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Top 10 Best of Treklit of the Past 15 Years

Arpy

Vice Admiral
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Recently I started reading some Treklit again for the first time in a while. Maybe since 2006, when I remember reading The Empty Chair and maybe Warpath before I became soured on the it, not getting closure to the Ascendents storyline in the DS9 Relaunch I’d really loved and spent time on.

But I just finished Last Best Hope and also recently listened to the audiobooks (having read the paperbacks way back when) for The 34th Rule and the first book in the Millennium Trilogy. Currently I’m going back and forth between The Entropy Effect and Prime Directive, even though I’m not the biggest TOS lit fan. I also ordered Dark Veil and the TNG Mirror Universe graphic novels.

I’m daring to keep going with this a little while longer and am wondering what you think the top 5-10 Trek Novels of the last 15 years are and why. Really include the why too. These lists can be very subjective and you might like a book for reasons not related to the book itself, so any insight you can offer as to why it’s top pick would be helpful. Thanks!
 
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Destiny (13 years old), such an epic crossover that worked really well in tying so many characters and plots together

Q&A (14 years) too, with the link into Parallels and Worf growing in his command role, and who doesn't love a bit of Q/Picard.

Watching the Clock (10 years), and how it tied all the time traveling exploits of TNG together, including Clare Raymond

And as you've included Millennium which is 21 years old...

Engines of Destiny (16 years), I do like a bit of alternate timeline (sparingly)

The Eugenics War (20 years) duology, and how it ties 20th century stuff, and goes to allow both Khan and events like Futures End and contemporary late 20th century together

A Stitch in Time (21 years), Garak's backstory. Garak is such a great character with a fascinating backstory, and the author adds to it's brilliance

Edit: And how could I forget Control, with it's epic scope throughout history, and the ramifications
 
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15 years... so, 2007 to 2021. Let's see.

Vanguard: Reap the Whirlwind
TNG / The Lost Era: The Buried Age
Destiny (I'm counting the whole trilogy as one because it's my list and I can do that if I want to, lol)
VOY: Children of the Storm
Vanguard: Storming Heaven
DTI: Forgotten History
Typhon Pact: Raise the Dawn
DS9: Enigma Tales
VOY: Architects of Infinity
TOS: The Captain's Oath

My goodness, narrowing that down to 10 was hard.

Trying to write about each of these books individually would take all day, lol. In general, I suppose I tend towards epic, grand themes; facing off against that which is bigger than ourselves and choosing optimism anyway (Whirlwind, Buried Age, Destiny, Children, Architects, Oath). I admire good endings to long arcs, which are hard to pull off (Storming Heaven, Raise the Dawn). Christopher's worldbuilding in Forgotten History is a true marvel. And Enigma Tales is just perfect - it's small, humble, and not like any of the other entries, but it's perfect.
 
The Buried Age - Picard, archeology, ancient civilizations, sense of wonder galore
Before Dishonor - Action thriller of a novel, pairs well with First Contact
Day of the Vipers - Excellent exploration of early Bajoran-Cardassian relations and cultures
Full Circle - Two great Voyager adventures in one book, Beyer really gets the characters and gives them their due
Synthesis - The already great Titan crew meets up with an AI civilization, really nails the "new life and new civilizations" part of the classic opening
Watching the Clock - time travel has never been cooler, and some big Temporal Cold War questions are addressed
Cast No Shadow - Valeris, Klingons, special ops, and a post-TUC setting make this one appealing to me
Rise Like Lions - The ultimate Mirror Universe story that was heavily influenced by the Foundation series
The Persistence of Memory - Soong and Data in the limelight
Prey trilogy - There are a lot of Klingons, and this is a spectacular celebration of 50 years of Star Trek
 
Oh you know, I’m misremembering because I did read Orion’s Hounds and The Buried Age too, both of which I liked — cosmozoans! Galactic history! So good.
 
Enterprise The Good Men do where Trip Tucker is brought back is one of my Favorite books Also one of my favorite Diane Duane novels is the Empty Chair. I recenty re-read all of her Romulan novels featuring Ael T'ralliue.
 
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All of the Vanguard books are one my favorite series of books. I highly recommend them too.And the Ds9 trilogy that dealt with the occupation of Bajor are really an excellent look to what leads up to the events on Bajor and Cardassia.
 
@Starbreaker, others, what did you think of the Terok Nor trilogy?

Do you remember what you might have liked or didn’t about it? Thoughts on the quality of the writing, or if the verisimilitude of the story worked for you?

The Occupation works for me in the abstract, but…similarly with what Earth is like in the future or what the 22nd Century looked like…some things worked better when we saw less of them. I mean, late in DS9 the Occupation was less Third Reich and more, well, Dukat seducing Kira’s mom. I mean WTF? I’m sure the writers were creaming themselves with glee…initially the idea was even that Kira herself would fall for space-Hitler…right, because that’s who Kira is…but then they switched it to her mom when Visitor recoiled at the idea.

