories collected herein).
As we did with the first volume, let's take them each in turn...
•"A Day in the Life" This 12-page short by writer Brett Matthews and artist Adrian Sibar comes from a 2002 issue of Star Wars Tales. Specifically, it comes from an issue with a cover by EDILW favorite John McCrea.
The opening is pretty inspired, given how in the movies the many battles in the vacuum space are always filled by exciting sound effects. "They say there's no sound in space," narrator Wedge Antilles says, "They're wrong. Or I'm just crazy, because I swear I can hear them." These words appear over an image of Wedge's X-wing blasting a TIE fighter from behind and then flying through the explosion, accompanied by a big THRA BWOOM! sound effect.
As the title indicates, the story follows Wedge through what is apparently an average day for him, this one being just days after Jedi's Battle of Endor. He and two other pilots engage TIEs and blow up a still-functioning Star Destroyer that has crash-landed on the surface, and one of their number die in the process. Wedge tries and fails to comfort the surviving pilot, then retires to his office to type out a condolence letter and, finally, to look for something to eat in what I assume is the Rebellion's cafeteria. There he finds Luke, and they talk over a pair of giant sandwiches.
Aside from the clever opening line, I also liked the bit where Wedge references the wild party that ensued after the destruction of the second Death Star, which sounds a bit like the one Archie Goodwin described in a Marvel-published comic set the night after the destruction of the first (I wrote a bit about that moment in my review of Star Wars: Wild Tales Vol.1, in this recent-ish column).
"Three days since the Battle of Endor," Wedge narrates. "Two of which I actually remember. Note to self--never accept a drink from an Ewok wearing a stormtrooper helmet."
Noted.
Sibar's art is noteworthy for how unusual its style is, particularly compared to much of that which will fill the rest of this volume.
•Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Leader This 2005 three-part miniseries from writer W. Haden Blackman and artist Tomas Giorello seems to be something of a retroactive origin for Rogue Squadron, or at least to its iteration under Wedge Antilles.
Giving each character an information box including their name, home world, ship of choice and a brief military biography, Blackman and Giorello introduce us to Luke, Wedge, Ten Numb (an alien of the same species as Nien Nunb, who was Lando Calrissian's co-pilot in the Millennium Falcon in Jedi) and a couple more white guys I often had trouble keeping straight throughout the rest of the collection. Then the creators give them a mission: They are to assess the state of the Corellian system in the wake of The Battle of Endor.
(This story is also apparently set just after that battle, by the way, as the various characters were all engaged in various activities on the forest moon when we are introduced to him. One of those white guys, Tycho Celchu, expresses his belief that "the war is basically over," but Luke corrects him, asking him if he would stop fighting just because he or Wedge or "Senator Organa" were killed, and noting that there were millions of Imperials still scattered across the galaxy. I guess that will explain why for the next 450 pages or so, Rogue Squadron will keep on fighting the Empire, as if the events of Jedi hadn't really changed anything in the galaxy.)
As for the state of things in the Corellian system, they are pretty grim. Shortly after our heroes land on Corellia, Imperials arrive with a bunch of scout troopers on speeder bikes and a pair of the two-legged walkers and start attacking the city indiscriminately, bent on instilling terror of Empire.
They're led by a scout trooper in cool-looking all-black armor. The bad guys capture Ten and end up torturing him to death before the good guys can rescue him, although Rogue Squadron do manage to shut down what the guy in the black armor calls "a new counter-rebellion."
"Defeating me won't stop the Empire," this villain says, as Wedge ties him up after beating him in hand-to-hand combat. "I'm just one man. The Empire is legion."
"I know," Wedge replies. "But I also know the difference that one man can make."
In the epilogue, Luke and Wedge have a heart-to-heart conversation about the future, with Luke saying, "The New Republic -- the galaxy --still needs Rogue Squadron. But it also needs a new Jedi Order..."
Essentially, he passes the torch here to Wedge, and the penultimate page features a big panel filled with would-be pilots being presented to Wedge as potential recruits; a few will be recognizable as characters that have appeared in previous Rogue Squadron comics, although in this collection (which is organized by where the stories appear on the Star Wars timeline, not when they were published) they haven't yet appeared in the book.
I thought it noteworthy that when the team first arrives on Corellia, Wedge, a native Corellian like Han Solo, wears a black vest over a long-sleeve white shirt and a pair of pants with a red stripe down them. I had thought that was a unique look of Han's, but I guess that's just the style there...?
•Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Squadron Special I was curious about the providence of this particular story, because it seems to be presented here as if it were a standalone one-shot, but the story is incredibly short: Just 16 pages. Looking it up on comics.org, it appears that it was a giveaway included with Hero Illustrated magazine, which I guess explains its low page-count.
It's written by Ryder Windham, penciled by John Nadeau and inked by Monty Sheldon.
Its fairly melodramatic opening has a Grand Moff declaring to a planet's population that they are now under the control of The Empire, while an Imperial Walker looms large in the background.
"Oh, Father!" a child cries, "Can't anyone help us?"
And then a two-page spread reveals a half-dozen X-wings dive-bombing the walker, the ships surrounded by speedlines.
Our heroes' victory isn't assured, however, as one of them sees a landing strip lined with a hundred TIE fighters. Wedge manages to shoot down a conveniently placed tower, which topples onto the TIEs and destroys them all before any of them can left off to engage our heroes' X-wings.
The people of the planet are pissed off, however, as that tower was apparently some sort of important monument. As they argue with Wedge, another rebel pilot wearing a helmet and visor tells Wedge to take a walk, and this pilot then spends a few pages telling the crowd what a great pilot and hero Wedge actually is, essentially vouching for him.
When a kid asks this pilot who he is, he finally takes off his helmet and responds, "Luke Skywalker, at your service!"
(Um, spoiler alert for 30-year-old story, I guess.)
And that's pretty much that.
It's a nice enough introduction to the Wedge character, focusing on his small but apparently important role in the films' adventures, and the basic Rogue Squadron premise. I quite liked the art on this one; it felt very "classic" looking in its style.
Nadeau will return later to draw a few more stories in this volume.
•"Lucky" A 14-page short from a 2005 Tales by writer Rob Williams, penciller Michel Lacombe and a pair of inkers, this is another portrait of Wedge story, this one narrated by the character himself, featuring a generous flashback to his youth on a Corellian moon and the tragedy that drove him to join the Rebellion. A tragedy that, apparently, still haunts him.
It's not a fun story. After reflecting on the major battles he's survived (those of the films) and then rather miraculously surviving a new bit of danger, Wedge narrates about whether he's managed to live through all of his many adventures due to skill or luck.
Then we see his pre-Rebellion life, including a girlfriend whose father was secretly a rebel, a job as a pilot and a devastating Imperial attack.
These events don't come up in the next 350 pages, of course, but then, the comics that follow it are all from a decade or so previous, so why would they? Still, this seems to be giving us something of a belated origin to the character.
I wasn't necessarily crazy about Lacombe's art style, but I did really like the long-necked, weasel-ish looking guy that worked for Wedge's girlfriend's dad.
•Star Wars: X-Wing Rogue Squadron #1-#16 These issues account for the rest of this particular collection, and they are a little less than half of the ongoing series.
The fact that there was an ongoing at all strikes me as a bit unusual, as when I think of Dark Horse comics, especially those of the '90s, I think of their publishing model as more of a series-of-miniseries, rather than ongoings (Although I know they've published other Star Wars ongoings as well, having read a few in trade paperback).
It's not hard to imagine the series being published that way instead, though, given that it is written in quite distinct, trade paperback-ready story arcs, and that the art teams and scripters change with each new arc, the one constant in all of these issues being the aforementioned Michael Stackpole, who would start telling these characters' adventures in his prose novel series just after the first arc of the comics series.
There are four four-part arcs here, "The Rebel Opposition," "The Phantom Affair," "Battleground: Tatooine" and "The Warrior Princess".
In addition to Wedge and his fellow white guys (Tycho, Janson, Hobbie)*, the cast also includes Dllr Nep, another Sullustan (i.e., the alien race of Nien Nunb and Ten Numb) who apparently has super-hearing and a deep love of music, and Plourr Ilo, a hard-drinking female prone to brawling who I at first took to be an alien of some kind given her weird hair, but it turns out she just shaves her head and wears some kind of dumb headdress that gives her an artificial mullet.
As the book progresses, they will pick up other characters, like Elscol Loroanother, another human female, as well as a blue-skinned Mon Calamari and a Quarren. (Do feel free to look any of these names or words up on Wookieepedia. There's no shame in that! God knows I kept a tab open to regularly consult it while reading these collections. It's not like I knew the word "Quarren" off the top of my head, when I first saw that character I simply thought, "Ah, one of those squid guys.")
The four stories are all quite well-crafted. Each works as a standalone story (Stackpole and company seem to be operating on an updated-for-the-'90s version of the Stan Lee maxim that every comic is someone's first comic: Every trade paperback collection is someone's first trade paperback collection). And each manages to successfully present readers with "more Star Wars", although I confess to being somewhat disappointed that the conflicts were all various riffs on the Rebellion vs. Empire conflict of the films, rather than any ambitious attempts to reinvent the wheel (as Jo Duffy did in the later issues of Marvel's original Star Wars comic, especially when she and artist Cynthia Martin introduced the Nagai).
