Thursday, December 8, 2022

Review: Children of Blood and Bone

Children of Blood and Bone Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I really enjoyed this young-adult fantasy.  Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi is a beautifully page turner set in an fictional Nigeria, where magic is real but only the poor have been blessed to receive this favor of the Gods.   This is why the tyrant king, King Saran, sought and found a way to break this connection to the dive thus taking away the magic of the maji people.  The king's then teaches that magic is evil, all and magic users are dangerous thus generating fear and hatred for the rest of the Orisha people. 
    King Saran's hatred is strong but not as strong as the willpower of the young protagonists' that defy him. Once they learned that they have a chance to bring magic back into the world, nothing short of death will stop them.  

      Zelie's power over Death has been restored to her by the king's own rebellious daughter Amari.   The two girls, with the help of Zelie's skilled  brother Tzain, embark on a mission to restore magic to the maji people. 

  The only real threat to this is Inan, the prince, who will do whatever it takes to destroy magic once and for all.  He and Zelie have some odd, wild, passionate connection through Inan's own awakened powers over minds and dreams.   

    Children of Blood and Bone is  a dazzling adventure through a fictional Nigeria that will have you pouring over the pages to find out what happens next. 

Don't have time to read?  Well try listening to this book while work, drive, or shower.  The narrator, Bahni Turpin, does a five star job of narrator all the characters and points of view on Audible.  

   If you enjoyed the Avatar: The Last Airbender series,  then I strongly encourage you to give this book a read.

Children of Blood and Bone is book one in the series. Please come back and read my reviews for Children of Virtue and Vengeance, and Children of Anguish and Anarchy 

Other Books and Series you may like:






If you liked this review, or if you want to discuss the book please a comment below or find me on Facebook at: P.B.Yeary
Twitter:  PB&Jellyphish









Lessons of the Sower: A Meditation on Parable of the Sower

Parable of the Sower Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Published: 1993 by Four Walls Eight Windows


    I've said it before, I love books that change the way I see the world. Some books are like putting on a permanent set of glasses - the way you perceive the world is forever changed.  
    "Parable of the Sower" and "Parable of the Talents" changed more than my perception and way of thinking.  They changed me.   The way I speak, the way I shop, the  way I engage with friends and family, even parts of my lifestyle have changed as a result of reading this book. I
author Octavia E. Butler

have too much to say about this author and this series to lay it all out here and now. Much of it I'm still processing.   
    This morning I cried.  I curled into a ball and wept from fear of the future.   My husband is at work for the first time in a month.  Our savings are down to the nub after buying our home.  He can't afford to take any time off, but Christmas is coming and they are laying people off for the holiday.   Now he is wondering how he'll pay the bills when we are already in the whole up to our ears. I'm here looking for another job myself, looking for hope but finding only a new crop of rejections.
     I've cast out so many applications and received so very many rejections that my soul is bleeding from the shame. It's almost Christmas and the baby only has one present under the tree.  We may have to take her out of daycare, but I needed today to fold in on myself and weep. 
     A calm came over me.  I was exhausted and staring at nothing when a thought bubbled up from my swampy misery.  I thought about all of the applications I've put out there - all the seeds I've sown. Some have landed on hard, dry earth; others have landed on stone.  But others are still out there still floating on an uncertain breeze, and others are waiting to be spread.  A small ray of hope crept into my misery.
     I thought back to this book, and where I was when I read it two years ago. Back then we lived in a house that was falling in on itself; an unhoused man sometimes slept in his car next to our yard; an odd neighbor insisted on cutting our grass and learning our names.           Strange people day and night wondering the streets around our home.  I had just learned that I was pregnant. We'd both been laid off. We didn't know how we'd survive then. But we did.  We survived and moved on to something better.   In that spark of hope I'd found it was possible to stretch what we had to move on and upward.  
    We bought a house in a quiet neighborhood.  Now this the first year of keeping it.  We survived the slums. We will survive the suburbs.  We just have to keep spreading our seeds.
    I smiled and whispered: "God is change."  
    It is with this feeling of hope, and the desire to spread that feeling to others, that I write this meditation down.   I want to make a space to discuss what I've learned from the experience of walking the world with Lauren Olamina.   

