---
product_id: 1210622
title: "Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith - The Collected Stories"
price: "1033012₫"
currency: VND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.vn/products/1210622-star-wars-lost-tribe-of-the-sith-the-collected-stories
store_origin: VN
region: Vietnam
---

# Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith - The Collected Stories

**Price:** 1033012₫
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## Description

At last in one volume, the eight original installments of the epic Lost Tribe of the Sith eBook series . . . along with the explosive, never-before-published finale, Pandemonium —more than one hundred pages of new material! Five thousand years ago. After a Jedi ambush, the Sith mining ship Omen lies wrecked on a remote, unknown planet. Its commander, Yaru Korsin, battles the bloodshed of a mutinous faction led by his own brother. Marooned and facing death, the Sith crew have no choice but to venture into their desolate surroundings. They face any number of brutal challenges—vicious predators, lethal plagues, tribal people who worship vengeful gods—and like true Sith warriors, counter them with the dark side of the Force. The struggles are just beginning for the proud, uncompromising Sith, driven as they are to rule at all costs. They will vanquish the primitive natives, and they will find their way back to their true destiny as rulers of the galaxy. But as their legacy grows over thousands of years, the Sith ultimately find themselves tested by the most dangerous threat of all: the enemy within.

Review: Finally collected in one place - I actually downloaded all these book at once on my kindle, but now I have them all collected in one shiny package with the never before released last part. Man was this a fun ride. This series covers the lost sith tribe we got to see glimpses in the fate of the jedi series. It shows just how far back greed and corruption of the sith actually go. Even right from the start when the a whole sith tribe is about to be wiped out by a space shuttle crash. It really shows the downside to the sith empire. Everyone wants to be on top and because there is so much backstabbing and corruption the sith will never succeed. Like most novel in the Star Wars universe this is a great read the stories or short and to the point and just plain fun. So pick it up.
Review: Digging into the Lost Tribe's history - For the past few years, the Star Wars Expanded Universe was largely focused on a series of novels collectively called "Fate of the Jedi". One of the major antagonist groups of the story was the so-called "Lost Tribe of the Sith", which pretty much came out of nowhere, spawning the rather memorable Vestara Khai. It also introduced a compelling back story for the Lost Tribe, which was only marginally explored in those novels. Concurrent with the main novels, however, a series of short stories were released (for free, no less) as e-books. Knowing that they would eventually be gathered into one collection, I waited for that to happen. Sure enough, here it is, and perhaps equally as predictable, the collection comes with a novella that brings the sprawling narrative to a firm conclusion. (Notice that the novella wasn't free, only the stories leading up to it; the novella is only available in the collection!) The nature of the collection is such that some of the stories interconnect directly, one after the other, but it covers a period of 2000 years or so before all is said and done. In essence, it is the long process of the arrival of the human Sith to Kesh, their early struggles with non-human fellow Sith and native Keshari, and ultimately their path to survival. (It also leads into the recently started "Lost Tribe of the Sith" comic series from Dark Horse.) By its very nature, the collection is rather narrow in terms of audience. If you didn't read a word of "Fate of the Jedi", and no practically nothing of the much older comics continuity of roughly the same period, a lot of the references and context will mean nothing. There is some basic arc structure to the collection, tying it all together, but I'm not sure it's enough to make this a must-read for the casually initiated. For my own part, the Lost Tribe has represented one of the few opportunities for those working on the Star Wars Expanded Universe to provide the Sith with a reasonable philosophical underpinning for their vision of galactic society. Various books have delved into the struggle to balance Jedi righteousness with a free government, but the Sith (their equal but opposite) has rarely been anything more than monolithically evil and self-serving. To some degree, this book does touch on the notion that the Sith themselves run into the problem of what happens when an entire society builds itself on the notion of individual hunger for power and control. In short, society breaks down in such a situation, unless there is something for that society to strive for as a unit. Looking at this notion from a historical standpoint in the real world, there's some truth to it. But it still retains the primary problem: the Sith remain two-dimensional villains. They don't pursue self-interest logically (a philosophy that recognizes that serving one's own interests means attending to those of society in a rational, balanced fashion), but rather, by constantly trying to screw each other over. It reminds me very much of the depiction of Slytherins in "Harry Potter" or Republicans in just about any Aaron Sorkin production; while there is lip service to the existence of well-balanced individuals in those groups, all too often, it descends into a skewed stereotype. Still, this is not entirely the fault of the author, since this all derives from Lucas' original inability to portray the Sith as anything but melodramatic villains of unimaginable evil. It's not as if Anakin was lured to the Dark Side by persuasive argument! For what it is, the book delivers exactly what one would expect, and provides some solid short stories in the process.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #50,327 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #473 in Science Fiction Crime & Mystery #1,026 in Space Operas #1,416 in Science Fiction Adventures |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 2,565 Reviews |

