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Reading Marathon: The Typhon Pact... and Beyond!

Typhon Pact: Plagues of Night by David R. George III
Published:
June 2012
Time Span: April 2382 - August 2382

The original run of four Typhon Pact novels wasn't one story, but four standalone ones with a common framework, like the Deep Space Nine relaunch's Worlds of... miniseries. One of the interesting things about Plagues of Night is that it takes most of the previous Typhon Pact novels inside itself. It begins just after Rough Beasts of Empire ends; its opening chapters overlap with the opening chapters of Zero Sum Game, showing the theft from Utopia Planitia from a different perspective; later, we see Bashir and Sarina debriefed following ZSG's events; we also get some context for the Tholian machinations in Paths of Disharmony. On the other hand, if Seize the Fire was mentioned, I missed it. (Oh, what a shame.) The first two-thirds of the novel span fourteen months.

These fourteen months make Plagues of Night very much a novel of set-up, especially for the traditional protagonist characters, who we just see snippets of until the final third or so. We get glimpses of Sisko captaining the Robinson, the Enterprise battling Tzenkethi privateers, and updates for a number of long-unseen characters on Deep Space 9 (plus introductions to new ones). These characters don't really drive any kind of plot, except on a personal level. The plot drivers all happen at the galactic political level, with characters like Praetor Gell Kamemor and President Nan Bacco making the choices that shape the story. All of this is clearly to set up the final third of the novel, which brings a plan of Romulan dissidents and Tzenkethi in the Gamma Quadrant to fruition, one that affects the Enterprise, the Robinson, and Deep Space 9. This part of the novel is suspenseful, as the reader can feel something building, but is uncertain as to exactly what. The cliffhanger, even though I was long spoiled on it, was still impressive and epic. It also is more interesting than the previous Typhon Pact novels because it explores them as a pact; there's much more of the consequences of the alliance than in the four standalone novels, which honestly often didn't do much with the pact itself despite the subtitle.

You might think this would make Plagues of Night very much a novel of two halves, but I surprised myself by liking the set-up. I think it's down to David George's trademark focus on character, and because you can get a sense that something is happening, even if you're not entirely sure what. Some parts of the book I'm a little uncertain what they added (the Enterprise crew pretending to be freighter), but it's got a lot of good scenes that carry you along: Martok's arrival at the summit of Khitomer Accord and Typhon Pact powers is delightful, for example, and I really liked the scenes of between Captains Ro and Picard. It's not a fast novel, but it is one that keeps you reading. It feels much more well-shaped than Rough Beasts of Empire, with its meandering plots.

I objected to a lot of what happened in Rough Beasts on the basis of character implausibility. It's interesting how Plagues of Night kind of rectifies some of this. I still don't think Sisko running away from Kasidy without consulting her makes any sense, but Plagues wisely spends its time exploring the after-effects rather than the causes of these events. This material convinces me in a way that the events it follows from did not. I don't buy that Sisko would leave Kasidy, but if he did, this is how it would play out afterwards. The novel does still lean too much on unseen events; the attempted kidnap of Rebecca isn't very successful as an explanation for some of the Siskos' emotional issues when we haven't actually seen it. And I'm still totally unconvinced by everything that involves Kira as a vedek.

But as I alluded to above, this novel ends on a cliffhanger, and it feels like one of those duologies that's one story in two parts, rather than two linked stories. So my complete reaction to what happens here will have to wait until the story is complete. But The Struggle Within aside, this is the best Typhon Pact story so far, for its continued suspense, and for its fuller exploration of the politics, and for its more convincing character work.

Continuity Notes:
  • You might think a mission where the Enterprise spends a lot of time in close contact with an alien culture might require some kind of specialist, but all T'Ryssa Chen does as far as I can tell is fly the Argelian freighter that the Enterprise uses to capture the Tzenkethi privateers.
  • Considering all Andorians serving in sensitive positions were recalled from their posts, there sure are a lot of them serving on Deep Space 9. (I know Plagues of Night actually came out before Fallen Gods, so that's actually another point against Fallen Gods.)
  • You lot said that Indistinguishable from Magic gets ignored, but each of the books to follow it thus far has referenced it; Plagues of Night even bothers to retcon how come Tomalak was proconsul in a passing comment in Indistinguishable when he was said to be stepping down and returning to the navy in Rough Beasts.
  • On the other hand, La Forge's rank reduction to commander seems completely unnecessary; I'm not sure what would have been lost by having him continue as "captain of engineering" as per Indistinguishable. La Forge is now second officer of the Enterprise, which raised the question for me of who had been in the position since Kadohata departed in Losing the Peace, around two years ago.
  • Can anyone remind me what is being referred to when Sisko thinks that Vaughn could have been the Emissary in the "so-called mirror universe"? Also is the first time "mirror universe" is used as a term in story?
  • Was Laas always this much of an asshole?
Other Notes:
  • The cover, logo, and spine design change for this installment of Typhon Pact. Ships instead of faces, new fonts, slightly different alignment of text. I wouldn't mind, except I can see just looking at my bookshelf that for some reason the old design comes back for Brinkmanship.
  • Prynn is reading the Iliad aloud to her comatose father, Elias Vaughn. Sisko thinks it's appropriate because it's about destiny and fate, but it's also appropriate because the Iliad is the inspiration for Tennyson's "Ulysses," itself one of the inspirations for the Mission: Gamma miniseries that starred Vaughn.
  • George does have a weird storytelling tic, of occasionally summarizing events instead of showing them. Worf finds signs the Romulans have already been to the Gamma Quadrant, and doesn't know what to do. We later find out what he did dropped in as a summary during a Picard scene; I don't get why we just didn't see this scene.
  • Am I wrong in feeling like there's no way a Jem'Hadar could wear a Breen helmet?
That's it for now! I'm going to take a break and read some other stuff before cycling back to Star Trek novels... I just hope it's not as long a break as my last one; I don't want to wait eleven months to find out how this cliffhanger resolves.
 