This is a message to my present self, and to my future self, that I've been scared before, and I will be again, but I've gotten through it wiser than before.  
    
   
Lessons I learned from Parable of the Sower.  
   
Lesson 1: Don't waist time dwelling on the past. The present is the only time we have to prepare for the future.
    Our protagonist Lauren Olamina is fifteen years old when our journey with her begins.  Like most of Octavia's characters, she is a strong willed black woman with a very strong since of self.  She knows that her little community with it's wall and it's harmony will not last much longer.  She is scared of what will happen when the wall gets breeched, as she knows it will.  But no one wants to listen to her. No one wants to imagine that the world around them has gotten that bad, or that there wall won't protect them.  Most of all, no one wants to listen to a young girl warn them about danger. She should have boys, and school, on her mind - not doomsday prepping.  Lauren seems to be the only one who realizes that doom doesn't happen in a day, its a long slow deterioration that started long ago, and continues all around them.  
    Lauren does not dismiss her own instincts.  Her fears, from her point of view, are reasonable and logical.  But she doesn't let that fear paralyze her.  Instead she uses her fear to prepare for all possible futures while she can.
   She insists on learning how to use a gun, and encourages even the weakest willed females in her community to do the same.  She learns from books what plants are medicinal or safe to eat.  She learns how to read people, and how to hide her weaknesses.  She stashes several  bug-out-bags around the community.  She collects maps, and even sets her mind to leaving before the wall comes down so that she has an idea of which way she will walk when she leaves.
    When the wall comes down she is the only one who is prepared for it.  She looses everything and almost every one in one night.  Only two members of her old community survive, Henry and Zarah, and she barely knows them.  The only things she regrets about her personal preparations was that they never setup an emergency meeting spot.  As a result her brother Marcus, who also survives the fire, goes on to live a terrible life on his own.  She won't meet up with him until Talents series, were he comes her worst possible foe.  
     

Lesson 2:  God is change - Everything changes.   
"All that you touch you Change.  All that you Change, changes you.  The only lasting truth is Change.  God is Change." 
    This is science.  Don't sit pretty and comfortable in the belief that being a good person will protect you from harm in this world.  No one is safe from change, but you can prepare for it if you don't get complacent.  

     To be fair, I already had my own ideas about God being a force of nature, an element, or uncaring movement of energy that can be pulled and manipulated by intention of willfulness.  Think bad things, bad things happen.  Think good things, good things happen - that sort of thing.  
     The sermons in this book have really touched me.  I'm one of those looking for a new understanding in this world beyond the white Christian hate spirit that I was raised to believe in.   God being an uncaring mass of energy is more appealing to me than It being a conscious being that picks and chooses who It will help and when. 

    That being said I still find comfort in prayer.  I still find warmth in the memory of my parents and grandparents who were all God fearing people.  I still pray and I intend to teach my daughter to, as well.  I'm complicated.    

Lesson 3: People need people

    I am a proud introvert.  The pandemic started off as a smug blessing for me.  I didn't have to go to work!  I could just stay home, collect unemployment, and not have to jump through social hoops for anyone.
    Then I learned that I was pregnant.  Travel was restricted so my parents were hesitant to come see me for fear of making me sick, or being trapped out their city.  My husband couldn't come in to any of my doctor appointments, my mother couldn't be there for the birth of my baby.  I had no sitters, no close family nearby to lend me a hand, and all of my best friends were sick, or suffering from their own Covid horror stories.  Didn't matter, I couldn't go anywhere anyway.  My daughter has been my constant companion for two years now.  I am a mother in need of a village, but I'd spent years distancing myself from everyone. 
art by Justin Swindall; owned by PS musical
    As Lauren moves through the world she learns how important having people around her is.  She starts off thinking about how she will leave her community and forge a life on her own.  After loosing her family though she laments not having them around her.  She learns better ways of talking to people, of persuading people to follow her.  She learns that having the people makes you vulnerable, but the right kind of people, well trained and working together, keeps you safe.
    Lauren builds a community around wonderers that see her strengths and lend her theirs.  She teaches, and is taught.  She listens and is listened to.  By the end of "The Sower" her dream of forming a community around Earthseed has blossomed into Acorn.  There are families that commune with her, and children learning how to read.  She's found love and is recreating a community like the one she'd lost but stronger and healthier because they are working together as one large family.  