So, I’m wondering if the annexation of Bajor will read realistic or drama-y.
 
Arpy, I'm working on a response but will quickly respond and say that the Terek Nor trilogy is the only "miniseries" (trilogy, quadrilogy, etc.) that I read that I rated each entry as a 10. James Swallow and S.D. Perry turned in phenomenal novels. My memory is that they were realistic.
 
I thought The Entropy Effect and Prime Directive were good not great, and neither was significantly better than the other. Don't misunderstand, I liked them, but I rated for my own enjoyment all of the Trek books I've read since starting in 2004, and I consider those with ratings of 8, 9, and 10 to be the great, even perfect.
 
Here are 11 books that were published since 2001 that I rated as 10s and that I believe are worth reading more than once. Course, a number of these are part of a "miniseries," so you would need to consider how much you want to dive in without reading what came before. As to why they still stand out to me after, in some cases, almost two decades? Easy. The quality of the writing, the promise of the scope of the tale undertaken and the author's execution and delivery, the phenomenal world-building and / or incredibly intimate portrait of characters' interior landscapes.

A Stitch In Time, DS9 #27
Worlds Of Deep Space Nine, Volume Three, The Dominion & Ferenginar, ST DS9
Articles Of The Federation, ST
A Singular Destiny, ST
Full Circle, ST VOY
The Never-Ending Sacrifice, ST DS9
Unspoken Truth, ST TOS
The Persistence Of Memory, Cold Equations, Book One, ST TNG
The Crimson Shadow, The Fall, Book Two, ST
Hell's Heart, Prey, Book One, ST
Enigma Tales, ST DS9

Enjoy!
 
Going for the Top 11, because I like to go one step beyond. The first three are tied, and the rest are in no particular order.
  • The Never-Ending Sacrifice by Una McCormack
  • The Fall: The Crimson Shadow by Una McCormack
  • Star Trek: Destiny trilogy by David Mack
  • Typhon Pact: Brinkmanship by Una McCormack
  • Vanguard: Reap the Whirlwind by David Mack
  • Mirror Universe: The Sorrows of Empire by David Mack
  • The Fall: A Ceremony of Losses by David Mack
  • Section 31: Control by David Mack
  • Crucible: Provenance of Shadows by David R. George III
  • Typhon Pact: Plagues of Night by David R. George III
  • Typhon Pact: Raise the Dawn by David R. George III
 
For me, the Destiny trilogy and the Department of Temporal Investigations books, with Watching the Clock being the standout, have been real favorites. I really enjoyed Vanguard. And then I guess there have been a few TOS era standalones that I really enjoyed, but I'm not sure they get the attention of the stuff in the 24C continuity!
 
Destiny trilogy
Vanguard series
Section 31: Disavowed / Control
A Singular Destiny
Hollow Men
Cold Equations
trilogy and The Light Fantastic (can I put in Immortal coil as well? :) )
DTI: Watching the Clock
The Buried Age
Full Circle
Crucible trilogy
(especially McCoy - though that was just over the 15 year mark..)

Now, if we would have expanded the 15 year limit to, say, 20-25.. well then I would have to add: :)
Ex Machina
Millennium
trilogy
A Time to Kill/Heal
A time for War, A Time for Peace
Articles of the Federation
Section 31: Cloak
DS9 "season 8" (Avatar to Unity)
Burning Dreams
Lost Era: Art of the Impossible
Lost Era: Serpents among the Ruins
New Frontier
especially books 1-4 but really the whole run up to Stone and Anvil
 
Here are mine in no particular order:

Star Trek: No Time Like the Past by Greg Cox. I absolutely love this novel. It is a fun adventure and Seven works so well with the TOS crew. I had never seen any of the episodes re-visited in this novel but that didn't hamper my enjoyment one bit. This is a novel I can re-read multiple times and enjoy.

Star Trek: Vanguard - Reap the Whirlwind by David Mack. A thrilling book with amazing action sequences, great character work, and phenomenal villains in the Shedai. In fact, I found the rest of the series somewhat disappointing on my initial read because I thought the Shedai were being set up to be the big bads of the series but they barely feature after this novel. Still, I love the Shedai here and just how tense the novel is.

Star Trek: Titan - Sight Unseen by James Swallow. The first half of the book is a really good horror novel so that made me happy. I liked the new additions to the Titan crew, including Kyzak. I enjoyed the bait and switch where it looked like Swallow had introduced Kyzak just to redshirt him but then kills off a regular Titan character. The ending was very much in keeping with Trek themes of understanding, finding common ground, and seeking out new life.

Star Trek: DS9 - Fearful Symmetry/Soul Key by Olivia Woods. Maybe it is a cheat to combine two books as one but it's my list and I can do what I want. I loved these books when I first read them. I thought they did a great job of setting up what felt like a new phase in the DS9 relaunch era before the time jump ruined everything. Ghemor made for a fascinating villain and I wanted to see what she accomplished as The Fire for the Ascendants. I enjoyed seeing the Mirror Universe again.