Can anyone remind me what is being referred to when Sisko thinks that Vaughn could have been the Emissary in the "so-called mirror universe"?

Hmm. I'm not sure. EV had an encounter with an orb of the Prophets in Unity. He even met Benny Russel. In Fearful Symmetry we see that Ben is the emissary in multiple timelines, but we also see Iliana Ghemor fulfill the role in the MU. I don't recall Elias having anything to do with being an emissary in that story.
 
Can anyone remind me what is being referred to when Sisko thinks that Vaughn could have been the Emissary in the "so-called mirror universe"?

Hmm. I'm not sure. EV had an encounter with an orb of the Prophets in Unity. He even met Benny Russel. In Fearful Symmetry we see that Ben is the emissary in multiple timelines, but we also see Iliana Ghemor fulfill the role in the MU. I don't recall Elias having anything to do with being an emissary in that story.

In that arc, I remember Sisko leading Vaughn (and the audience) to believe that he might need to take the role of Emissary, but he was either mistaken, or he was messing with Vaughn's head to make sure he'd do what was needed to get mirror-Ghemor to do it. I remember back in the early days of the DS9 relaunch, the broad-stroke similarities in Sisko and Vaughn's backstories made people suspect that he may have been a potential "back-up" Emissary.
 
IIRC Laas murdered a Klingon on the promenade. The Klingons threatened him, then Laas turned his arm into a sword and stabbed one of them.
Apparently my memories of "Chimera" are vaguer than I thought. Still, that seems a step removed from the gleeful killing he apparently does out of his boredom at being left in charge of the Dominion.
 
He probably didn't even view it as murder either, since he felt 'solids' were a lesser species.

He was a bit different then the Founders though. In "Chimera" he didn't want anything to do with solids, including ruling over them. In the novels he seemed resigned to being a leader of the Dominion, since all the other Founders high tailed it out of there. But he still had an extreme disinterest in solids and so he'd have no problem in killing them. They weren't worth his compassion in his mind.
 
I'm still reading the Hornblower novels (actually, I paused doing that to read The Goblin Emperor), so no Raise the Dawn yet, but I did start reposting editing versions of my reviews here to my blog. They're not too different, but I cleaned up the prose, and also sometime incorporated responses to issues or comments raised in the discussion here. First up is From History's Shadow: https://lessaccurategrandmother.blo...ar-trek-from-historys-shadow-dayton-ward.html
 
Last night I finished Brinkmanship. I thought the Typhon Pact series were all very good.

Now reading the Cold Equastions trilogy.
 
I'm still reading the Hornblower novels (actually, I paused doing that to read The Goblin Emperor), so no Raise the Dawn yet, but I did start reposting editing versions of my reviews here to my blog. They're not too different, but I cleaned up the prose, and also sometime incorporated responses to issues or comments raised in the discussion here. First up is From History's Shadow: https://lessaccurategrandmother.blo...ar-trek-from-historys-shadow-dayton-ward.html
I finished posting all my cleaned-up reviews on my blog: https://lessaccurategrandmother.blogspot.com/search/label/blog: reading project tuesday

Hopefully I get to Raise the Dawn sometime soon, but right now I'm knee-deep in reading Hugo finalists.
 
It's been five months since I left off-- not so bad. It's time for the next group of stories:

Phase Four: 2383-84
16. Typhon Pact: Raise the Dawn by David R. George III
17. Typhon Pact: Brinkmanship by Una McCormack
18. The Next Generation: Cold Equations, Book I: The Persistence of Memory by David Mack
19. The Next Generation: Cold Equations, Book II: Silent Weapons by David Mack
20. Department of Temporal Investigations: The Collectors by Christopher L. Bennett
 
Typhon Pact: Raise the Dawn by David R. George III
Published:
July 2012
Time Span: August 2383 - September 2384

Plagues of Night and Raise the Dawn are very much one of those duologies that's one novel in two parts. In my review of Plagues of Night, I wrote, "Plagues of Night [is] very much a novel of set-up, especially for the traditional protagonist characters [...]. We get glimpses of Sisko captaining the Robinson, the Enterprise battling Tzenkethi privateers, and updates for a number of long-unseen characters on Deep Space 9 (plus introductions to new ones). These characters don't really drive any kind of plot, except on a personal level. The plot drivers all happen at the galactic political level, with characters like Praetor Gell Kamemor and President Nan Bacco making the choices that shape the story." I also said I felt like I couldn't really judge it until I read part two.

