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Books for those new to Treklit!

erastus25

Commodore
Commodore
Hi, I'm a relatively long time Star Trek fan (I've been watching since I was 5ish, I'm 24 now) and I had a question about the books. Back during my teen years I dabbled in Treklit but never really got into it. I think I want to give it another try. What books do you all think are the best? What books should I begin with?

Note: If this is a repost please please let me know. I hate reposting but I did a quick search and couldn't find this topic. I'm sorry if I'm just being oblivious.
 
Hi, I'm a relatively long time Star Trek fan (I've been watching since I was 5ish, I'm 24 now) and I had a question about the books. Back during my teen years I dabbled in Treklit but never really got into it. I think I want to give it another try. What books do you all think are the best? What books should I begin with?
I have to answer your questions with a question, to wit, what part of Star Trek is your favorite?

Having said that, here's some suggestions from the last couple of years, which are the easiest to find at your local bookstore. I'm not going past 2003 here, so be aware that there are lots of cool things written before then, too.

(Ritual disclaimer: I've written/contributed to/edited some of the below.)

Each of the first four TV shows has had an anniversary anthology within the last five years:
  • DS9: Prophecy and Change
    VOY: Distant Shores
    TOS: Constellations
    TNG: The Sky's the Limit
If you're a TOS fan, I strongly recommend the Crucible trilogy by David R. George III, released for the show's 40th anniversary in '06:
  • McCoy: Provenance of Shadows
    Spock: The Fire and the Rose
    Kirk: The Star to Every Wandering
If you're a TNG fan I also strongly recommend both the A Time to... miniseries and the post-Nemesis books.

The former chronicles the year leading up to Nemesis:
  • A Time to Be Born by John Vornholt
    A Time to Die by John Vornholt
    A Time to Sow by Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore
    A Time to Harvest by Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore
    A Time to Love by Robert Greenberger
    A Time to Hate by Robert Greenberger
    A Time to Kill by David Mack
    A Time to Heal by David Mack
    A Time for War, a Time for Peace by Keith R.A. DeCandido
The latter pick up after the film:
  • Death in Winter by Michael Jan Friedman
    Resistance by J.M. Dillard
    Q & A by Keith R.A. DeCandido
    Before Dishonor by Peter David
Also there's a Titan series that picks up on Riker and Troi's post-Nemesis adventures:
  • Taking Wing by Andy Mangels & Michael A. Martin
    The Red King by Andy Mangels & Michael A. Martin
    Orion's Hounds by Christopher L. Bennett
    Sword of Damocles by Geoffrey Thorne
If you like DS9, the story has been continued after the finale in a huge number of books. I'd start with the recently released omnibus: Twist of Faith by S.D. Perry, David Weddle & Jeffrey Lang, and Keith R.A. DeCandido, which collects the first five stories in the saga, originally published in 2001. If you like them, there's an omnibus of the next two books, These Haunted Seas by David R. George III and Heather Jarman, coming this summer. (It's only two books because the two titles it collects were very very very very long.)

If you like VOY, there's the post-finale fiction, all by Christie Golden:
  • Homecoming
    The Farther Shore
    Spirit Walk: Old Wounds
    Spirit Walk: Enemy of My Enemy
And there's in-the-Delta-Quadrant fiction:
  • String Theory: Cohesion by Jeffrey Lang
    String Theory: Fusion by Kirsten Beyer
    String Theory: Evolution by Heather Jarman
There've been two recent ENT novels of note, both by Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels. One takes place during the third season, but also has a rather, er, revealing framing sequence, and the other tells the other side of "These Are the Voyages...":
  • Last Full Measure
    The Good That Men Do
Then we've got other cool stuff, like the Lost Era books, which fill in the 70-year gap between the Generations prelude and "Encounter at Farpoint":
  • The Sundered by Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
    Serpents Among the Ruins by David R. George III
    The Art of the Impossible by Keith R.A. DeCandido
    Well of Souls by Ilsa J. Bick
    Deny Thy Father by Jeff Mariotte
    Catalyst of Sorrows by Margaret Wander Bonanno
    The Buried Age by Christopher L. Bennett
This only scratches the surface. But it's a start. :)

(I haven't even gotten into the "prose-only" series that feature new crews and such -- well, aside from Titan, anyhow. If you're interested, I'll do a separate post about New Frontier, Corps of Engineers, Vanguard, Klingon Empire, etc. :D )
 
What books do you all think are the best? What books should I begin with?

