I thought the bit with the ambassadors was great, too. I thought it was nice to see the political side of the job in addition to the Starfleet commander and Emissary roles--but that's definitely part and parcel with a station commander's job, and something you don't get to see to the same extent on a starship.
Exactly. And the sleeplessness. And the people starting to crack, and maybe missing things because of not getting enough rest. And the fact that when you're worried, you can't shut off, but you go through the things that happen in your head. But yes, even Federation ambassadors sometimes seem like a pain, and these ones were in danger. So it makes sense there'd be a lot of chaos, and plenty of demands, though time consuming and repetitive.
Yeah, really. And that's a good point about Tilton remembering that the sleeplessness is going to wear on people as well, in addition to the stress. I know even from doing a full shift under stressful conditions without a break, it's tough. (And that's at a job that DOESN'T have life-or-death implications!)
It's really weird reading about the way Jake and Nog used to be, now that I know how they come out at the end of the series--how in the end of DS9 we have Nog the responsible engineer, and Jake the more laid-back reporter. It's really funny to see it highlighted in such dramatic fashion how they once were!
Haha! Yeah... It amuses me because Nog's greed and misbehavior drove me nuts at first... but then later, Nog turned out fine, and Jake because, to me, rather pretentious at times. And I like Jake's conscience, good, but childish. And how he wanted to do the right thing, but sometimes it was inhibited by his father. Now why would his son, who crawled all over the station with the Ferengi boy whose uncle was up to his ears in everything know anything about what was going on??
Childish, but wasn't Jake 11 or 12 at the time?
I can understand why, though, Sisko would've been surprised Jake knew about THAT.
I also got a kick out of the fact that people actually "appreciated" Dukat after dealing with that a-hole Marak. And you know Dukat was just lapping up every last bit of it!!!
Indeed! I thought what he said about Kira in the end was hilarious! And in the end, Sisko and Dukat do seem to have a "system."
Well, until Dukat cracked. But until then, yeah, they definitely do. I loved that whole bit: "You understand I still have to demand that you hand over the station and wormhole." "Uh-huh." "You understand I can't do that." "Yep." (Paraphrased.)
I find the Cardassian "hanging" to be rather horrid, especially after the story points out that it isn't lethal, that it goes on for days due to the Cardassians' neck structures. Yikes! So awful! And it's used by Marak for regular punishments, and on Cardassia just during brief political shift...
Yeah, that was creepy. The duration of the punishment actually reminded me of another sort of torture from our world. I mean no irreverence by pointing this out, but crucifixions could go on for days, in the worst cases.
Something tells me Marak got off on pain...and that he encouraged his crew to do the same--ewwwwwww.
As one of our resident 'Cardassians' I feel that I must put my 50p (after inflation) in. Unfortunately I don't remember much of this book and I have not seen a copy in years so this may be stretchy in places.
I bet you can still get hold of it at a used book store, or eBay. Those places tend to be great for out-of-print stuff.
The first thing I'll say is that this is one of my favorite early DS9 novels which is really saying a lot because they never quite agreed with me, mostly because they did not match with what I saw on screen.
Betrayal was a different kettle of fish altogether. It had an interesting storyline (a coup on Cardassia prime, a Cardassian who did not quite 'fit' in with his peers and a Bajorian traitor) some great characterization and a satisfing ending.
Especially for that early in the show, I think it DID do a great job with characterization. I felt like I could really hear all of the regular characters saying the things they were portrayed as saying; she really had the "tone" of them right.
I will have to go with the flow and say that Berat is one of the most compelling Cardassians that we have seen on DS9. A very talented individual (as I recall he had great engineering skills) with a likable personalty trapped in a terrible situation not of his making. His plight and the way he handled it could not hope but make you feel for the guy and it's good to see that he had his freedom back(even if it meant going off into the sunset with Gul Dukat!)
After what Berat went through--I'm sure he would've taken ANY opportunity that didn't involve further beatings!!
I definitely sympathized with him, right from the start--and I was very pleased to see him get his rank restored.
Even Malak works as a typical Cardassian Bastard Stereotype although when I first read about Gul Macet returning in the DS9R my first thought was ' hang on,didn't they kill Macet off years ago?

'.
I STILL can't believe the cover artist used Macet to represent Gul Marak! I mean, look at how controlled Macet is in "The Wounded"--even going so far as to remove himself from the room BEFORE he can go off on someone. It just...wow, it doesn't work at all.