Text by W. Haden Blackman All new full color illustrations by Ian Fullwood From the beat-up landspeeders that whisk travelers between desert towns on Tatooine to Jabba the Hutt’s luxurious sail barge and the elegant Naboo Royal Starship, the vehicles and vessels in the Star Wars universe have captivated millions of delighted fans.
In light of the ever-expanding saga, the New Essential Guide to Vehicles and Vessels features completely updated entries that cover more than 150 ships, along with brand new, full-color illustrations by dazzling artist Ian Fullwood. This new volume encompasses craft from all five movies, the bestselling novels of the New Jedi Order, comics, TV specials, and games. Inside you will find:
• Detailed profiles and vital statistics for each vessel, including data covering the vehicle’s construction, size, maximum speed, and its role in Star Wars history • A revealing Layman’s Guide to Technology, covering common terms applied to each class of vehicle • An outline of engine technologies that drive the craft across the Star Wars galaxy, and of the unique weapons they boast • Schematics for each vehicle, providing the reader with instant visual reference Discover the modifications Han Solo and Chewbacca made on the Millennium Falcon to make it one of the fastest vessels in the galaxy; the secrets of the Imperial All Terrain Armored Transport Walker, possibly the most formidable military vehicle ever assembled; the reasons the Tribubble Bongo Sub is the chosen way to navigate the watery depths of Naboo; and the unique and lethal properties of the Yuuzhan Vong’s living starship, the Coralskipper.
Skiffs, cargo haulers, shuttles, podracers, gunships, sandcrawlers– if it flies, glides, drives, or speeds in the Star Wars galaxy, you’ll find it in The New Essential Guide to Vehicle and Vessels! Ballantine Books/Science Fiction Visit the official Star Wars Web site at www.starwars.com Visit our Web site at www.delreydigital.com
Bill Smith worked his way through undergraduate school firing steam locomotives on the railroad, then paid for graduate school as a dormitory resident advisor. Three years later, he was the acting chief of television for a branch of the Air Force in Washington, then acting assistant to the under secretary of a federal department. He was the founding executive director of a state wide public broadcasting network, a founder of a seventeen state public broadcasting system, and the recipient of the George Foster Peabody Award.
I'm putting this in science and don't care that it is fiction. Maybe I need to add a category Sci-Fi. I love this book and think a lot of the Star Wars fans will like it. I never thought about the sheer raw number of vehicles that are present in the series. Wow!
I think a truer fan will do better getting through the book that even I will. It was a bit hard to remember everything. That is despite the fact that the writing is def from a fan to a fan. The little tidbits remind you of the scenes where said vehicle showed up. and it's interesting to think about how the innovations happened from movie to movie.
In the end, I seriously wanted to rewatch all the series and all it's prequils with this book in front of me, so I could be a bit smarter. Good stuff!
I friggin loved this book back in the day. Reading about technical specs and manufacturing info for fictional space ships was very much my jam. Also fun to draw them.
Fresh off reading the Essential Guide to Planets, I picked up this one with relatively low expectations. To my surprise, this was a fun and quick read. Most of the information is about the vehicles and ships and not about the plots from Star Wars novels and comics which was a nice change of pace. The information about the ships and vehicles felt like it was useful and unique to this book which made this Essential Guide worth reading. I was surprised that even the sciencey parts didn't cause me to lose interest. If the idea of this book sounds appealing to you or you thirst for Star Wars knowledge, then it is worth picking up.
A nice book with some good illustrations to go with the text. It is with the lack of technical information which I felt let this book down. It for the most part has some interesting information on the vehicles, at times focusing more on extractions from novels or films and less on the vehicle or vessel.
I know this is a tech book for a fictional universe but I prefer to have more of a technical and factual feel to my guides.
Fun and interesting none the less for any Star Wars or Sci Fi fans. It predates the prequels and all of the subsequent prequel spin offs. This is either a good or a bad thing, depending on your perspective.
My personal favourites of the "Star Wars" trade paperback guide books...it satisfies the SF futuristic techie geek within. Mind you, it's not quite up to the standards of the "Star Trek" guides...but we'd be unfairly comparing apples to oranges.
detailed information out the vehicles and peoples of the star wars universe with drawings sketches and blue prints for the different and varied forms of space ships, shuttles, and other vehicles of different worlds