
I read this book as a kid because Han Solo was super cool. I reread this book as an adult because I found it in my mother's basement and also because Han Solo is super cool. It stars Han Solo and his dog which he taught to fire a crossbow. That seems dangerous but what is danger to Han Solo? It is like an oyster before doing it.
While reading this book, I kept thinking, "Why hasn't anybody made a novelization of Garfield?" Not like the whole Garfield series is one book. But maybe one book per week of strips. I would buy that exciting book. Sometimes when I read a Garfield comic strip, I think, "This would make a terrific movie script if it were padded out a bit and introduced some exciting new characters, like a hamster that is a spy and a sexy cat that is a sexy spy." But since nobody has done that yet, I would recommend this book because it stars super cool Han Solo.
While reading this book, I kept thinking, "Why hasn't anybody made a novelization of Garfield?" Not like the whole Garfield series is one book. But maybe one book per week of strips. I would buy that exciting book. Sometimes when I read a Garfield comic strip, I think, "This would make a terrific movie script if it were padded out a bit and introduced some exciting new characters, like a hamster that is a spy and a sexy cat that is a sexy spy." But since nobody has done that yet, I would recommend this book because it stars super cool Han Solo.
at a yard sale in the early 2000s i once found the "box set" edition of the Han Solo trilogy. you know, when "box set" just meant they wrapped three or four books in cereal box cardboard to sell the publisher's surplus printings at a fractional markdown. this specific book, At Star's End, contained a small collection of two dollar bills secreted between the pages
ReplyDeleteanyway. i always meant to read the lando adventures and never did
Oh! Oh! Hoo boy, I've got reviews of the Lando Adventures too! Whenever I get around to sticking them up!
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