I even finished Carey's Red Sector, which was a torture.......
I've never once had a book where I couldn't stand the first half and I really enjoyed the second
The only Star Trek novel I ever gave up reading after a few pages was John M. Ford's Final Reflection (Der letzte Schachzug).
Some consider it a gem, though.
I even finished Carey's Red Sector, which was a torture.......
Always amazes me how this is hated! I loved it! A few days later I found the Psi Phi bbs and realised I may have been the only one who did enjoy it.
The only one I never finished was [dating myself] The Abode of Life, which had a very basic error from misreading the star charts in the FJ Tech Manual on about page 3 that I recognized at once, confirmed in about a minute, and then laughed scornfully and threw across the room.
The Stiles character was annoying.
My only problem is that I don't know what "Provenance" means.![]()
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Do you mean the part about the inner edge of the Orion Arm being "about 10 kiloparsecs from Starbase 4"? That's certainly an error, but it seems a rather tiny one to abandon a book over. Certainly The Abode of Life has a wealth of problems, but that's far from the worst one.
The only one I never finished was [dating myself] The Abode of Life, which had a very basic error from misreading the star charts in the FJ Tech Manual on about page 3 that I recognized at once, confirmed in about a minute, and then laughed scornfully and threw across the room.
I've tried to find the error you're talking about in the text (courtesy of Google Books). Do you mean the part about the inner edge of the Orion Arm being "about 10 kiloparsecs from Starbase 4"? That's certainly an error, but it seems a rather tiny one to abandon a book over. Certainly The Abode of Life has a wealth of problems, but that's far from the worst one.
It was mistaking the first outpost along the Neutral Zone for Starbase One -- it was obviously because the gap between the spiral arms puts that one a little way away from the others on that map, but the one on the facing page clearly shows that Starbase One is w/in the UFP itself. Mainly it was the fact that it didn't occur to the author that the Feds would hardly build their first frakking starbase halfway across the quadrant on the Romulan border.
It was mistaking the first outpost along the Neutral Zone for Starbase One -- it was obviously because the gap between the spiral arms puts that one a little way away from the others on that map, but the one on the facing page clearly shows that Starbase One is w/in the UFP itself. Mainly it was the fact that it didn't occur to the author that the Feds would hardly build their first frakking starbase halfway across the quadrant on the Romulan border.
You assume that the author, G. Harry Stine (writing as Lee Correy), used the Tech Manual for reference. It may have been changed by an editor, or he may have plucked a number at random.
Well, to be fair, the map itself is confusingly marked; it uses the same hollow dots for both starbases and border outposts, the outpost marked "1" is well removed from the gray "Treaty Zone" area, and there's no other "1" on the map. So it's an easy mistake to make. I made it myself. Maybe you should've been mad at FJ.
You assume that the author, G. Harry Stine (writing as Lee Correy), used the Tech Manual for reference. It may have been changed by an editor, or he may have plucked a number at random.
No, it's clear from the text that the entire monologue Spock gives on pages 3 and 4 is based on the version of galactic geography presented in the SFTM map. It's more than just that one reference. (And it's interesting to realize that. I'd never actually made the connection before.)
Probably because I lived and breathed the FJ Tech Manual and Connie blueprints for a loooong time growing up.
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