I also got a sense, apparently common among these Dark Horse Star Wars comics, that by having not read the novels (and/or played the video games...? Or role-playing games...?) that I was missing something, with certain characters appearing in the comics for the first time as if they were characters I should recognize and know, apparently having been introduced...somewhere else (The first of these in this volume is a Dame Winter, who is apparently some sort of intelligence agent for the Rebellion/Alliance and a Princess Leia lookalike...although one can't really tell from the more generic way that penciler Allen Nunis draws her).
In "The Rebel Opposition," scripted by Mike Baron and drawn by Allen Nunis and Andy Mushynsky, Rogue Squadron is stationed on the planet Cilpar, where they are trying and failing to make contact with the local underground, led by a woman code-named "Targeter". They find themselves caught between the planet's own, homegrown rebels and the Empire, the former not trusting the Rebellion/Alliance, and Wedge and company eventually have to prove themselves to them.
In "The Phantom Affair", scripted by Darko Macan and drawn (and lettered) by Edvin Biukovic, Rogue Squadron find themselves in an unusual setting for a Star Wars story, I thought—the equivalent of a college town planet. They are there to negotiate with the planet's leadership to gain possession of a fantastic new weapon that could tip the balance of the still-going galactic civil war...as are representatives of the Empire (The main bad guy here is an Imperial officer with some kind of space parasite permanently attached to his face).
"Battleground: Tatooine", scripted by Jan Strnad and drawn by Jon Nadeau and Jordi Ensign, is obviously set on the oft-visited desert planet that Luke and Anakin both hail from. There, Wedge and company reunite with agent Winter to aid in her investigation of a local conman who may or may not have had connections to the Empire. They attend a fancy party, get in the Star Wars equivalent of a car chase and ultimately uncover a secret Imperial base. This story includes an appearance by Jedi's Bib Fortuna, who has apparently had his brain removed from his body and put into some sort of spider-y droid at some point...?
Finally, "The Warrior Princess", scripted by Scott Tolson and drawn again by Nadeau and Ensign, primarily focuses on Plourr, as the action is set on her home world. To the surprise of the rest of Rogue Squadron, she is actually a princess, which comes out when they are drawn into the political intrigue of her home planet, involving a suspicious aristocracy, her arranged husband-to-be, her long-lost brother, anti-royal rebel freedom-fighters and, of course, an Imperial presence.
Visually, I was most fond of Nunis' style on "The Rebel Opposition," which, again, had a "classic" comics feel to it, and that of Biukovic on "The Phantom Affair," which was highly idiosyncratic and had the look and feel of European comics to more standard American comics of the era.
While all four stories are perfectly serviceable, balancing the war story aspects of the franchise with various bits of local political intrigue, I thought "The Phantom Affair" was the most fun, in large part because of its campus-like setting and colorful villains and side characters.
While I was a little disappointed that this collection was exclusively focused on Rogue Squadron at the outset, I have to admit that it proved more interesting than I had originally feared, and that when I closed it and set it down, I found myself looking forward to the next volume which seems to be, again, all Rogue Squadron.
It might be a bit until I can read and write about that next volume, though. As I recently discovered, these collections are much fewer and farther between now than I would have guessed, given that they are, you know, Star Wars. In fact, it looks like they may actually be out of print now....? Regardless, I'll keep trying to get my hands on them.
*Obviously, modern Star Wars has been plagued with a particularly noxious group of "fans" who loudly complain online about the franchise's efforts to add more women and characters of color to the most recent films and Disney+ TV shows. These terrible people apparently see any attempts to make the casts of these newer works better reflect the audiences that are watching them as some sort of affirmative action run amuck, somehow tainting the franchise by finally, belatedly giving it the diversity it so sorely lacked in the 1970s and '80s.
I obviously agree with the powers that be who are now making the films and shows that diversity is a good thing, and that the setting could use more women and people of color to better reflect the people watching these films and shows...and, one would hope, give the young people perhaps looking up to new heroes the chance to more easily see themselves in the rebels and Jedis.
That said, another benefit of diversity? Well, if there were a few women or Black or Asian folks in Rogue Squadron, it would be a hell of a lot easier to keep all the characters straight. Instead, the team is like 90% young white guy with short hair, and the fact that the artists drawing them changes almost every arc makes it even harder to get a sense of who is who.