Lesson 4: You have more than you realize. 
    In the meditation of present mindfulness, in your state of here and now thinking, keep stock of all of your resources.  What you have right now may already be a key resource to your survival.  Pour energy into the useful skills, and people, in your life.  Let the useless atrophy and fall away.  
      In  "The Sower" and "The Talents" the ability to read is a valuable resource  save her brother's lives.  The ability to speak well and persuade others is a kill that Lauren uses to grow her community, she's also an impressive writer - almost everyone who reads "Earthseed: The Book of the Living" fall under her spell. 
    Are you a good shot, or fleet-footed runner is?  Do you know how to take care of babies or talk to children?  Can you find or grow food, or fix machines?  These are all valuable talents that our current society down plays as unskilled labor.  But they are incredible useful attributes.  You are more of an asset than you realize. And if you don't have any basic survival skills do you have the ability to listen, and learn?  Being a good student may someday save your life!

    I could go on.  Parable of the Talents has lessons about choosing good leaders to follow, and good ways to be a leader.  But I think this is enough for now.

    
        Come back for more discussion on Mrs. Octavia E. Butler. I intend to write two more essays soon: one on the common tropes I've learned to look for her work.  The other will be a complimentary essay between the Parable Series and Dune! Join me. 

Please, share below what lessons you learned from Parable series.
What do you think of my take away?

Also if you've read the books you may be interested to know about the The Parable of the Sower Musical, written by Toshi Regan.  And the Octavia's Parables Podcast hosted my Adrian Maree Brown and Toshi Regan.  

Learn more about me at 
pbyeary.com or follow me on twitter at PB&JellyPhish
Until next time, I'll see you on the next page! 
 

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Star War's Fan Edit: Palpatine Genes Prt 1: The Inspiration

Children of Dune



The story of Dune is an intricate tapestry of plots and politics woven together with intriguing cultures and heavy philosophical ideology.  Every fight and every victory has huge sweeping consequences that ripple through a culture for generations.  


By contrast, the Star Wars series is a fun romp through an epic space fantasy.  The original three films charmed the childhoods of an entire generation, and those viewers passed their love of Luke, Leia, Han and Chewy on to their children.  

Creator George Lucas was inspired and heavily influenced by legendary works of fiction including the Flash Gordon series, Kurosawa’s The Hidden Fortress, as well as Frank Herbert’s Dune series. 

Sprinkles of Dune's special seasoning is littered throughout the Star Wars universe.  It can be tasted in the heavy political plotting that reverberates through several generations, the diversity of cultures, the strong female characters, as well as a fascinating seed of science that can potentially connect the two vastly different stories.

 

George Lucas is no longer involved in the new Star Wars stories which have spun off from his original creation, and with his absence some of the Dune flavoring was lost.  

I believe Dune could have been of further inspiration, adding a dash of its spice to the weaker plot points of the Star Wars sequels that left so many fans disappointed.  


How?  What if Rey isn’t just Palpatine’s granddaughter.  What if she is his female clone which he had specially made to raise as his replacement?  He just needed his inferior clone reserves to keep him alive long enough for Rey to grow up and rise to power.    


Spoilers ahead for most of the Star Wars, as well as the first three Dune novels.  



The main thing that bothered me about Rise of Skywalker was its setup.  Somehow Palpatine returned.  Seasoned fans will have guessed within moments that he's simply using his clones to regenerate himself.  Though no longer official canon, Tom Veitch's six-issue comic series Dark Empire introduced this concept to Star Wars lore in 1991. Rise of Skywalker clearly used this concept for inspiration, but was uninspired in its implementation. A slew of what ifs spring to my mind, but the greatest of them is this; what if Rise of Skywalker had better used the ideas within Dark Empire, and then added a heavy sprinkle of inspiration from Dune?

