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Anakin's Quest (Star Wars: Junior Jedi Knights #4) Paperback | Pages: 115 pages
Rating: 3.61 | 461 Users | 13 Reviews

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Original Title: Anakin's Quest (Star Wars: Junior Jedi Knights, #4)
ISBN: 0425168247 (ISBN13: 9780425168240)
Edition Language: English
Series: Star Wars: Junior Jedi Knights #4, Star Wars Legends

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Anakin Skywalker has been having terrible dreams of a secret cave on Dagobah. He asks his uncle Luke if he can go there to see if it's real. Luke says yes--but only if Tahiri, R2-D2, and the Jedi Master Ikrit go along. Anakin and his friends find more danger than they bargained for in the swamps of Dagobah. But they do find the cave. What is inside? And will Anakin be strong enough in the Force to face it?

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Title:Anakin's Quest (Star Wars: Junior Jedi Knights #4)
Author:Rebecca Moesta
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 115 pages
Published:June 15th 1998 by Berkley (first published April 1st 1997)
Categories:Media Tie In. Star Wars. Science Fiction. Fiction. Young Adult. Fantasy. Childrens

Rating Out Of Books Anakin's Quest (Star Wars: Junior Jedi Knights #4)
Ratings: 3.61 From 461 Users | 13 Reviews

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Rebecca Moesta is the author of several science fiction books. Although born in Germany, Rebecca was born to American parents and raised in Pasadena, California, where she lived until her early twenties. Rebecca graduated with a Bachelor of Liberal Arts from Cal State L.A.. and shortly after graduation married a former classmate from Caltech, becoming Rebecca Moesta Cowan.In 1981, the couple moved

This book follows the adventures of Anakin as he's becoming a Jedi. It involves Anakin, a couple of new friends and a unusual Jedi Master. A little predictable and not very exciting. Read it once, won't recommend it to anyone.

I was a bit disappointed, since the plot was not very fast-paced, and the endings less interesting than I'd expected. But I suppose it's not bad as Moesta's first novel on her own (as opposed to coauthoring).

The prologue is a bit confusing. Are the twins on Yavin? If so, why didn't they go home with Anakin? Why is there no interaction between the three in the series? And if it is indeed the case, then Moesta has contradicted what Richardson wrote in the first book - that Leia doesn't want all her kids out of the house at once.However, I find Moesta to be a better writer of Star Wars than Richardson.Moesta goes along with the third book in that Tahiri is 2 years younger than Anakin and was orphaned

I think my favorite of the Junior Jedi Knights series thus far. Ikrit, Anakin, and Tahiri were all better written than the first JJK book and the exploration of Anakin's concern regarding his heritage was perhaps not anything unusual or surprising, but was handled decently well with several quotable moments from Master Ikrit. This boy felt like a future great Jedi Knight more than he has in some of the earlier stories. :)The only low point in this book was the addition of the character of Uldir

This is a good series earmarked for ages 7-9. As I noted before, my seven-year-old just finished the Potter series so she's past this, and my five-year-old isn't ready for this. Just a light, quick read with all the usual goofy quirks of a kids book (i.e. silly coincidences, luckily-timed events, and farfetched permissions for the child characters). This one was a little worse than the first three because the character Uldir is pretty annoying.I won't punish any books this series with a low

2.5*

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