Re: TOS: Serpents in the Garden by Jeff Mariotte Review Thread (Spoile
Finished reading. The book was solid and the characters believable in their motivations, and generally likeable. I liked how the villains were shown as beings rather than as cardboard villains. That is, except Keran. But he's that type of mindless bully that we also encounter in real life.
Another plus is that this is a sequel. I'll never understand why nobody in the Federation bothered to check up on Khan and his followers, therefore it's nice to see the Feds acting on behalf of the Neuralese in this case. Neural's fate in this case is better than in one of the 20th century RPG books, where the Neuralese end up annihilating each other.
The low technology was another highlight, and the circumstances bringing that about believable. Now that I think of it, that reminds me of the Heroic Age portions in Kahless, another book I liked for that very reason.
One aspect I didn't enjoy was that Kirk and some redshirts go on a mission... and all the redshirts die. Life is dangerous but it felt like there was a double standard, with old Kirk surviving all those harrowing situations while young men and a young woman die, their lives and careers cut short on some backward planet their parents probably never heard about. While the first two deaths fit the context of the story, Rowland's death felt tugged-on and superfluous. There wasn't anything to be gained plotwise, other than instilling a diffuse feeling of regret for his poor would-be wife.
One of the hightlights, of course, was the temporal setting. While I detest those uniforms they wore at that time, the period itself is interesting, especially TMP introduced us to a more racially diverse Federation than the monotone Homo sapiens-only club. Now that I think of it, there weren't any people besides Humans, Neuralese and Klingons in this book.