I guess writing the same story for the third time is one way to avoid finishing a series that he left hanging in 1993. (GRRM fans, google The War Against the Chtorr and you may feel a bit better. I'm glad I didn't start reading either, personally....)
Gerrold said on Facebook a few days ago he's plotted out the final three chapters of the Chtorr saga, and now he just has to write it.
I've never read the Chtorr saga, either, and while I've read
A Song of Ice and Fire at this point I'm not sure I care any more. (I have an ending in my head, from where the books leave off, that is completely different than the television series ending, and I'm okay with that.)
My only contact with anything Niven wrote was his collaboration with Jerry Pournelle, The Mote in God's Eye. Which didn't exactly thrill me, in part because the aliens were so alien, in part because the FTL drive was so limited for such a distant-future setting, and in part because the book was so damned long, probably the longest continuous narrative I'd read up to that point (I think I was still pre-teen at the time).
Matt Jefferies designed the model kit, the "Lief Ericson," that served as Niven and Pournelle's inspiration for the
MacArthur. It's not at all how I visualized the
MacArthur in my head.
Mote was originally longer! Robert Heinlein told them to cut about a quarter of the book. I would love to see a "restored" edition, but it would probably be bloated like the restored
Stranger in a Strange Land.
The Alderson Drive and its limitations as an FTL drive is a key part of the worldbuilding of that universe, and I think it might even be a mistake of think of it as an FTL drive at all. You can't go just anywhere with it. It's more like a key to access something like an unstable wormhole network.
I've said before, "The Slaver Weapon" is strange as adaptations go, because it doesn't adapt the original story to fit the universe it's adapted to (the way the novel Tin Woodman was adapted into TNG: "Tin Man," for instance), but rather adapts the Trek universe and story format to fit a nearly exact retelling of "The Soft Weapon" complete with most of its Known Space worldbuilding.
Whereas I'm fine with that. My non-
Destiny theory of the Borg origins has for years been that the Borg were a bioweapon developed during the Slaver Wars that would be immune to the telepathic Power of the Slavers.
A book I keep forgetting to mention that I think is right up Star Trek fans alley is Speaker for the Dead, the Enders Game sequel.
It’s all about Ender going to a new planet and trying to understand and interact with an alien race. From what I recall, people think the race is evil but he has to prove otherwise. Also it has a very Star Trek “all life is valuable” philosophy.
Speaker is really good. The climax of the book, in which
Ender plants Human, absolutely broke me the first time I read it.
I have mixed-to-indifferent feelings about
Xenocide and
Children of the Mind, though.