I always like to ask (before recommending):

Favourite series, characters and Star Trek aliens?

Do you prefer tech novels or relationship novels?

Sequels to episodes or standalones?

Heavy science fiction?

Heavy or light reads?
 
Yeah what KRAD said.

To wit, I'll add the Vanguard series to the mix, if you like TOS era stuff and don't mind books without the main charecters and focusing on what else is going on during the 5 year mission.

  • Harbinger by David Mack
  • Summon the Thunder by Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore
  • Reap the Whirlwind by David Mack
:bolian:

Aaron McGuire
 
I always like to ask (before recommending):

Favourite series, characters and Star Trek aliens?

Do you prefer tech novels or relationship novels?

Sequels to episodes or standalones?

Heavy science fiction?

Heavy or light reads?

My favorite series is TOS and Romulans are my favorite aliens. I like relationship novels and am indifferent to sequel vs. standalone. I do prefer slightly heavier reading.

And KRAD, thanks for your recommendations. I guess that pretty much covers recent publications.
 
My favorite series is TOS and Romulans are my favorite aliens. I like relationship novels and am indifferent to sequel vs. standalone. I do prefer slightly heavier reading.
In that case, despite my clearly biased motivation, let me recommend you check out the Star Trek Vanguard series, by yours truly, with Messrs. Ward and Dilmore.
 
Strangely, KRAD forgot to mention one of the best books - Star Trek: Articles of the Federation. It really is a must-read for the light that it sheds on Federation politics, which we know very little about. I can't possibly recommend it enough.
 
Since you like TOS, Romulans, and heavier reads, the Rihannsu omnibus and other Diane Duane books should be right up your alley. I'd also recommend the Sand and Stars omnibus and Vulcan's Glory.
 
Strangely, KRAD forgot to mention one of the best books - Star Trek: Articles of the Federation. It really is a must-read for the light that it sheds on Federation politics, which we know very little about. I can't possibly recommend it enough.
I was sticking with stuff that connected directly to one of the five series. More off-the-wall stuff like Articles I was saving for later. :)
 
Then we've got other cool stuff, like the Lost Era books, which fill in the 70-year gap between the Generations prelude and "Encounter at Farpoint":
  • The Sundered by Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
    Serpents Among the Ruins by David R. George III
    The Art of the Impossible by Keith R.A. DeCandido
    Well of Souls by Ilsa J. Bick
    Deny Thy Father by Jeff Mariotte
    Catalyst of Sorrows by Margaret Wander Bonanno
    The Buried Age by Christopher L. Bennett
Just so you know, each one of these is stand alone, and focuses on a different group of characters, sometimes mixing characters from multiple series.
The Sundered - The Excelsior: Sulu, Checkov, Rand, Chapel, Tuvok.

Serpents Among the Ruins - Enterprise-B: Harriman, Demora Sulu, Elias Vaughn (the new first officer of DS9 from the Relaunch. He who has appeared in several other series now)

The Art of the Impossible - no specific group of characters, but it does feature alot of different characters from several different series and movies.

Well of Souls - Ent.-C: Garret, ect.

Deny thy Father - Will and Kyle Riker

Catalyst of Sorrows - Uhura, Sisko, Selar, Crusher, Tuvok,

The Buried Age - Picard between Stargazer and Ent.-D also features most of the TNG main cast.


If you are into this kind of stuff I would reccomend these as a pretty good place to start, since it gives you a pretty good idea of what kinds of things the books are dealing with now, and it also gives you a good collection of some of the (IMHO) best Treklit authors out there right now.
 
The Buried Age - Picard between Stargazer and Ent.-D also features most of the TNG main cast.

Except Riker, whom Picard didn't meet until "Farpoint," and the Crushers, whom Picard had no contact with between Jack Crusher's death and "Farpoint." And some of those who do appear only have cameos.
 
I was sticking with stuff that connected directly to one of the five series. More off-the-wall stuff like Articles I was saving for later. :)

And here I was thinking you just didn't want to be self-promoting. Another illusion shattered. *sigh*
 
And here I was thinking you just didn't want to be self-promoting. Another illusion shattered. *sigh*
:guffaw:
I couldn't have claimed that with a straight face, since the list I provided included seven titles that I either wrote or contributed to...........
 