To preface my idea I must make a couple of points first.  The first is that this isn’t entirely my idea. Frank said it first.   


 What does Dune Have to do with it?

 In Dune, Lady Jessica finds herself amongst the Fremen, natives of the desert planet Arrakis. To become their Reverend Mother, she must undergo the Spice Agony by consuming the Water of Life, a toxin created by a drowned Sandworm. This process awakens her ancestor memories, thus allowing her to look back and learn from the wisdom of her maternal/mitochondrial ancestors.  And she does this while pregnant with her daughter, Alia.  As a result, Alia is “pre-born”, born fully self-aware with a mature mind, and also filled with the memories of her ancestors long before she’s had a chance to develop her own personality.

Mitochondrial DNA is the common cellular chromosome that we all share with our mothers. It’s what ancestry trackers use to trace a person’s bloodline back through time. 

  

Alia’s mind  ages faster than her body.  She’s born a fully realized Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother but without any of the training needed to control her impulses, or focus her mind.  

She’s merely a child when she kills her own grandfather, the Baron Harkonnen, to defend her big brother Paul.  This allows Paul to establish his reign on Arrakis, but Alia is left vulnerable to her own hyper-sensitive mind.  

 Through two books Alia struggles with the voices in her head who are trying to take over her mind and body. She is an abomination and yet she is left in charge of Arrakis when Paul disappears into the desert.  

The only one that steps up to help her is the ghost of the long dead Baron Harkonnen.  

The Baron is able to speak directly to Alia’s mind because he is Jessica’s father, ergo Alia’s maternal grandfather.  The Baron’s personality possesses Alia:  he sleeps with her husband and her servants; he conspires to kill her niece, nephew, and mother; he takes over her guards.  Her potential victims look at Alia with pity instead of fear.  They know she is too far gone to be saved and too blind to be a real threat to them.  


Second: According to George, Palpatine was always cloning around.


When the plot of Star Wars is considered from the dark side point of view, it could be seen as the saga of Palpatine and his quest for immortality.  Every third Star Wars movie in the main series shows the rise, fall, and eventual success of Palpatine’s mission to escape death.  

At a young age Palpatine discovered that it was possible to gain immortality.  He’d heard stories of the dark side master who’d found the secrets he sought. Uncovering these methods for himself  became his personal quest.

Everything Palpatine did, from conquering the galactic government, to killing off the Jedi in order to unbalance the force in his favor, was to gain more power while he sought immortality.  He seduced the young Anakin Skywalker to be his apprentice easily because Anakin was also interested in this ability.  As the Emperor of the galaxy he’d had the resources to research and chase every lead.  

This research lead him to be interesting in cloning.  He'd learn by cloning himself he could make copies that he could then jump into when his current body died.  He didn't care about the clone army he'd created - only the information that could gained from the project.   


    

In Attack of the Clones The Jedi discover a factory already in the process of creating a clone army from the DNA of a man named Jango Fett.  Jango has agreed to this under one condition - that he be given one special clone that ages at a normal rate which he will raise as a son.  This boy grew up to become the legendary Boba Fett. 

This introduces the concept that such a clone, one with a slow healthy growth rate, is possible.  We learn later that Palpatine is behind the creation, training, and programing of this army as part of a plot to whip out the Jedi with the infamous Order 66.  


The new Disney animated series The Bad Batch reveals to us that the empire experimented with gender switching in clones.  One of the main characters of this story is a female clone created with the Jango DNA.


In Conclusion:  


Perhaps Palpatine ultimately learned that immortality was really a sort of ancestor hopping through time, probably by using midi-chlordans - or force molecules.  Such molecules might influence  the mitochondrial DNA of one’s descendants.  It would make since then that a female body would be able to pass this DNA on to her offspring, thus providing stronger vessels in the future for his soul to hop into.  

