Just as badOr maybe he was trying to write a novel that resembeld cause and effect?
"He" who? Diane Carey novelized Equinox.
Just as badOr maybe he was trying to write a novel that resembeld cause and effect?
"He" who? Diane Carey novelized Equinox.
Or maybe he was trying to write a novel that resembeld cause and effect?
"He" who? Diane Carey novelized Equinox.
They can, they sign our death warrantsOr maybe he was trying to write a novel that resembeld cause and effect?
"He" who? Diane Carey novelized Equinox.
A female writer? don't be silly! Women can't write
They can, they sign our death warrants"He" who? Diane Carey novelized Equinox.
A female writer? don't be silly! Women can't write
Go and read Ship of the Line, then you'll understand.btw I wish people would stop giving Carey stick I've only read one of her books I think the novel of WOTW and I liked i
Also, the novelization of "Equinox." After the first fifty or sixty pages, the book reset to page one and started over again, skipping a good chunk. I do not remember *that* happening in the episode! Bah.
Sounds like a printing error in the copy you bought. I'm sure they weren't all like that.
Finishing that was liking sticking hot forks in my eyeballs: painful.
I am going to have to give The Buried Age another try. I've heard too many people raving about it.
I wouldn't call it a least favorite because it was a really good book but I didn't much like the first Vanguard novel. It was harsh and depressing and it had a much darker tone than any other Trek novels I had ever read. It was a great read but I'm not sure if I want to read it again and suffer through the various losses and painful deaths Mr. Mack subjected all those poor people to!
I guess this would be a good example of to each his own, because I thought that the fact that it was so dark and depressing was part of what made it so good. Sometimes, like with the new Battlestar Galactica for example, these kinds of situations allow us to really get into some very interesting character based dramatic stories. Not that I want every story I read to be dark and depressing, but sometimes it's a nice change of pace from the usually lighter typical Star Trek stories.I wouldn't call it a least favorite because it was a really good book but I didn't much like the first Vanguard novel. It was harsh and depressing and it had a much darker tone than any other Trek novels I had ever read. It was a great read but I'm not sure if I want to read it again and suffer through the various losses and painful deaths Mr. Mack subjected all those poor people to!
My only complaint about the first Vanguard book, was that the description on the back of the book made me think it would be centered around Kirk and Co. and that was the main reason I picked it up. Even with that though, the book really hooked me in to the idea and the series has been consistently good to great and I'm looking forward to the fourth volume.
Oh, and they gave away the ending in the book right before that . . . so yeah.
"Rising Son" by S.D. Perry. I'm forcing myself to re-read it now as I go back through the re-launch from the beginning. A whole book about Jake Sisko* and a bunch of characters that nobody has ever heard of before . . . kill me now.
I liked them too. Have any of them appeared outside of Rising Son?^I loved it too. I especially liked the Even Odds crew, I thought they were a really unique group of characters, that included some really interesting and original aliens.
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