FILE - This undated file photo provided by Matthew Westmoreland shows Riley Howell. The North Carolina college student hailed by police as a hero for preventing more injuries and deaths after a gunman opened fire in a classroom in April 2019 has been immortalized as a Jedi by the production company for the Star Wars franchise. (Matthew Westmoreland via AP, File)
FILE - This undated file photo provided by Matthew Westmoreland shows Riley Howell. The North Carolina college student hailed by police as a hero for preventing more injuries and deaths after a gunman opened fire in a classroom in April 2019 has been immortalized as a Jedi by the production company for the Star Wars franchise. (Matthew Westmoreland via AP, File) Credit: Matthew Westmoreland

A North Carolina college student hailed by police as a hero for preventing more injuries and deaths after a gunman opened fire in a classroom has now been immortalized as a Jedi by the production company for the Star Wars franchise.

News outlets report the family of Riley Howell, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte student who is described as a huge Star Wars fan, was tipped off by Lucasfilm, in May that it planned to honor him in a forthcoming book, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker โ€“ The Visual Dictionary. The book was released by publisher DK to coincide with the release of the new film Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.

In May, the fan relations team for Lucasfilm wrote a letter to Howellโ€™s family expressing condolences.

โ€œRileyโ€™s courage and selflessness brings out the Jedi in all of us,โ€ wrote fan relations team member Lucas Seastrom. โ€œWe hope that you may rejoice in his memory, and we join you in honoring his life and example.โ€

โ€œAs a small tribute, our Story Group has incorporated a reimagining of Rileyโ€™s name as a character in the Star Wars galaxy,โ€ Seastrom continued. โ€œThe Force will be with Riley, and all of you, always.โ€

The entry in the book is just 66 words, but credits Jedi master and historian โ€œRi-Lee Howellโ€ with collecting โ€œmany of the earliest accounts of exploration and codifications of The Force.โ€

Riley Howellโ€™s mother, Natalie Henry-Howell, told The Charlotte Observer that that this actually marks the second time her son has appeared in a โ€œStar Warsโ€ book: When he was a little boy, an uncle had a personalized book made for Riley that put him in the starring role of The Phantom Menace.

โ€œIt was a big hit of a gift,โ€ she recalls, noting that the inclusion in the new book is far more significant.

โ€œAnd I like the way they actually left his last name,โ€ Henry-Howell says. โ€œI think he would really be appreciative of that. Because, you know, they could have just said Ri-Lee โ€“ Jedi Ri-Lee โ€“ and weโ€™d be guessing the whole time about whether or not that was really (him), but they put his last name in there just to really honor him … and that really made me cry when I heard about it.โ€

The entire family went to see the new movie on opening night. They brought his ashes, and left a seat open for him.

โ€œI think,โ€ Henry-Howell says, โ€œhe would have liked the way it ended.โ€

Howell, 21, and a classmate died April 30 when a gunman opened fire in a classroom in the Kennedy building on UNCCโ€™s campus. Four other students were injured, but police say Howellโ€™s actions prevented more injuries or loss of life.

โ€œYouโ€™re either going to run, hide and shield, or youโ€™re going to take the fight to the assailant,โ€ Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department Chief Kerr Putney said. โ€œHaving no place to run and hide, he did the last.โ€

Lauren Westmoreland, Howellโ€™s longtime girlfriend, said in an email, that the honor of becoming a Jedi was one that was closest to his heart.

โ€œThough he wasnโ€™t an artist, he loved to draw the clone trooper helmets all the time, sometimes even on my birthday cards,โ€ Westmoreland said.

Laurenโ€™s father, Kevin Westmoreland, said Howell studied the Star Wars universe for most of his life.

โ€œHe had a very strong sense of good and evil, and how to live life as someone who looked out for others,โ€ Westmoreland said. โ€œSeeing him listed as both a Jedi and a historian in Star Wars lore is a perfect way to connect him to this story and the characters he loved.โ€