It therefore makes since to Palpatine's character to have experimented with these things and found out that they could be done.  So why not do them?  Having a female clone capable of carrying parts of his DNA into future generations could give him exactly what he's looking for.  He only had to be a little patient while his female clone grew to an independent adult and came looking for power.

  

Check out part two to see how I think this might have made for an interesting addition to the Star Wars lore.   



If you're like me and studying how to write picture books, feel free to check out my picture book breakdowns at PB&JellyfishTalez.  
   

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Thank you for stopping by!
I'll see you on the next page!


    

Star Wars Sequel FanFic - Palpatine Genes Prt 2: The Rewrite

The Force Awakens

The Force Awakens:

We meet Rey, abandoned on Jakku.  She’s maintained hope for decades that someone would come back for her.  

Most of The Force Awakens plays out the same - with Rey meeting Finn who is escaping the storm troopers.  They run into Han and Chewy while escaping with The Millennium Falcon.  

Rey bonds with Finn, Han, and Chewy as they work together to fight thieves and fix the ship.  When she gets to meet the rest of the rebels, however, she becomes quiet.  She lacks social skills and she doesn’t do well in groups. 

She runs into Leia while trying to escape the crowd.  The famous force sensitive rebel princess can see her in ways no one has ever seen her before.  Rey is both drawn to and afraid of Leia.  Right away she wants to impress her.  Leia starts pulling up Rey’s buried memories - she can sense the pain and fear of being abandoned and feeling so alone.  Leia warns that such feelings are a path to the darkside.   They are  interrupted with news of a map leading to Luke Skywalker.

Rey jumps at the chance to get away from the group and do a mission on her own.  Finn, Han, and Chewy insist on going with her.  

“You don’t have to be alone anymore.”  

On this mission Rey demonstrates raw, untrained force abilities that are very destructive.  They cause concern in her friends and draw Kylo Ren’s attention.  


Kylo starts trying to pull Rey to the dark side. He uses past moments of destruction to make her feel even more alone. He says that he understands her. He tells her about his own destructive nature. She rejects this first temptation, then turns it on him.  She tries to draw him back to the light-side.  For a moment Ben Solo reacts to this tenderness.  Kylo rejects her violently.   Rey returns  to her friends with the key to finding Luke Skywalker.

Force Awakes ends with Rey still on the light-side but conflicted.  She is firmly bonded to Finn, Han, and Chewy.  She’s impressed Leia by showing that Ben is still alive inside Kylo.  Leia emotionally adopts Rey.  She feels at home for the first time and never wants to see Jakku again.

 However she’s still uneasy around the other rebels.  When they find the coordinates to Luke, Rey is happy to leave on her own.  This time R-2 wakes up and comes with her.  She likes droides and is happy for his company.


The Last Jedi:

Luke refuses to train Rey at first.  He detects the fear in her.  She assures him that she is only concerned about the fall of the rebel forces, but she fears nothing.  He doesn’t believe her.  

 Kylo confronts Rey via some weird force trickery.  They duel in front of Luke. Once again she tries to pull Kylo to the light-side, and once again Ben shows himself.  But the sight of Luke brings back Kylo and the connection is broken.  Luke sees that Rey is, at her a core, is good, honest, and  kind person.  She is worthy of being a warrior for the Light.  It’s obvious too that Kylo sees the potential in  her could be turned to the Dark Side.  Luke agrees to do more tests.  

He introduces her to the Dark Side Well on his sacred island.  Here is where Rey gets her first glimpse of what she could become if she gave in to her destructive nature. The seed Palapatine planted finally germinates.  

She comes out a little shaken but able to show cheer and fearlessness to Luke.  He trains her for a while.  But her training is interrupted, just as Luke’s was, by news that her friends are in danger.   Phasma has captured Finn and several other former Storm Troopers.  She is attempting to reprogram them all back into the soldiers they were.  They know things about the rebel forces that could get millions killed.

Under this torment Finn’s force powers blossom.  He calls out to Rey, Luke, and Leia. 

