One thing I've noticed myself doing since I picked up my kindle in December is reading more than one book at a time. Not sure why I never did before now.
Currently reading:
Vanguard: What Judgments Come
ST: That Which Divides
Gauntlgrym: Neverwinter, book I
It doesn't really matter when you read P&C, all of the stories except the Garak one take place during the series, and the Garak one is (I believe) set decades after the relaunch. I read all of the stories up the Garak one, I only got a few pages into that one before I found it too confusing and quit. I really enjoyed the rest of the stories though.Right now, I'm two stories in to Prophecy and Change, which I know I probably should have read in its published order before Unity but I couldn't wait! My plan of attack is to read the 6 Worlds of DS9 Novellas, 3 DS9/SCE X-Overs and Kira's Captain's Table story and alternate them with the 9 A Time To... Books.
For an unfinished story, it's amazing how many versions of "Shada" there are. There was the VHS release with Tom Baker narration summarizing what happened in the unfilmed portions; there was the fully dramatized flash-animated web production that turned it into an 8th-Doctor adventure; there's the audio-only release of same with additional material; and now there's the novelization.
And lets not forget Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, which recycled the character of Professor Chronitis.
One thing I've noticed myself doing since I picked up my kindle in December is reading more than one book at a time. Not sure why I never did before now.
And lets not forget Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, which recycled the character of Professor Chronitis.
Oh yes, of course, I did forget. It did more than that, in fact: much of its storyline was taken directly from both "Shada" and "City of Death" (also by Adams).
I certainly don't blame Douglas Adams; at the time none of the other "completions" had been done, and why not retool a story that hadn't gotten to see the light of day?
I certainly don't blame Douglas Adams; at the time none of the other "completions" had been done, and why not retool a story that hadn't gotten to see the light of day?
But it was weird that he also threw in so much of the plot of "City of Death," a story that definitely did see the light of day and is one of the better-remembered Tom Baker stories.
Are there kings in the ST multiverse?
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