Doesn't that occupy, like, a single page of the novel?And Imzadi wasn't the first book to delve into characters' backstories; arguably that was Planet of Judgment, which told the story of McCoy's divorce for the first time.
Doesn't that occupy, like, a single page of the novel?And Imzadi wasn't the first book to delve into characters' backstories; arguably that was Planet of Judgment, which told the story of McCoy's divorce for the first time.
Doesn't that occupy, like, a single page of the novel?And Imzadi wasn't the first book to delve into characters' backstories; arguably that was Planet of Judgment, which told the story of McCoy's divorce for the first time.
Ah, that's a lot more than I remembered-- I just had a vague memory of the walkout scene. I am on campus and my copy of Planet of Judgement (for some reason!) is not kept in my office.Four pages, actually. And it's one of several flashbacks into Spock's and McCoy's pasts in the book. In all, we get:
- A lengthy recap of the "Amok Time" arena sequence, based on the Blish adaptation.
- The day McCoy's wife walked out on him and he decided to enlist in Starfleet.
- The 10-year-old Spock coming to Earth to stay with Amanda's relatives and encountering bigotry from his cousins.
- McCoy getting mugged during shore leave on a wild and lawless frontier planet, during his time on the Enterprise.
Plus other bits of character backstory about Kirk and the supporting cast here and there.
An interesting list although I admit that I personally consider the lack of inclusion for either Strangers From The Sky and/or Spock's World to be a fairly major oversight.
Spock's World was the first hardcover Trek novel from Pocket, kicking off the ongoing hardcover line. The only previous hardcover Trek novel had been the very first one, Mission to Horatius.
As for Strangers from the Sky, it was the second of the three "giant" paperback novels that were the forerunners of the hardcover line, but I don't know why it would rate as more of a milestone than the first giant novel, Enterprise: The First Adventure. Perhaps because it was the first attempt to portray first contact between Earth and Vulcan?
Fair enough, although personally the use of hardbacks isn't something I'd really consider to be in the top ten milestones to write about.
Well, the reason they were in hardcover is because it was more of a "prestige" format, and they were written to be bigger, standout stories. Two of the items on your top-10 list, Imzadi and The Eugenics Wars, were part of the hardcover line, as were the William Shatner novels, the "Vulcan's Noun" novels, the Voyager biographical novels Mosaic and Pathways, and other notable novels like The Lost Years, Reunion, Dark Mirror, Sarek, Q-Squared, Federation, Kahless, The Genesis Wave, etc. Basically, if the monthly paperbacks were the "episodes," the hardcovers were the "movies."
Have to admit I don't know these books. What is it about them that makes them milestones in Trek literature?
What is "What Culture"?Over at What Culture, Ian Coomber has provided a list of ten milestone Star Trek novels. It should be emphasized that this is a list that's more about importance than quality. I'd say it's a strong list, and I'm not just saying that because I'm at #3.
For those too lazy to click, they are:
#10: Mission to Horatius by Mack Reynolds
#9: The Romulan Way by Diane Duane & Peter Morwood
#8: Imzadi by Peter David
#7: the Invasion! miniseries by Carey, Smith, Rusch, Graf, and ab Hugh
#6: House of Cards by Peter David
#5: Avatar Books 1-2 by S.D. Perry
#4: The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh by Greg Cox
#3: Articles of the Federation by Keith R.A. DeCandido
#2: The Good that Men Do by Andy Mangels & Michael A. Martin
#1: Before Dishonor by Peter David
I haven't read it myself, but What Culture is a web-site blog that @MadeIndescribable wrote this article for back in 2014, @KRAD posted about it then, and now MI is a member here, it's being discussed again. (Nothing disappears without a trace...)What is "What Culture"?
Mission to Horatius seems to be notorious for some reason. Anyone know why?
Mission to Horatius seems to be notorious for some reason. Anyone know why?
Because it's a kid's book, whose primary distinction is that, historically, it was the very first STAR TREK novel ever published. I confess I've never read it, but it's remembered for being the first TREK book, not necessarily the best one. And it was aimed at a younger, much less demanding audience than later Trek books.
A major subplot is that the crew is dangerously bored, so McCoy(?) trains a lab rat to dance so everyone can get excited at the idea that they may all die from the bubonic plague. There's also a planet of literal cave-men. So, I'd say about a six if Gold Key is a ten in terms of off-basedness.Also, I gather that it has a rather inaccurate interpretation of the Trek universe, due to being written so early. Sort of like the Gold Key comics, although I'm not sure whether it's that far off base.
So, I'd say about a six if Gold Key is a ten in terms of off-basedness.
The above are all Great Star Trek Novels. I would add, in no particular order, Federation, Shadows on the Sun, anything on the Romulans by Diane Duane, The Lost Years, Sarek, Vulcan's Forge and a bunch of others that I read over twenty years ago. Thick. Long. Great brain candy.
Finally found time to click through the actual article. Thanks for the kind words about the Eugenics Wars books, and let it be noted that Dave Mack's DESTINY saga comes in for praise even if it didn't technically make the list.
Finally found time to click through the actual article. Thanks for the kind words about the Eugenics Wars books, and let it be noted that Dave Mack's DESTINY saga comes in for praise even if it didn't technically make the list.
Thanks for the great work that went into them. Have to admit I was astounded at exactly how much real world historical detail was included.
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