  Luke warns Rey that she is only partially trained and that she shouldn’t leave.  But she believes in her heart that Ben Solo can be saved and that Kylo can not be allowed to turn Finn to the Dark Side.  She leaves hoping to save everyone all by herself.

Once she’s around other rebels, in a crowd and without her friends, she starts hearing voices.  She starts hearing other people’s thoughts about her.  She’s un able to turn off the voices and becomes trapped in other people’s toxic opinions of her. 

   These voices  tell her that no one can trust her, that she’s a bad person, that she doesn’t belong with these people.  She fights it.  She wants to be good - do good.  But does she want to do good because it’s the right thing to do?  Or does she just want to be loved and respected?  How selfish of her.     The more she feels outcasted the more she behaves like an outcast - the more she shies away.   She isn’t listening to the instructions or the dangers.  She wants to be on a ship.  She’s looking for someone to blast.  

“How deliciously violent of you.”  

Someone lays a hand on her shoulder.  She lashes out at them.  As a result she accidentally wipes their memories.  The person is shocked and confused.  So is everyone else who witnesses this.  Rey apologizes but everyone looks at her more afraid than before.

Later we hear voice in her mind has become more familiar. It’s the crackly stale voice of an old man whispering evils into her mind. It shares visions of her being abandoned.  Some of these are not her true memories, but those of another little boy.  It opens her mind up to the minds of others.  She can hear people whispering about her, thinking about her.   

 Kylo asks her to join him during a battle over a prison ship that has captured Chewy.  He brings up Rey’s discomfort around the rebels and says he felt the same way.  He tells Rey that her skills for destruction would be valued on the Dark Side.  His words are  the same thing the voices in her head have been whispering.  Kylo then says that he knows who her parents are and why they left her.  

“They were filthy junk traders.  They traded you for drink money.”

 He’s trying to weaken her, but suddenly she’s more angry than anyone has ever seen her.  Lightening shoots from her fingers and the ship Chewy was on is destroyed.   Everyone witnesses his death. The are shocked that Rey just  killed their beloved Chewy with Palpatine’s old lightening finger trick.  

Fear consumes her.  She runs. The  old man is laughing inside of her head; she can’t escape him. 

Everyone is so stunned by the sight of Chewy’s ship that only Finn and Kylo run after her.  

Finn finds another Storm Trooper defect, a woman he met while being held by Phasma.  She has escaped the First Order and needs help.

 Rey is curled up into a ball hiding in the wreckage of a ship. Her mind is being taken over by Palpatine.  The audience can hear the struggle as  horrible visions of the past and present flood her mind - not all of them are her memories. Palpatine’s laughing voice takes over, drowning out Rey’s horrified screams. 

When she looks up Kylo Ren is there.  He offers her his hand.  The dream falls away.  The voice is silenced.  All she sees is Kylo.  For a moment she is herself again, but she is afraid. Rey takes Kylo’s hand.  He takes her trembling body into his arms and carries her, willingly, to his ship. 

The Imperial march plays as the credits roll.   


Rise of Skywalker:


 Chewy was actually on a different ship.  He’s alive but being held prisoner on a ship called the Black Star.  The rebels have a meeting to find a way to rescue him. He’s obviously bait in a trap. The rest of the rebel forces are busy.   A planet that has been friendly to their efforts is under attack.

“We can not spare our fighters to save one, when trillions are at risk!”

 Finn, Poe and Rose slip away on the Falcon to find Chewy. The others warn them that he is being held in the lair of the Shadow Empress.  No one who sees her can recall her face.  And no one taken to the Black Star ever returns.  

Poe trades the Falcon for a less familiar ship.   They use Rose’s skills as a mechanic and Finn’s knowledge of the First Order to get inside the Black Star base.     

Finn is able to get the gang into the prison where they set Chewy free.  Before they can get back to the ship Captain Phasma captures them.

The rescue party is brought before the throne of the Shadow Empress.  Their eyes are covered at first.  Then Kylo orders them to have their blinders removed.      They shout insults at Kylo as they believed that he killed Rey in the last movie.  

