That's my second favourite, but it's so so close to AOTF in my ratings.Something I find quite memorable is the SCE two parter Wildfire by David Mack. It just was a wild ride full of action and emotion. Very well written.
That's my second favourite, but it's so so close to AOTF in my ratings.Something I find quite memorable is the SCE two parter Wildfire by David Mack. It just was a wild ride full of action and emotion. Very well written.
Articles of the Federation is quite good too. Wildfire just has the emotion, the action, and the drama that make it so good. It basically tears apart our safe little world as we know it. And from there we get to see what happens to the others as they deal with the aftermath in other SCE stories.That's my second favorite, but it's so so close to AOTF in my ratings.Something I find quite memorable is the SCE two parter Wildfire by David Mack. It just was a wild ride full of action and emotion. Very well written.
VOY: (Any books that make this list get a LOT of credit given my feelings or lack thereof towards the series.)
VOY: (Any books that make this list get a LOT of credit given my feelings or lack thereof towards the series.)
I found it very hard to warm to most the early DS9 and VOY novels and, when I first started to fall behind as the publication schedule stepped up to two-books-per-month, it was the pile of DS9 and VOY novels which ended up going unread. I did eventually catch up, but the two unforgettable standout VOY titles were both Janeway novels: "Mosaic" and "The Captain's Table: Fire Ship".
when did books start being written after the series was aired?
Sure. Certainly "TNG: Ghost Ship", "TNG: Peacekeepers", "DS9: The Siege" (written in just 14 days; using the DS9 writers' bible plus five scripts), "VOY: The Escape" and "ENT: By the Book" (ENT writers' bible plus three scripts).some books were started before a single episode was ever aired. Is this true?
Articles of the Federation is quite good too. Wildfire just has the emotion, the action, and the drama that make it so good. It basically tears apart our safe little world as we know it. And from there we get to see what happens to the others as they deal with the aftermath in other SCE stories.That's my second favorite, but it's so so close to AOTF in my ratings.Something I find quite memorable is the SCE two parter Wildfire by David Mack. It just was a wild ride full of action and emotion. Very well written.
Articles of the Federation is quite good too. Wildfire just has the emotion, the action, and the drama that make it so good. It basically tears apart our safe little world as we know it. And from there we get to see what happens to the others as they deal with the aftermath in other SCE stories.That's my second favorite, but it's so so close to AOTF in my ratings.
Wildfire has an element in common with the greatest Trek novels, including Spock's World, Articles of the Federation, and The Sorrows of Empire. Reap the Whirlwind: It is, ultimately, a story that speaks to a universal human experience, and thus a genuine literary accomplishment. If Articles of the Federation is about our capacity to unite in common cause to create a better world, about the joy of democracy, then Wildfire is about the inevitability of death and how we choose to face it (while The Sorrows of Empire is about the horrors of tyranny and the necessity of human liberty, and Spock's World is about the interaction within its history of a culture's dark sins and greatest hopes).
That reminds me, I really should reread AotF, now that I've finally gotten a chance to see The West Wing, thanks to the recent election episode marathons on Bravo. In fact, it was everyone comparing the two on here that finally made me decide to check it out when I saw that it was gonna be on. So I guess I have to thank KRAD for getting me to try it, because I did really liked it. So thanks!Also, I couldn't get enough of Articles of the Federation, I was struck by how well it captured the feel and energy of The West Wing (intentionally or not), no easy feat... better than crack for a poli sci major like me.
There were only four seasons of The West Wing. It ended on a cliffhanger which was never resolved, and I wish Sorkin would get off his ass and show us how it was supposed to all work out.
Okay, fans, here's one that should go on for a while:
What is your all time FAVORITE Star Trek novel, and WHY?
Mine would have to be "Excelsior: Forged In Fire". Great story, with a fast-paced, driving plot that holds you to the end, complete with excellent character interaction. Major continuity errors are explained, Star Trek history is made, AND it even refers to the older books for reference, without hitting you over the head!
I must say, THIS is the book that, above all others, caused me to stay up late THE MOST.
(Even if it DID have Chapel's hair change color in the same scene....)
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