The galaxy’s most calculating villain is trading prose for panels. Star Wars: Thrawn (The Manga), Vol. 1 brings Timothy Zahn’s celebrated novel into a fresh black-and-white format, with art and adaptation by Man Tsang. The US edition arrives on September 29, 2026, published under the Random House Worlds and Disney Manga banner.
For the uninitiated, Grand Admiral Thrawn is the rare Star Wars antagonist who wins through intellect rather than brute Force. Zahn’s source novel charts the blue-skinned, red-eyed Chiss’s rise through the ranks of the Galactic Empire — a story driven less by lightsaber duels and more by tactical chess. That cerebral tone makes it an unexpectedly natural fit for manga, where a single thoughtful close-up can carry as much weight as a fleet engagement.
Here is what’s confirmed for this first volume:
- Format: 224 pages
- Price: US$30.00
- ISBN-13: 979-8217376063
- Reading age: 10 years and up
- Adaptation: Man Tsang, from the novel by Timothy Zahn
Readers in the UK got a head start: the paperback landed there on June 9, 2026, leaving US fans to wait out the summer for their copy. That staggered rollout has become a familiar pattern for Disney Manga titles, but it does mean import-hungry collectors already have a sense of how Tsang’s linework handles Thrawn’s signature stillness and the cold geometry of Imperial command.
What makes a manga adaptation interesting here isn’t just the format swap — it’s the editorial challenge. Zahn’s writing leans heavily on internal monologue and Thrawn’s habit of dissecting enemy psychology through their art and culture. Translating that into sequential panels demands real visual storytelling, not just dialogue balloons stapled over recycled illustrations. At 224 pages, Vol. 1 has room to breathe, suggesting the team is pacing the narrative rather than cramming the whole novel into a single book.
The 10-and-up rating signals this is firmly within all-ages territory, in line with most of the Disney Manga line. It’s a smart on-ramp for younger readers who know Thrawn from the animated series Rebels or his live-action appearances, but haven’t yet tackled the prose novels.
For longtime Star Wars readers, this is another data point in a years-long effort to keep Thrawn front and center across every medium imaginable — novels, animation, comics, and now manga. For new fans, it’s a low-commitment way to meet one of the saga’s smartest minds. Either way, US shelves get the import-quality treatment on September 29.