 The Shadow Empress appears. The gang react in shock and horror at Rey’s new outfit.  She explains that her new power to wipe memories has helped them recruit more troops than ever, even some of Finn’s new friends have been brought back to the fold.  She’s also been able to help the current soldiers sleep better at night with their minds whiped clean of the deeds they’ve done.  So the troopers are well rested, resolved of any guilt, and are much more dangerous.  They also have better armor, more like Phasmas,  so they are a much harder to defeat.     

They shout insults at her.  It makes her laugh in Palpatine’s voice.  He speaks directly to their minds.   

He tells them Rey’s back story:


 Rey’s backstory

 Palpatine researched the forbidden Dark-side methods of “Life Jumping”.  He figured out that he could only hop into bodies that are closely related to him.  His clones work but they are only temporary fixes as they age rapidly.  Palpatine had fathered no children.  Instead he had special clones made that would age more slowly.   

With more research he learned that a female body would carry with her the possibility of continuing his Mitochondrial DNA  into future generations.  Infinity was his at last.  So he made a female clone that would age slowly.  She needed to be put someplace safe in case something happened to all the others before she was ready for him.  

 Good thing to because the Skywalkers nearly ruined everything.  When the empire fell Rey’s caregivers fled.  They were not the most scrupulous people - after all they worked for Palpatine. They thought their meal ticket had dried up so they  traded Rey to Unkar Plutt on Jakku for drinking money as Kylo had told her.  

Learning the truth about her lineage and why she was abandoned, also that she was nothing but an intended vessel for the Dark Emperor - finally broke poor Rey’s spirts.  She lives in the shrunken place inside of her own psyche unable to control her own body as Palpatine prances around with her face, and runs his empire.

The only good she can do is to help the storm troopers forget their guilt and pain each night.  


Back to the story:

Her friends speak past Palpatine directly to Rey.  Finn shows that he’s discovered his force sensitivity.   Some part of  the real Rey surfaces but only for a moment.  Kylo and Finn sense the change before she is shoved back down.  Rose, Poe, and Chewy see nothing but the bubbling rage of yet another trader.  

Phasma escorts the prisoners to their cells to await torture and execution.   Before they are killed something strange happens.  The doors to their cells are opened and they have a clear path back to the Falcon.  Ben Solo has intervened and saved them.  He doesn’t like being married to Palpatine.  The reveal that she is still in there somewhere turns his heart and he has to try and free her.  

Finn refuses to leave without Rey, but the others think she’s a lost cause.  

Finn turns back and is captured and held by Ben.  The darkness in Rey has brought the clarity of the light back to Ben Solo.  Ben explains that Rey is fully possessed by Palpatine but killing her won’t kill him.  He has other clones.   But he is trapped as her husband - as Palpatine’s husband.  He doesn’t want to abandon her either.  

Finn presses to know why.  Kylo doesn’t answer but Finn figures it out.  

“She’s pregnant!?”  

“I have to be here to kill them both when the time comes.”

“There must be another way!”


Ben helps Finn escape the Empress’s lair but in doing so he is ousted as a trader.  


Ben and Finn must work together to help Rey find herself again.  

First they track down and destroy all the hives holding additional Palpatine clones on a planet called Biss.  They are well hidden but Ben had been spying on the Empress. He knows the location of the master control room which supplies the clones with life support.  They reach that and destroy every one of the tanks and the clone guards which protect them.

It’s sort of a fun let loose moment as these two heroes are allowed to destroy ever single living thing in this building, and blow up the buildings.    

As they travel together Ben is training Finn in the ways of the force so that when the Empress catches up to them again he will be better prepared.  

Together they lore Rey-patine to a sacred Force Temple which is heavy with Light & Dark side energies.  They bait her with the Darkness, but reveal their true location during the battle.   

Rey-patine easily out fights Finn physically.  But Ben balances the battle.  The proximity of the Jedi Temple helps Rey find the will to fight for her body and she joins the battle from within.  Finn holds Ben back from destroying Rey-patine for fear of the ghost jumping before the job is complete.  