## Images

![Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith - The Collected Stories - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81StmMQsqFL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Finally collected in one place
*by A***S on August 20, 2013*

I actually downloaded all these book at once on my kindle, but now I have them all collected in one shiny package with the never before released last part. Man was this a fun ride. This series covers the lost sith tribe we got to see glimpses in the fate of the jedi series. It shows just how far back greed and corruption of the sith actually go. Even right from the start when the a whole sith tribe is about to be wiped out by a space shuttle crash. It really shows the downside to the sith empire. Everyone wants to be on top and because there is so much backstabbing and corruption the sith will never succeed. Like most novel in the Star Wars universe this is a great read the stories or short and to the point and just plain fun. So pick it up.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Digging into the Lost Tribe's history
*by J***N on September 12, 2012*

For the past few years, the Star Wars Expanded Universe was largely focused on a series of novels collectively called "Fate of the Jedi". One of the major antagonist groups of the story was the so-called "Lost Tribe of the Sith", which pretty much came out of nowhere, spawning the rather memorable Vestara Khai. It also introduced a compelling back story for the Lost Tribe, which was only marginally explored in those novels. Concurrent with the main novels, however, a series of short stories were released (for free, no less) as e-books. Knowing that they would eventually be gathered into one collection, I waited for that to happen. Sure enough, here it is, and perhaps equally as predictable, the collection comes with a novella that brings the sprawling narrative to a firm conclusion. (Notice that the novella wasn't free, only the stories leading up to it; the novella is only available in the collection!) The nature of the collection is such that some of the stories interconnect directly, one after the other, but it covers a period of 2000 years or so before all is said and done. In essence, it is the long process of the arrival of the human Sith to Kesh, their early struggles with non-human fellow Sith and native Keshari, and ultimately their path to survival. (It also leads into the recently started "Lost Tribe of the Sith" comic series from Dark Horse.) By its very nature, the collection is rather narrow in terms of audience. If you didn't read a word of "Fate of the Jedi", and no practically nothing of the much older comics continuity of roughly the same period, a lot of the references and context will mean nothing. There is some basic arc structure to the collection, tying it all together, but I'm not sure it's enough to make this a must-read for the casually initiated. For my own part, the Lost Tribe has represented one of the few opportunities for those working on the Star Wars Expanded Universe to provide the Sith with a reasonable philosophical underpinning for their vision of galactic society. Various books have delved into the struggle to balance Jedi righteousness with a free government, but the Sith (their equal but opposite) has rarely been anything more than monolithically evil and self-serving. To some degree, this book does touch on the notion that the Sith themselves run into the problem of what happens when an entire society builds itself on the notion of individual hunger for power and control. In short, society breaks down in such a situation, unless there is something for that society to strive for as a unit. Looking at this notion from a historical standpoint in the real world, there's some truth to it. But it still retains the primary problem: the Sith remain two-dimensional villains. They don't pursue self-interest logically (a philosophy that recognizes that serving one's own interests means attending to those of society in a rational, balanced fashion), but rather, by constantly trying to screw each other over. It reminds me very much of the depiction of Slytherins in "Harry Potter" or Republicans in just about any Aaron Sorkin production; while there is lip service to the existence of well-balanced individuals in those groups, all too often, it descends into a skewed stereotype. Still, this is not entirely the fault of the author, since this all derives from Lucas' original inability to portray the Sith as anything but melodramatic villains of unimaginable evil. It's not as if Anakin was lured to the Dark Side by persuasive argument! For what it is, the book delivers exactly what one would expect, and provides some solid short stories in the process.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ John Jackson Miller writes a most compelling and enjoyable Star Wars story for the everyday fan.
*by A***I on March 10, 2015*

John Jackson Miller writes a most compelling and enjoyable Star Wars story for the everyday fan. This was a lite and brisk read broken down into small vignettes which focused on different aspects of the world he creates. A departure for most die hard Star Wars fans, it allows the casual reader to jump in with little to no background knowledge. This isn't to say that those who grew up with the Expanded Universe will be disappointed. On the contrary, Miller's writing is so crisp that it can suck all into its descriptive cinescapes. This lovely departure is filled with unique landscapes, well thought out technology and a cast of characters that are easy to make your own. This might be off the beaten Star Wars path, but it's a wonderful journey to take.

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*Last updated: 2026-06-03*