Certainly, novel character Christine Vale shows up and I've always supported her in more properties. I'm still hoping she'll be canonized by Lower Decks.
Not unless she dyed her skin blue and got possessed by Eclipso.
Certainly, novel character Christine Vale shows up and I've always supported her in more properties. I'm still hoping she'll be canonized by Lower Decks.
Not unless she dyed her skin blue and got possessed by Eclipso.
This one's $1.99/99p right now![]()
I also appreciate the use of the Romulans in this book as we get a nice mixture of "honorable soldier", "sneaky KGB Loyalty officer", and "insane death cultist." Some people had issues with the Zhat Vash when it was introduced in Picard but seeing how the Admonition utterly breaks someone's mind like a Lovecraftian Cthulhu cultist actually helps underscore what the show only hinted at.
The fact the Romulan system has about a year left before 900 million residents die is also something that hangs over the heads of each of its residents.
On the contrary, it makes far more sense, for the most part. The movie implied that the supernova happened first, that the radiation was somehow expanding FTL toward Romulus, that Spock and the Vulcans expected to have a certain amount of time before it hit, and that it somehow magically got faster and destroyed Romulus before he could get there, which makes no damn sense on any level. Picard's version is immensely more coherent -- it's Romulus's own sun, they had advance warning that the supernova was coming, but it went off sooner than expected. The only implausible thing there is that a star with habitable planets shouldn't be capable of supernova, but that ship sailed back in TOS with Minara, Fabrina, and Beta Niobe.
The one part that still doesn't make sense is that dropping the Red Matter after the supernova happened wouldn't do any good, so there's no reason why Spock would've gone ahead and done it anyway. But that was nonsensical to begin with. Picard's version doesn't make it any worse, and it makes just about everything else enormously more sensible.
And if you prefer softcovers, the paperback edition is out on the 7th...![]()
Perhaps an effort at cleanup, sparing if not the Romulan system then adjacent ones?
It's a great idea that the blue-skinned Titan XO is Christine Vale. She dyes her hair, it's not too far-fetched in the late 24th century that people go for extreme/temporary body colors.Not unless she dyed her skin blue and got possessed by Eclipso.
Yes, that's explicitly the intent of it in the film, but the point is that it's physically absurd to suggest that it could do that. The radiation and superhot gases are already spreading outward from the star, the former at the speed of light, the latter nearly as fast. Nothing you do at the place they started from will magically suck them back inward. They're already far away from it and getting further every second. They're way beyond the reach of any black hole, natural or artificial. It's like trying to tag a runner at first base when they've already rounded second.
It's a great idea that the blue-skinned Titan XO is Christine Vale. She dyes her hair, it's not too far-fetched in the late 24th century that people go for extreme/temporary body colors.
However, during her appearance she states moss got her into Starfleet, while Vale was inspired by law enforcement action. I guess, unless the new Titan XO, a novel or so could reconcile that.
The only reason the eeeeeevil villainess isn’t twirling her mustache is because she doesn’t have one. This was terribly, terribly disappointing. And having one of the Starfleeters intone “We’re better than that” flashed me all the way back to Wesley’s “We’re Starfleet. We don’t lie.”
I don’t expect Trek to be subtle. That’s not it’s thing. But I do prefer it not to be THIS unsubtle.
Poor.
I grew up in a crazy cult. The one thing I can confidently say about real crazy cultists is that they DON’T sound like Snidley Whiplash. They're far more subtle than that.To be fair, sometimes I think Trek goes overboard with its villains just being misunderstood or able to be reached rationally. The Zhat Vash are a crazy cult of extremists and of course will act crazy. Best to portray that realistically.
Robert Petkoff generally turns in strong performances for the audiobooks. But he was defeated by the character on the page.The Zhat Vash were embarrassingly hokey onscreen (part of an unfortunate whiff of cheesy conspiracy thriller in the first season of Picard) and the one in The Dark Veil was the one major downside of a pretty strong novel. The only thing that could have made her bearable as a screen character would have been a top-notch performance; on the page there was just no hope.
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