She was good but I wish she had more scenes with SpockT'Ryssa Chen has officially joined my pantheon of favorite Trek characters, alongside Beckett Mariner and Mackenzie Calhoun.
She was good but I wish she had more scenes with SpockT'Ryssa Chen has officially joined my pantheon of favorite Trek characters, alongside Beckett Mariner and Mackenzie Calhoun.
GREATER THAN THE SUM is a book I bought in paperback and then bought in Kindle format because I enjoyed reading it twice. It's definitely a book that benefits from reading BEFORE DISHONOR first, though I enjoyed it both before I read the latter and just moreso afterward. It deals with some of the fallout of that book and the scenes resonate better if you've read it first. Do I wish that T'Lana and Zelik Leybenzon had stayed on the Enterprise? Yes. Probably unrealistic given what happened in Before Dishonor but I would have enjoyed them dealing with the crew. I understand this wasn't Christopher Bennett's choice, though, but something dictated from on high.
The biggest thing I love about this book is T'Ryssa Chen and she is easily my favorite character from the original TrekLit characters. Yes, that beats out the cast of NEW FRONTIER, VANGUARD, and even the Picard novels. She's a bubbly, exuberant human-choosing Vulcan that reminds me of a number of more fondly remembered ex-girlfriends who just so happened to have all been Trekkies themselves. If I had to vote for any of the TrekLit characters to come back then I'd definitely choose her and hope she gets revived in the Nu Expanded Universe at some point.
More likeable characters are created with Choudhury, who is the kind of peaceful warrior that Jedi should aspire to being (while also being entirely based in real life spiritual/cultural practices) and seems to be the only security officer trained in conflict de-escalation until (of all people) Shanx.
Christopher Bennett does a good job combining your typical Borg story with a V'Ger/Nomad-esque, "we encounter something utterly beyond our understanding" sort of tale.
It reminds me of how he handled the aftermath of TMP with EX MACHINA and I think it is a very good "Clarke-ian" sort of sci-fi. Which is the best term I can put for this sort of Trek tale and works better than the Borg themselves.
I do also give props for CB causally mentioning her daughter was in a relationship with another woman and not being at all noteworthy by her mother except for how happy it made Rebekah. I recall that was still a bit of a push in Star Trek at the time.
I'm really glad that T'Ryssa resonated so well with the fans, even if I didn't get to write her much after her debut. Dayton Ward did some excellent work with her in later novels.
I tried to do something similar with Rennan Konya in SCE: Aftermath, but later writers didn't take him in that direction. It always seemed to me that it was a mistake to approach security officers as fighters; ideally, their job is to prevent conflict. If weapons are fired or punches thrown, they've already failed. And surely part of security is making people feel secure, not intimidated.
Not a bad characterization, since Clarke was one of my main influences growing up. But -- though my memory is vague -- I think there's a thematic tie between the carbon-planet consciousness and the Borg, since they're both collective cybernetic intelligences but have very different approaches.
For 2008? Not really. It was a bigger push for Section 31: Rogue in 2001 to introduce Ranul Keru as Sean Hawk's partner, and of course he then became a regular in the Titan novels starting in 2005.
Well, partly from on high, partly from Dave Mack, since he outlined Destiny before I was given the gig to write its lead-in.
Oh, huh. It's been roughly a billion years, and I do vaguely remember something about the trilogy conceptually predating the "season" of TNG novels that came between NEM and Destiny, so the earlier books had a degree of directionality to them, but I don't remember that playing into the shake-ups of the secondary cast (...or do I?). From the outside, it looked like the litverse "replacements" were fine in Q&A, everyone got all riled up in Before Dishonor, and then you had to sort out who was salvageable and who wasn't in Sum, and introduce the successors for the characters that couldn't plausibly stay on the Enterprise for Destiny. It all felt a little accidental, but if there were two separate sets of new crew members conceptualized in parallel, and one of them had to go... well, the hardcore-ness of the mutiny in Before Dishonor makes a lot more sense as a creative choice.
You are correct. Destiny was commissioned by the editors in November 2006. In June 2007 the final version of the Destiny trilogy outline was being approved. Part of what had inspired the eventual story arc of the trilogy was the plot of Before Dishonor, which was already written and in editing/production while I was developing Destiny. In July 2007 I began writing the manuscript for Gods of Night.No, I'm fairly certain that the concept for Destiny was developed after Resistance/Q&A/Before Dishonor. Destiny was still in outline when I was brought on board in June 2007, and I know from my records that Q&A, and presumably the other two novels that came out a month before and after it, was outlined in the first half of 2006 with a completed manuscript by spring 2007 at the latest. So GTTS was the only pre-Destiny novel whose plotting was influenced by Destiny. The intent when Kadohata, T'Lana, and Leybenzon were introduced was that they would be permanent new cast members, but things went in an unexpected direction and the plan changed. My job in GTTS was basically to tie off the loose ends and reset the board for a fresh start.
In July 2007 I began writing the manuscript for Gods of Night.
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