Spoilers TNG: A Singular Destiny by Keith R.A. DeCandido review thread

Discussion in 'Trek Literature' started by Brendan Moody, Jan 21, 2009.

  1. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    ^^Have you tried special-ordering books from them? Even if they don't have a book on their shelves, you should be able to order it.
     
  2. Mysterion

    Mysterion Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Yes. Apparantly these days when they say "internet only", they mean it.
     
  3. Brefugee

    Brefugee No longer living the Irish dream. Premium Member

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    And from a certain point of view I see where you are coming from. BUT, maybe the reason why the Borders around you are not ordering in stock is because they honestly do not believe that Trek books will sell because, oh I don't know, people arn't going into the shop to buy them or making enquires and going to the competition instead.

    If you don't go in and spend your green in there, it will increase the risk of them going under because they will think no one wants to buy certain books and in this case Star Trek. Now, if you go in there, order the books, make it known that you and others want to buy them, maybe they'll start ordering them in in greater numbers. Shops try to anticipate what will and won't sell, but this is because they use sales figures in most cases and if for what ever reason certain things don't sell or don't seem to be selling, they look at the maths and decide to cut back as it's not really worth having the stock on the shelf and not sold as it could be used for things that will sell and I'm assuming due to one thing or another, that's why there are fewer and fewer Trek books on shelves.
     
  4. Thrawn

    Thrawn Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    Woo! My copy just arrived (thank you Amazon Prime); review up tomorrow.

    I'm excited!
     
  5. Marie1

    Marie1 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    My imagination is small... and broken...
    [​IMG]

    :p
    LOL, thanks for clearing that up.

    I love the comparison between Stitch and the councilor I met in Destiny! :bolian:
     
  6. JoeZhang

    JoeZhang Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Are we meant to think that Klingon woman and her kid from voyager are actually dead? really? just seems to be tease to get you to pick up the next voyager book.
     
  7. Marie1

    Marie1 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    ^ I would say we're supposed to think so...
     
  8. Thrawn

    Thrawn Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    I don't think it's true, but either way it's a pretty great tease.
     
  9. KRAD

    KRAD Keith R.A. DeCandido Admiral

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    MINE IS (yes, still) AN EVIL LAUGH!!!!!!!!!!
     
  10. JD

    JD Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    I've run into the same problem as you guys with Borders. Either one or two weeks ago, I went to Borders to look for Shards and Shadows, but they didn't have it, so I went to the B&N which is so close you can almost see it from the Borders parking lot, and they had like 6 copies. But I also noticed that there did seem to be alot less stock in general in the Borders, there everything was really spread out with lots of open space, and then at B&N the store was packed pretty tightly. This is sucks for me because I tend to prefer to shop at Borders, I don't know why but for some reason it's always felt more casual to me.
    Oh, and I went to both stores again this week, and couldn't find ASD in either store yet.
     
  11. KRAD

    KRAD Keith R.A. DeCandido Admiral

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    Last night, I appeared on Destinies: The Voice of Science Fiction, a radio show out of the University of Stony Brook's WUSB. The show has been archived at Captain Phil Online. I talk quite a bit about A Singular Destiny (as well as my Farscape comic book work).

    (BTW, if you check out the Destinies archive section on the same site, you can find more interviews with me, as well as with such Trek folk as Allen Asherman, Greg Cox, Peter David, Glenn Greenberg, Glenn Hauman, Mark Lenard, and Tim Russ.)
     
  12. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    ^^So you were talking about A Singular Destiny on a show called Destinies? Somehow that seems incongruous.... ;)
     
  13. Jean-Luc Picard

    Jean-Luc Picard Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    I'll check it out :techman:
     
  14. Man of Steel

    Man of Steel Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Good Show.:bolian:
     
  15. Baerbel Haddrell

    Baerbel Haddrell Commodore Commodore

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    Thank you. On the other hand, if I get this wrong there will be quite a few people eager to rip my head off.

    Better not risk it...
     
  16. Defcon

    Defcon Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Maybe you could make a trial-run with a non-spoiler text. :)
     
  17. C. Cole-Chakotay

    C. Cole-Chakotay Commodore Commodore

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    I just ordered my copy. Amazon just loves me, I order so many things there. :D
     
  18. Thrawn

    Thrawn Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    Warning: SPOILERS AHEAD!