I don't think Raise the Dawn lived up to the set-up of Plagues of Night. Plagues of Night felt like I was watching David R. George play a game of cosmic chess, moving characters into position for some kind of exciting end game. Unfortunately, no exciting end game ever emerges. Instead, it feels as though the book is a series of conversations between people about how much they do not know about things. President Bacco talks to Esperanza Piñiero, Praetor Gell Kamemor talks to her nephew, Sisko talks to Odo, Kamemor talks to Bacco, around and around this novel goes with long conversations about how much no one knows about what's going on, with no new information being uncovered. It's especially frustrating because the reader does know what's going on. It's not until around 300 pages into this novel of almost 400 that I felt like people really began to figure anything out worth knowing. The end does have a pretty dramatic climax, but by that point I was too checked out to enjoy it very much, although Odo becoming a space creature and flying into the Bajoran Wormhole is pretty badass.

The really weird thing about the book is that when I got to the end, I realized Gell Kamemor is the protagonist. Its her decisions that tend to move things forward; the antagonists (Tomalak and Sela) are primarily operating against her. This is okay, though I wish Kamemor was more interesting; mostly she seems to just give long speeches about how she's a nice Romulan. I guess, based on some comments here, she was in Serpents Among the Ruins? I don't remember her at all.

But if Gell Kamemor is the protagonist... what are all these other characters doing in the book? That Deep Space 9 should be destroyed in a book very much not a Deep Space Nine books reeks of the worst aspects of comic book crossovers, where some mid- or lower-tier character is cynically killed or maimed in a high-tier book to prove the situation is serious without actually hurting any high-tier characters (e.g., Infinite Crisis, Infinite Crisis Companion, World War III). It just seems weird that something as titanic as destroying DS9 would not really result in a story about DS9, but just raise the stakes in a story about Gell Kamemor. We get a lot of the DS9 crew on Bajor post-destruction, but it's not really a story, more snapshots of exposition so that we know where the new DS9 comes from when it finally materializes (it's halfway done by the time of the book's epilogue), so I assume I will be seeing it in future novels. O'Brien and Nog come back, Quark is doing a thing, Ro is in charge. It's all kind of pointless within the context of story actually being told here, and it's all very low-key given how significant the actual destruction is. One would hope that the destruction of DS9 would feel significant to the characters and stories of DS9, but it's just kind of a thing that happened.

Finally, Sisko. Sisko finally goes back to his family in this book, but I found the explanation of the Prophets' prophecy tortured and ultimately unsatisfying. Sisko couldn't be with Kasidy because it would lead to sorrow, but the sorrow actually came from not being with Kasidy because he ran away from her because of the prophecy, so he can be with Kasidy because... you can't step in the same river twice? What was the point of this whole storyline, because it just makes Sisko look like a giant asshole. It's hard for me to believe Kasidy would even want him back after all this, because who wants a spouse whose reaction to crisis is to run off with no discussion? He's clearly not committed to her or their child or their relationship in any meaningful way, even if he did technically come home in the end.

Continuity Notes:
  • No one mentions that this is actually the second time Odo plunged into the Bajoran Wormhole like a badass. (Time's Enemy is technically in continuity thanks to S.C.E. and DTI.)
  • Like me, David R. George seems to have found Nog's motivations for joining the Challenger crew in Indistinguishable from Magic confusing, so when Ro asks why Nog did it, Nog himself can't provide an answer-- and then provides four different ones, none of which convince. I feel like I would have glossed over this instead of spending two ultimately unsatisfactory pages on it.
  • Lots of discussion of the status of Andorians in Starfleet; no mention of how Starfleet recalled Andorians from sensitive posts in Fallen Gods. And hey, I'm assuming those transporter duplicates will become important any book now.
Other Notes:
  • This book could be a hundred pages shorter without all the exposition. I feel like the dialogue is always contorting to have the characters communicate things that 1) could be more smoothly communicated in narration, 2) the reader actually already knows, because they saw the tv show (or, in some cases, read this very book), and/or 3) don't actually matter. Like, there are multiple discussions of the so-called planet in the wormhole from "Emissary." But never upon watching "Emissary" did I think there really was a planet, and it ultimately doesn't even matter, so why does it need to be crowbarred into dialogue multiple times.
  • The narration itself does this too. For example, at one point Picard thinks to himself about who Kira is, how he knows who Kira is, and how the Enterprise rescued Kira earlier in the book. I don't need the specifics of Picard's knowledge of Kira spelled out, why would I, and why do I need to be told the Enterprise rescued her. I remember it because it happened in the book I am reading!
  • I found the motivation of the DS9 bomber profoundly unsatisfying and improbable.
 
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