And here I was thinking you just didn't want to be self-promoting. Another illusion shattered. *sigh*
:guffaw:
I couldn't have claimed that with a straight face, since the list I provided included seven titles that I either wrote or contributed to...........

Well - yes - but like you said, those were "main series" books.

Of course, I also thought you were trying to avoid more "Do I need to read Articles to..." jokes. :devil:
 
Some more off-the-beaten-track recommendations:

Anthologies

There've been a spate of short-story anthologies over the past few years (besides the anniversary anthologies I mentioned upstream). For the past ten years, there's been the Strange New Worlds volumes, edited by Dean Wesley Smith (et al), which was specifically only open to nonprofessional authors.

Besides those:
  • The Lives of Dax, ed. by Marco Palmieri
    Tales of the Dominion War, ed. by Keith R.A. DeCandido
    Tales from the Captain's Table, ed. by Keith R.A. DeCandido
Prose-only series

In 1997, Star Trek: New Frontier by Peter David debuted. The first series not to be directly tied into one of the TV shows, it featured the U.S.S. Excalibur and its sometimes eccentric crew assigned to the Thallonian sector, an area of space once controlled by a great empire that recently collapsed. The series was a huge hit, and has continued to this day. The two most recent books were intended as jumping-on points, but in the interests of completeness, here's the whole list:
  • House of Cards
    Into the Void
    The Two-Front War
    End Game
    Martyr
    Fire on High
    Captain's Table: Once Burned
    Double Helix: Double or Nothing
    Double Time
    (graphic novel)
    "Stone Cold Truths" in Tales of the Dominion War
    The Quiet Place
    Dark Allies
    Excalibur: Requiem
    Excalibur: Renaissance
    Excalibur: Restoration
    Gateways: Cold Wars
  • "Death After Life" in Gateways: What Lay Beyond
    No Limits (short story anthology by various authors)
    Being Human
    Stone and Anvil

    "Pain Management" in Tales from the Captain's Table
    After the Fall
    Missing in Action
There's also an upcoming NF comic book from IDW.


NF's success led to more, including Corps of Engineers (originally called S.C.E.), an eBook original series that debuted in 2000. Focusing on the S.C.E. team on the U.S.S. da Vinci, these are high-adventure problem-solving stories, as much in the vein of M*A*S*H (in terms of focusing on kooky specialists rather than the more spit-and-polish crews of other ships) as Star Trek. The eBooks -- all novella-length by a variety of authors -- started being collected into print form in 2002:
  • Have Tech, Will Travel
    Miracle Workers
    Some Assembly Required
    No Surrender
    Foundations
    Wildfire
    Breakdowns
    Aftermath
    Grand Designs
    Creative Couplings
Michael Jan Friedman introduced the crew of Jean-Luc Picard's previous command, the Stargazer, in a TNG novel in 1991 called Reunion. He shows Picard taking command of the ship in a flashback TNG novel called Valiant. After that, the Stargazer series kicked off, all by Mike and focusing on the early days of Picard's captaincy:
  • Gauntlet
    Progenitor
    Three
    Oblivion
    Enigma
    Maker
Keith R.A. DeCandido (who????) introduced the I.K.S. Gorkon in the TNG novel Diplomatic Implausibility, and the ship also appeared in The Brave and the Bold Book 2, and a bit of backstory for one character was in Robert Greenberger's "A Song Well Sung" in Tales of the Dominion War. In 2003, the I.K.S. Gorkon series debuted, renamed Klingon Empire in 2008, and showing Trek adventures from a distinctly Klingon perspective:
  • A Good Day to Die
    Honor Bound
    Enemy Territory

    "loDnI'pu' vavpu' je" in Tales from the Captain's Table
    A Burning House
Two new series debuted in 2005 -- one was Titan, which I mentioned in my first post. The other was Vanguard, which takes a new look at the TOS era, through the eyes of a space station in an uncharted region of space:
  • Harbinger by David Mack
    Summon the Thunder by Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore
    Reap the Whirlwind by David Mack
Other odds and ends

Last year Pocket tried an experiment -- rather than a six-book crossover that included six separate mass market paperbacks, they did a six-book crossover that was released as two paperbacks, with three novel-length stories in each. They started it out with Mirror Universe, which has visits to the MU focusing on each of the five TV shows, plus New Frontier:
  • Glass Empires by Mike Sussman, with Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore (ENT); David Mack (TOS); and Greg Cox (TNG)
    Obsidian Alliances by Keith R.A. DeCandido (VOY), Peter David (NF), and Sarah Shaw (DS9)
(That format will be revisited in the "what if" tales in Myriad Universes this summer, and there'll be more MU next year with the Shards and Shadows anthology.)