    This novel was definitely an interesting read; it took a lot of chances, I think, and some worked and some didn't. If nothing else, I think the primary mission of this one was to show What Happens Next on a galactic scale after Destiny, and to really fulfill that trilogy's promise of "everything is different now", and in that regard it succeeds brilliantly. The plot is all interconnected, but covers a lot of ground, both personal and political. I'm a fan.

    It also seemed to me as though a lot of the book was built around taking the projects KRAD has put a lot of work into (Bacco, Gorkon/Klingons, SCE) and a bunch of books he likes (Final Reflection, etc) and updating them into the post-Destiny timeline, and here I think the book is less successful. Sure, it's nice to see a lot of these people again, but there's just so much name-dropping that I question whether a casual fan would really be able to keep up. And, mind you, I *LOVE* this vast interconnected universe that Star Trek is these days; I felt that all the cameos and shout-outs in Destiny greatly added to the experience.

    But here, it just really felt like too much. Like, is there some prior story about Dax and the Ferengi ambassador I've forgotten? And I've never read SCE, and while I know enough about their reputation to find the "they made a planet disappear" joke be funny, I found the chapter devoted to catching up on those characters hard to follow; similarly, despite having finished A Burning House a month ago, I was already fuzzy enough on the names of some of those characters that I had to be running to Memory Beta in those sequences just to make sure I wasn't missing anything. I'm all for a wider universe sort of approach, but it seems like with every successive novel, KRAD assumes more and more readers share his obsession with keeping lists of every obscure character and species in the universe, and for the first time, I think it did detracted from this story somewhat.

    I also felt that Sonek Pran was a fantastic character, but putting such a huge emotional event in the last 70 pages of this book, and the fact that Pran was a character that we just met, seemed to rob that event of a lot of the emotional weight it was trying to have. It just seemed tossed off and annoying. I think, for me personally, it would've had a lot more impact if we'd met Pran with his wife already dead, depressed and reeling in a dead-end job, and shown him regain his prior joy in life as the story went on. As it was, despite really enjoying Pran and his characterization and hoping we see him again, I didn't buy the end at all.

    Finally, I wish that the existence of the Typhon Pact hadn't been dropped online before this book came out; it would've been better if that'd been a total surprise. It was a brilliant plot development, well foreshadowed and explored in the novel, but I'd pretty much predicted what it was going to be in advance. That's not KRAD's fault, but it did detract from the book for me.

    On the plus side, I did love seeing the Aventine again, especially Kedair's brief investigation of the mine on Capella, and I thought that crew was well-characterized and fun to have around. I loved all of the stuff back at the Federation government; in this case, I'd forgotten all the names of characters, but KRAD didn't require me to know them to enjoy the scenes. The spirit and power of Articles of the Federation came through cleanly, without me feeling like there was something I was missing (which was happening to me for a lot of the rest of the book), and I remain very impressed with how important to the Trek universe Bacco and her staff have become.

    I also liked seeing how the Klingon Empire and the Romulan Empire(s) were coping with the changes, and the political situation there; that whole situation was one of the more interesting currents in Articles, and it's great to see the Borg invasion used as a plot point to further move around and complicate those alliances and politics. I look forward to reading about the future relationships developing here. (To think, a story lasting over 200 years with all these three powers in various states of conflict and peace, and there are still new twists and developments to see!)

    In all, I think the large-scale continuity of the Trek universe these days is both its greatest advantage and biggest flaw; it requires a lot of balance, on the part of the authors, to use that continuity in a way that makes the universe feel huge and detailed without making the reader constantly feel like they're missing out on backstory and details. I thought Destiny nailed it perfectly, and ASD went a bit too far in the excessive detail department. But aside from that, this was an excellent glimpse at Destiny's aftermath, and (if it hadn't been blown in advance) would've been a truly surprising new political development in the galaxy.

    8/10
     
  19. KRAD

    KRAD Keith R.A. DeCandido Admiral

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    Thanks for the review! I appreciate the detailed criticisms...


    Nope. I leave the explanation of that particular relationship to another story for another time. :D
     
  20. Thrawn

    Thrawn Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    Fair enough. And it was certainly believable, either way. The problem was that the book had so many of those cute little references in it that it became hard to tell what was new and what was winking at past stories.

    But that sounds really negative, it's still a pretty minor complaint; it was definitely a fun read, and a necessary follow-up to Destiny.