Star Trek: Titan - Over a Torrent Sea by Christopher L. Bennett. I think of this book as a cozy Star Trek read, similar to a cozy mystery. It's a book I like to read on a rainy day. After all the death and destruction in Destiny OaTS felt like a nice palate cleanser. It focuses on an interesting and well developed world that I would love to visit. The character work is superb. It fits the mission statement of seeking out new life to a T. I just adore it.

Star Trek - Articles of the Federation by KRAD. I never knew I needed a West Wing style Star Trek book in my life until I read this novel and now I wish I had more ST books like this in my life. I didn't think originally I would like this novel all that much but I quickly became engrossed in the going-on in the Bacco administration and couldn't put it down. I was very disappointed to learn that there weren't any true follow-ups to the novel but I was glad that the characters introduced here continued to play a large role in the LitVerse.

Star Trek: Typhon Pact - Plagues of Night/Raise the Dawn by DRGIII. These are seriously some of my absolute favorite Trek novels ever written. I was not a happy camper when I found out about the time jump in the DS9 novels and the fact that several plots had yet to be resolved. I also wasn't happy with some of the changes made to certain characters. That said, these two novels really sold me on the time jump and some of the new characters, even if I didn't like the resolution to some plots later on (the Ascendants plot really fizzles out in a way that drew my ire). I loved the political machinations of the Typhon Pact here. There was some nice tension in the novels and I was never really sure how things would play out. The space battle that ends Plagues of NIght and begins Raise the Dawn is superbly written and extremely suspenseful. Blowing up DS9 was huge and something I didn't see happening.

Star Trek: TNG - Armageddon's Arrow by Dayton Ward. This felt like a breath of fresh air after all the darkness and death involved in Destiny, Cold Equations, Typhon Pact, and The Fall. (Not that any of those were bad, per se, but it did feel like the Trek writers were trying to emulate the grimdark of Warhammer 40K for a bit). This was a novel about exploration again with reltaively small stakes. It felt like the old Enterprise crew and the new characters were really gelling and felt like the crew of the Enterprise. I enjoyed the plot about the time traveling ship. I thought that Chen, Taurik, and Konya were used quite well which was nice since I like all three characters. Quite frankly, I enjoyed all of Ward's TNG novels following this one.

Star Trek: Corp of Engineers - Have Tech, Will Travel by KRAD, Golden, Smith, Ward, and Dilmore. I'm not saying this is my favorite CoE novel but it is up there. I'm including it more because of how much it took me by surprise. I thought a series focused on engineers would be boring and have lots of technobabble. That first story quickly disabused me of those notions. I fell in love with the da Vinci and her crew. The format of a new novella a month meant that it was easy to pull off long term plots like Soloman coming to grips with the death of his mate and being a single individual. It also meant that the crew could go on a wide variety of missions from the wacky to the serious.

Star Trek: Enterprise - Rise of the Federation: A Choice of Futures by Christopher L. Bennett. I'm a huge Enterprise fan and I was initially excited to see the series continue on in book format. However, the Romulan War books left me cold. I was a bit wary about this book even though I generally enjoy Christopher's novels simply because the last books had left a sour taste in my mouth. Christopher quickly won me over with this novel which respected the characters and the events of the series while continuing their stories in logical, fun ways. Christopher even made palatable the decision to make Trip a Section 31 agent, a plot point that I hated in the Romulan War novels. I love the RoTF novels and am extremely sad that we probably won't get another one. Hopefully we might get a stand-alone ENT novel set during the series itself written by Christopher. It would be the next best thing.
 
I've never gotten around to reading that one. I love DS9 the series but I've never been a big fan of the DS9 novels and those never looked particularly interesting to me.
You know that’s funny. I love TNG the series (my favorite in fact), but the TNG novels for the most part haven’t done it for me. Though I did read and like Dark Mirror, Imzadi, I,Q, and Q-Squared, and Immortal Coil. And The Buried Age if that counts. …my first one might have been the TNG installment in the Invasion! tetralogy, but I could be misremembering.

But I read most every DS9 Relaunch book from Avatar on to maybe The Soul Key, as well as The 34th Rule, Fallen Heroes, Hollow Men, and A Stitch in Time (later folded into the Relaunch) before them. And the DS9 Invasion! novel too.

There’s some dazzling quality to TNG for me that the books couldn’t replicate. I wanted to live there. And those characters, those actors’ faces, were family, and maybe I wanted to see them in a way that the books could rarely satisfy.
 
I think for me it's the character consistency. In the TNG and Voyager relaunch novels, you get most of the same cast. DS9 was really unrecognizable for me during the relaunch. I'll probably go back and revisit them someday. The only DS9 during the series I think I've even read is the Millennium Trilogy.
 
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