Instead they speak kindly, gently to Rey.  They remind her of the love she has felt for them, and that they have felt for her.  They tell her that the rebels miss her.  This makes her laugh, but they continue even as Palaptain regains control over her, hisses opposing words of abandonment and betrayal.  

Then Ben asks Rey if she really wants Palaptain to raise their child.  

She fights with the love for her  unborn child.  She holds on to that desire to be a mother.   The real Rey is able to at last take control.  She warns Ben and Finn that besides her there is one body left.  One clone left to age slowly and return Palpatine to youth.  She tells them vaguely where to find it.  Then she submerges to do battle with the Emperor in her mind.  


Finn leaves to tell the rebels about the “weapon” he’s discovered.  Poe, Rose, and Jannah accompany him in his search but he doesn’t tell them exactly what he’s looking for.   The coordinates lead them to a house with a family in a poor slum of a city planet.  Finn tries to detect where the body might be but he senses nothing.  


Rey remembers kindness.  She remembers meeting Finn, and their adventures.  Then she remembers Leia and her kindness towards her.  Leia who was a mother to her, and wrapped her in the light no matter how much others were afraid of her.  She remembers the embarrassing moments with the women in the rebellion as funny.  She laughs away moments that were shameful.  She forgives herself for feeling so lonely among potential friends.  She feeds that warm glow to her baby.  It feeds love and trust back to her.  


Palpatine hisses hatred and fear at her.  He demands that she focus on her hatred for him.

She turns that kindness towards him instead.  

“I pity you really.  You’ve been in my mind.  But I’ve been in yours.  I’ve seen what made you - what  filled you with so much anger.”   

Palpatine’s dark and terribly tragic childhood plays before his own eyes.  He is brought to his knees weeping and powerless as she walks him further and further into the Light Side of the sacred temple.

 She shows him tenderness as he ages before her mind’s eye.  She embraces him and calls him grandfather.  She cries for his pain and his suffering.  He can’t handle the agony of the Light side flooding him.  He is taken back to that sad and terrible childhood where only horrible things ever happened to him.  She says 

“I forgive you.”

Palpatine cries out.  He flees from her mind and her body.  She can since that he is gone, totally gone.  

When she emerges from her trance she finds the ghosts of ancient Jedi holding the still struggling old man between them.  

“You’ve purged the evil from your blood.  We’ll take it from here”

“We’ll keep this one imprisioned here where he can do no harm to anyone else for an eternity.”

“But what about his other clone?” Rey asks.

“It’s fate is yet to be decided.  The choices it will make will determine it’s future.  

“Perhaps a guide can steer it away from the Darkness.”

“Perhaps not.”


Finn sences the presence of a force sensitive being.  He runs away from Rose and Poe, prepared to strike down he last clone.  But when he finds it he discovers that it is only a ten year old boy.     

 

Rey rejoins Ben and assures him that she and their baby are safe with a kiss.    Finn communicates that he’s found the last clone.

Rey and Ben race to meet Finn.  When he introduces them to the boy child Ben instinctively reaches for his lightsaber.  The moment reminds him of his master Luke Skywalker raising a saber to kill him.  He remembers the darkness that flooded his soul in that moment.  He pauses.

Rey steps forward and asks the boy who he is and where he’s from.  He’s a slave as is his family.  He is another cast off clone left to live a hard life, forgotten by all.  His past is very similar to the young Anikan Skywalker.  Rey takes pity on him and shows him compassion.  She sets him free, and his parents, and all the slaves they are with.  She then vows to the boy that she will work to end slavery in the galaxy.  She  takes the young boy under her wing as a charge to make sure he knows kindness in his life.  

He will live with his loving parents.  But Rey, Finn, and Ben check on him and watch over him.    

 

In conclusion


This isn’t my usual content.  This blog is for reviews and essays about books that influenced me, not movie re-writes.  I just had to get this idea off my chest.  This is how I would have written the sequel trilogy, please share your thoughts and comments down below.  Tell me what you would have done differently.  

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