^That was Shatner, not Kirk. 

Officially at least, Starfleet did not encounter the Q until "Encounter at Farpoint," many decades after "The Rings of Time."
That certainly could be true. It just seems as if the Q we are the most familiar with seems to meddle more with the vastly lesser lifeforms then the others.
^That was Shatner, not Kirk.![]()
Better late than never: here's my take on Greg's latest (and full disclosure - I get a thanks in the back, although I'm not sure what for exactly!)
Paul
I'd say this was fairly average stuff - some nice characterization but the story was a bit contrived with a rushed ending plus way too much name-dropping of other stories in there which kept pulling me out of the story. Having said that, the writer is between a rock and a hard place because a lot of people love that sort of fan-wankery.
Is this considered to be part of the current Pocket continuity (i.e. does it have any connections to books set before/after it, however minor), or is it pretty much just a completely standalone adventure with no ties at all to anything else?
It doesn't much matter to me either way, I'm just curious.
Is this considered to be part of the current Pocket continuity (i.e. does it have any connections to books set before/after it, however minor), or is it pretty much just a completely standalone adventure with no ties at all to anything else?
It doesn't much matter to me either way, I'm just curious.
Shaun Christopher appeared briefly in my Eugenics Wars novels, and there's some (non-essential) callbacks to those books, but mostly it's a standalone TOS adventure.
I loved The Rings of Time. It was a fun, exciting story and Greg Cox made the characters ring true. I think this may be the first Greg Cox book I have read. I keep meaning to read the Khan books. I am more interested in reading those now that I know he has the stuff. Good work Mr. Cox!
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