Two other novels that defy categorization are both 2005 releases. Articles of the Federation by Keith R.A. DeCandido (him again!) took a look a year in the life of the Federation president -- a year that happens to take place after Nemesis, so among the many other things President Nan Bacco has to deal with in her first year in office is watching the Romulan Empire fall apart.

The other is Gene DeWeese's Engines of Destiny, which is a TOS/TNG crossover focusing on Scotty as, post-"Relics," he tries to go back in time to save Jim Kirk, which doesn't quite work as expected.....
 
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My favorite series is TOS and Romulans are my favorite aliens.


Some recent books that featured the Romulans:

Pre-Federation
  • The Good that Men Do by Andy Mangels & Michael A. Martin
The other side of ENT's finale "These are the Voyages..." and the Romulans are involved...


Rihannsu
  • The Bloodwing Voyages by Diane Duane, with Peter Morwood
    The Empty Chair by Diane Duane
Between 1983 and 2000, Diane wrote four novels that provided background on the Romulans, some of which were superseded by onscreen material, but the series continued in its own way. In 2006, it was finally concluded in The Empty Chair, and Pocket released The Bloodwing Voyages, which includes those first four books in one volume: My Enemy, My Ally; The Romulan Way; Swordhunt; and Honor Blade.


Origins
  • Vulcan's Soul: Exodus by Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz
    Vulcan's Soul: Exile by Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz
    Vulcan's Soul: Epiphany by Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz
The secret origin of the Romulans and their exodus from Vulcan, tying together both Duane's work as well as the revelations of Nemesis.


Post-Nemesis
  • Captain's Blood by William Shatner, with Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens
    Death in Winter by Michael Jan Friedman
    Taking Wing by Andy Mangels & Michael A. Martin
    The Red King by Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
    Articles of the Federation by Keith R.A. DeCandido
These all deal with the fallout from Shinzon's coup in Nemesis, though the Shatner book isn't consistent with the others. However the others are all consistent with each other. :)


Other
  • Serpents Among the Ruins by David R. George III
    The Art of the Impossible by Keith R.A. DeCandido
    Catalyst of Sorrows by Margaret Wander Bonanno
    "The Devil You Know" by Heather Jarman in Prophecy and Change
    "Blood Sacrifice" by Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz in Tales of the Dominion War
    "Mirror Eyes" by Heather Jarman & Jeffrey Lang in Tales of the Dominion War
    "Twilight's Wrath" by David Mack in Tales of the Dominion War
    Hollow Men by Una McCormack
All of the above are Romulan heavy, telling things like the Tomed Incident (Serpents...), Shinzon's rise to power ("Twilight's Wrath"), the aftermath of "In the Pale Moonlight" ("Blood Sacrifice" and Hollow Men), and so on.

So lots of Rommie goodness. :klingon:
 
KRAD, I wonder if you could comment... I own at least what I consider to be book 1 of each series in the intention of progressing along through each at some point. I have a bit of confusion about whether what I consider to be "book 1" is actually appropriate for the Stargazer and Klingon Empire series. For Stargazer, I kind of figured the beginning to be Reunion and The Valiant (I own the collection of the two), but I know that the series doesn't technically begin until Gauntlet. For Klingon Empire, I own Diplomatic Implausibility (haven't started yet) but not the first I.K.S. Gorkon book. Would you consider these to be the best places to start these series or would it be more appropriate to just jump into the actual "series" themselves? I know there isn't exactly a right answer but was curious if these other books are basicly members of their respective series in every way other than name.
 
You can go either way, to be honest. In a perfect world, yeah, read Valiant before Gauntlet and Diplomatic Implausibility and The Brave and the Bold Book 2 before A Good Day to Die, but if you start with Gauntlet and A Good Day to Die, you'll be just peachy-keen. :)
 
You can go either way, to be honest. In a perfect world, yeah, read Valiant before Gauntlet and Diplomatic Implausibility and The Brave and the Bold Book 2 before A Good Day to Die, but if you start with Gauntlet and A Good Day to Die, you'll be just peachy-keen. :)

But then go back and read the other ones! :thumbsup:
 
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