Wookieepedia has a pretty long explanation of this, but here is a condensed answer:
Lucas Licensing, the company owned by George Lucas that handles Star Wars merchandise, including the books, says that all books are canon, except for a few special cases, chiefly the Star Wars Infinities comic book series. That series is not canon. If, however, there are contradictions between the books and the movies, they say that whatever is in the movie is canon, and whatever contradiction is in the book is not canon.
George Lucas himself doesn't consider the books, or anything outside of the films, part of the Star Wars story. He once said, "The Star Wars story is really the tragedy of Darth Vader. That is the story. Once Vader dies, he doesn't come back to life, the Emperor doesn't get cloned and Luke doesn't get married." He does, however, have a few rules that Star Wars authors have to follow. On very few occasions he has influenced the stories of certain books personally. He ordered changes made to the plot of the Dark Empire comic series (the one where the Emperor gets cloned), and he ordered that the major character to have been killed off in Star by Star be changed to a different character. Otherwise, he claims not to have even read any of the books.
Leland Chee, who works for Lucas Licensing, has said that while the company operates as though all the extra material is canon, it is up to individual fans to decide for themselves what is part of Star Wars and what is not. Leland Chee also maintains something called the Holocron Database, which is basically Lucas Licensing's official list of what is canon, though it is not available to the public.
No, the movies came first. However, the first novelization of A New Hope was released WHILE the movie was being filmed, and was based completely on the screenplay.
yes actually there are more than one there are kids beginner books and a couple chapter books
Yes.
Seth mcfarlane is a huge fan of star wars and especially the director george lucas , in the DVD extra of " family guy : the blue harvest " you can find your true answer which is clearly a dedicated episode to george lucas.
Either Science Fiction: Star Wars Star Trek Or Fantasy Fiction: Harry Potter Birth of a King by Jenka
"A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far, Far Away..." Star Wars: The Phantom Menace Star Wars: Attack of The Clones Star Wars: The Clone Wars (Animated Film) Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith Solo: A Star Wars Story Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Star Wars: A New Hope Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Star Wars: Return of The Jedi Star Wars: The Force Awakens Star Wars: The Last Jedi Star Wars: Rise of The Skywalker
padme's full name is Padme Izar Amidala in the movie but since star wars is based on a true story it is Katie Elizabeth Loudermilk
It's a dramatic interpretation of the events. The original statement remains true.
no but i wish it was :)
No.
STAR WARS! Clones are like cyborgs in their armor. A true supersoldier.
Anakin Skywalker In "Star Wars"
well, I do not no, but someone posted on this that Lego star wars 3 the clone wars came out on the 25 of march that is not true it comes out on the 22 of march so goodbye.
get true jedi in ALL levels
There is one "true" successor to Star Wars Galaxies. Star Wars: The Old Republic was created by Bioware (creators of Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic, a fantastic RPG itself) under license from LucasArts. It's a traditional MMORPG in the style of World of Warcraft except... it has Jedi. Also, there are on-rails space segments, which are fun, but don't quite match what SWG had.
you must go back in time, in a far,far away galaxy.
Yes.But only 1,2,3,4,5,and 6 are films.
If by that you mean which TV series is considered part of the actual timeline, there's really no right answer for that. The timelines of the two series sort of conflict with one another and the computer animated series has made some events seen in graphic novels, books, etc. no longer canon.
You need to get true jedi story on all levels. It is called sandbox when you unlock it