I liked Resistance. I thought it was a fast-paced read and did a good job presenting a newer, more aggressive variety of Borg.
I'm rather intrigued about the evolution of "Resistance" because JM Dillard has a pretty good track record and this book was originally announced as a hardcover, which often raises expectations that it was intended tol be "extra special". Although I enjoyed it as a MMPB quite a bit, I was reading it many months after it (and the negative reviews) had come out. While the premise seemed weighty enough to have been a potential hardcover, the finished product certainly does not, and it felt way too light in word count and style to be dealing with such heavy themes as the (again) return of the Borg, only meaner.
But I'd fallen way behind when it came out, and hadn't read Dillard's ENT title either, which many had pronounced underwhelming at the time. I had thoroughly enjoyed MJF's "Death in Winter" hardcover, which had also been pronounced as underwhelming by many others, but again was perhaps too light in tone to carry that hardcover prestige. It kinda seemed like the TNG "relaunch" was in trouble before it could even kick off.
For those of us who'd followed all the Borg-heavy episodes of VOY, the supposedly resolutions of "Endgame", and the then return of more Borg themes in the first duology of the VOY Relaunch, maybe everyone was still too "Borged out" to face more Borg in TNG?
I can see where, on paper, it looks great to map a series of interesting new Enterprise-E characters, some of whom we shall begin to get quite invested in, only to have them die surprising deaths in future instalments, and others who'll manage to survive (ie Miranda Kadohata) but the cumulative effect of the whole relaunch/Borg story arc was that we ended up losing almost the new characters (adding in the complication that PAD's book earmarked two more potential regulars as needing disposal, when they were probably supposed to stay.)
It was a rocky path, but "Greater Than the Sum" and the Destiny" trilogy were worth it. Haven't got to "Losing the Peace" yet. I am actually really am looking forward to some retro TNG novels (ie. set in the time of the TV series) where Miranda can be slipped into the action as if she was really always there.
For those of us who'd followed all the Borg-heavy episodes of VOY, the supposedly resolutions of "Endgame", and the then return of more Borg themes in the first duology of the VOY Relaunch, maybe everyone was still too "Borged out" to face more Borg in TNG?
I've (finally) decided to start reading the Titan series and post-NEM TNG books, before (finally) reading the Destiny trilogy, but Resistance has kind of taken the wind out of my sails. Do the TNG books get any better after this, or should I skip ahead to Destiny?
Definately don't skip "Before Dishonor". If you like the Borg, it's a great follow up to PAD's 1990 TNG Borg novel, Vendetta. Some people harp on it because there are character inconsistences between the secondary characters as established in Resistance and Q and A, but if you read it as a standalone, you may really enjoy it. I read it before I read the others, and much preferred PAD's take on the new characters.
Greater than the Sum is ok, but the pace of the story is quite slow ...
All of the TNG-R books are pretty good, barring Resistance (one of the weakest) and Before Dishonor (*the* weakest, and just)
Q&A is part of a post-NEM TNG narrative that begins with Resistance and continues in Q&A, Before Dishonor, and Greater Than the Sum. All of those books except Q&A deal with a multi-part Borg crisis, but Q&A introduces characters who figure into the subsequent books. Greater Than the Sum wraps up that Borg crisis, but then reveals that it was just a warmup for the big event in Destiny. GTTS was commissioned specifically to be a bridge between Before Dishonor and Destiny, to tie up the loose ends of what came before and put the pieces in position for Destiny.
Thx. Are there spoilers in your review?
Thx. Are there spoilers in your review?
Probably.
It's been a while, but I would imagine that I "spoiled" Resistance.
So, what did folks think of Resistance in particular? Seems to be setting up a new status quo for TNG since Riker and Troi head over to Titan.
So, what did folks think of Resistance in particular? Seems to be setting up a new status quo for TNG since Riker and Troi head over to Titan.
Oh, that happened months before Resistance -- pretty much immediately after Death in Winter, in fact, in December 2379. Resistance takes place around four months later.
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