“Two there should be; no more, no less. One to embody the power, the other to crave it.”
-Darth Bane.
As we learned in Star Wars: Episode I, The Phantom Menace, there are always two Sith, a master, and an apprentice. Such is the way of the Sith, evil users of the Dark Side of the Force and the perpetual nemesis of the Jedi Knights. But it was not always so. Once, the Sith were as numerous as the Jedi, and swelled their ranks into an evil Brotherhood of Darkness that threatened to march across the galaxy.
And into such times, a millennium before the days of Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, and Princess Leia, was born Dessel, a day laborer trapped mining cortosis on the outer rim, hopelessly in debt to the corporation that sold the extremely strong metal to the republic. Desperately seeking a way off the backwater rock that has become a tomb to so many of his coworkers, Des is constantly getting into trouble. And when things go sour during a card game with Republic troopers, Des makes a fateful decision: to escape his indentured servitude forever and join the armies of the Sith. After all, what has the Republic and it’s Jedi Knights ever done for him?
Des quickly rises through the ranks of the Sith army, with the help of the strange glimpses into the future that he has experienced all his life. In time, he comes to the attention of the Sith Masters, who discover that the Dark Side of the Force rages within him. Sent to Koriban to train in the dark ways of the Sith, Des discards his given name, the last vestige of his old existence, to become Darth Bane. Discovering the ancient Sith holocrons that hold the secrets to the true power of the Dark Side, Bane soon has plans to restore the order to its former glory. And before long, the very Sith Masters who have trained him discover that Bane, whom they had hoped would be a powerful weapon against the Jedi, may turn out to be the instrument of their own destruction instead.
Such is the tale of Star Wars: Darth Bane, Path of Destruction, a very different Star Wars novel set in the days of the Old Republic. With characters and situations far different from those we’ve become accustomed too in any of the Star Wars films, Path of Destruction still has enough familiar to readers to ingrain it into the Star Wars mythos and give it the feel of the saga.
It also makes the book genuinely interesting, delving as it does into a segment of Star Wars lore heretofore previously relegated to the comic book series by Dark Horse. But it does answer questions about why the Sith are always limited to two, questions brought up in the first Star Wars prequel.
Being a tale told mostly from the perspective of the Sith, Path of Destruction, has a decidedly dark tone to it. Then too, character development is relatively minimal, except perhaps for Bane himself, whom we become familiar with but can never really identify with. The plot, too, is a bit predictable, although author Drew Karpyshyn does weave in a few surprises for us along the way.
Most readers will tear through the book’s 389 pages in no time. But most of all, Path of Destruction is great fun, a chance to see a different side of the Star Wars Galaxy and learn more about the evil Sith that we so love to hate. And a way to travel a bit longer ago into that galaxy we love that’s so far, far away.


