So you're the one who bought it!
Also known as the Kate Winslet
It's Dave Galanter & Greg Brodeur, FYI.
All in all, it was an enjoyable read, and certainly the first attempt to make Trek seem a bit more 'adult' with the continual references to sexuality, particularly that of the curvaceous Ensign George.
Also, Spock Must Die!, because there weren't anymore at the time.
I have absolutely no idea at all. It was a TNG numbered novel when I was something around 6 or 7 years old, before DS9 was even on the horizon, but that's all I could tell you.
Ok, guys, the question was "What was the 1st Trek novel you ever read?" Are you telling me that, as published authors, you don't differentiate between novels and short story collections?
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The "ST Log" books are written like novels. Even the three-eps-to-a-book examples are interconnected with bonus scenes and a continuing narrative, in ways that TAS could never hope to do on Saturday morning TV.
All in all, it was an enjoyable read, and certainly the first attempt to make Trek seem a bit more 'adult' with the continual references to sexuality, particularly that of the curvaceous Ensign George.
I wouldn't characterize Spock: Messiah's treatment of sexuality as particularly adult. "Sophomoric" would be a better term.
And TOS itself was very adult in its treatment of sexuality, compared to other '60s media. It was the NYPD Blue of its day, pushing the envelope in terms of skin and sexual themes. I mean, it had one episode where a main character was driven by an overpowering compulsion to mate, another episode touching on the concept of male infertility, another dealing with overpopulation and mentioning contraception as a remedy. The pilot episode itself involved aliens trying to capture a breeding pair of humans. And this was at a time when most married couples on TV weren't even allowed to sleep in the same bed.
I have absolutely no idea at all. It was a TNG numbered novel when I was something around 6 or 7 years old, before DS9 was even on the horizon, but that's all I could tell you.
You were 6 or 7 while TNG was on the air??
Oh, Thrawn, I feel so old...
I was lucky - started with a great one, Q Squared
I was a little kid; the Winnie the Pooh thing blew my mind, lol.
I was lucky - started with a great one, Q Squared
I was a little kid; the Winnie the Pooh thing blew my mind, lol.
Refresh my memory, it's been years since I read Q-Squared; what was the Winnie the Pooh thing?
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I was lucky - started with a great one, Q Squared
I was a little kid; the Winnie the Pooh thing blew my mind, lol.
Refresh my memory, it's been years since I read Q-Squared; what was the Winnie the Pooh thing?
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Relying on memory here but I think Q-Squared linked up TOS and TNG. Q was almost killed by Tremaine (Squire of Gothos) and managed to survive at the edge of the galaxy. Along comes Kirk (Where No One Has Gone Before) and the force that enabled Gary Mitchell to have ESP was due to Q who manged to leave Gary with the intervention of Kirk and Elizabeth. Neither knew about Q, he didn't communicate with them.
I forgot how but Q found Picard later and with his help, defeated Tremaine. Q was able to return to his own form and Tremaine was reduced to the infant stage in the afterrmath of the struggle.
I might have misremembered, the above was probably some other book about Q.
To this day, I sometimes have trouble remembering whether certain early Pocket novels were actually post-TMP or if I just pretended they were.
I think that most of them 'pretended' to be, by utilizing TMP-influenced cover art; The Entropy Effect is a good example of that.
I think the first two that actually were post-TMP were The Covenant of the Crown and Triangle.
No, The Prometheus Design was second after TCotC.
I'm honestly surprised that over the years, there haven't been more post-TMP novels to fill up that second, 5YM. Any chance that we'll get another one from you in the future? (hint, hint).![]()
As for myself, I'd love to do more, but there doesn't seem to be sufficient audience interest to warrant it (which may be why there haven't been more over the years).
to this day, I don't think Howie's written any 5-year-mission fiction since "The Pirates of Orion." No, wait, his Constellations story is 5YM, but that's it.
My last TOS bk was In The Name Of Honor....
So you're the one who bought it!
I think it was The Entrophy Effect back in '82. .
Also known as the Kate Winslet
I have absolutely no idea at all. It was a TNG numbered novel when I was something around 6 or 7 years old, before DS9 was even on the horizon, but that's all I could tell you.
You were 6 or 7 while TNG was on the air??
Oh, Thrawn, I feel so old...According to the premier date on Memory Alpha, I was only 2 weeks old when TNG premiered.
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