Yrica Quell is probably the closest thing to a protagonist we have here; though the book does split into multiple viewpoints within the pilots of what becomes Alphabet Squadron, Quell's is the first, and I think the one with the most page time. And when we meet Quell, she's in a Republic prison camp, being given therapy by an ex-torture droid, trying to get back into the cockpit of a starfighter, trying to prove herself, because she's a defecting Imperial pilot. Quell is someone who always seems one hammer blow away from breaking, often unyielding, always trying to get the best out of her fellow pilots, but not always bridging the gap between what she thinks they should be and who they actually are. Her paradigm is rooted in the model of order, of a galactic superpower speedrunning repression, of a military that requires unified models of conduct and thinks its hardware is worth more than its pilots. The New Republic, with roots in a guerrilla insurgency, doesn't have those institutions, doesn't operate the same way, and Quell is less a fish out of water and more a fish rapidly descending into an acid bath. Still, she's trying her best - and watching her work with agency and intentionality to change who she is, and who she is perceived as, is a joy. That said, there are hints, even as the story opens, that Quell has some secrets up her sleeve. In this, she's by no means alone, but hers may be the most impactful. Still, as I say, she isn't alone, surrounded by a squadron of malefactors, malcontents, iconoclasts and outright pirates. Each of them has time to come up onto the page, and each of them takes that time to let us know that they're real, that their actions matter, and each aside and each small story (or...lie) tells the reader a little more about the folks we're dealing with. They're people. Not always people we'd like, but always people we can empathise with, people we can understand. Interestingly, this is true to an extent when we're occasionally shown the perspective of the antagonists, the generally malevolent Shadow Wing. We know them a little from Quell, but the Imperials have their own perspectives as well, their own truths. Victims of a war they can't bring themselves to walk away from, and perpetrators of sufficient horror that they don't know if they can or should. They're given humanity, but not excused.
Because this is a story that wants to talk less about the glory of war, though there is some of that, too, in the graceful dance of fighters in the black, and more about the consequences, about the costs. About people making decisions that they regret (or don't) for the rest of their lives. About friendship, about what people owe to one another. About the price of rebellion, the price of moral clarity, and the price of acquiescence in the face of atrocity. Alphabet are on a mission, but it's not entirely a mission of justice, being just as much one of revenge. They all have their reasons, and as they come to know each other and be honest with each other about why they are where they are...we stand alongside them.
I'm not doing a great job of selling this, but let me say this. It's possibly the best Star Wars war story I've read, including those original X-Wing books that I loved so much I almost wore the pages out. It's bloody and brutal and ambiguous and messy and heartfelt and true. And every so often, there's a space battle that makes you sit up and feel that tightness in your chest as you wait to see if everyone survies. It's a story with teeth - emotional and otherwise. It's a story that wants you to think, that wants you to feel, that wants you to fall into it. And it is, at the end of the day, a bloody great story - I went off to read the sequel immediately, and I hope that you do as well.




