So, have any of you guys read Trek novels published in the past 20 years? We're still churning out a whole bunch of them, and the line has evolved and expanded considerably since the era of the books being mentioned here.
So, have any of you guys read Trek novels published in the past 20 years? We're still churning out a whole bunch of them, and the line has evolved and expanded considerably since the era of the books being mentioned here.
Let's see ... that would be about 1990 give or take a year or two ... huummm .... no. That was about when I stopped buying them. I had more important things to spend my money on than the drek Pocket Books was churning out and calling Star Trek.
I really enjoyed Vulcan's Glory (DC Fontana), The Wounded Sky, Spock's World (Diane Duane), The Lost Years, Demons, Mindshadow, Bloodthirst (JM Dillard), Sarek (AC Crispin), Diane Duane's Rihannsu series, Probe, Unspoken Truth (Margaret Wander Bonanno), The Pandora Principle (Carolyn Clowes), and Vulcan's Heart (Josepha Sherman and Susan Shwartz). Brad Ferguson is also enjoyable. I have yet to read any Peter David, but I hear he's good.
I personally didn't like Mind Meld, Sanctuary (John Vornholdt), The Joy Machine (Theodore Sturgeon and James Gunn), The Prometheus Effect (Sondra Marshek and Myrna Culbreath), Crucible: McCoy (David R George III - and I hear the Kirk and Spock aren't any better), Troublesome Minds (Dave Galanter), and The Better Man (Howard Weinstein). You might like some of these, but I thought they were either bad and/or boring.
If you're having trouble finding Trek books you like, find an author you like (for me, Diane Duane and JM Dillard) and read all of his/her books.
Let's see ... that would be about 1990 give or take a year or two ... huummm .... no. That was about when I stopped buying them. I had more important things to spend my money on than the drek Pocket Books was churning out and calling Star Trek.
Well, the books went through a dry phase around then, due to restrictions imposed by Richard Arnold, but there's been one heck of a renaissance in the past decade or so. Everything the books were forbidden to do then, they do in spades now -- continuing storylines, original characters and series, real character development and change, you name it. I would've felt very constrained as a writer under the regime that existed in the '90s, but since I began writing Trek fiction professionally in 2003, I've had extraordinary creative freedom and gotten to participate in a very diverse range of projects and series.
So, have any of you guys read Trek novels published in the past 20 years? We're still churning out a whole bunch of them, and the line has evolved and expanded considerably since the era of the books being mentioned here.
So, have any of you guys read Trek novels published in the past 20 years? We're still churning out a whole bunch of them, and the line has evolved and expanded considerably since the era of the books being mentioned here.
And the Movie Books for Original cast. There is so much more the books tell that the movie left out, even with page cuts in script. Str 5: wasn't that bad if you read the book, they cut the hell out of the script.
Titan is a close second. Once it gets back to it's exploration storyline, I have high hopes for it. Unfortunately, Destiny derailed it for a while. While Destiny was a great big action movie, the crossover nature of it hurt Titan's run. Here's hoping it gets back to telling it's own stories.
Once we're past The Typhon Pact I'm homing that the crossovers are put on the back burner for a while. It's a big galaxy. How likely is it that these ships will keep meeting up? Let's get each series standing on it's own for a while.
Best of the recent crop, a tie between Orion's Hounds and Reap the Whirlwind. Big thumbs up to both!
I didn't really care too much for "The Lost Years". It had it's moments, but ultimately I recall it being kind of a drag. Actually, the one vivid memory I have of that book is a WTF moment. A brawl breaks out at some bar on a frontier world with many different races, and we are told that a Horta pulls out a phaser and fires. A HORTA drawing and firing a hand weapon?
So, have any of you guys read Trek novels published in the past 20 years? We're still churning out a whole bunch of them, and the line has evolved and expanded considerably since the era of the books being mentioned here.
Titan is a close second. Once it gets back to it's exploration storyline, I have high hopes for it. Unfortunately, Destiny derailed it for a while. While Destiny was a great big action movie, the crossover nature of it hurt Titan's run. Here's hoping it gets back to telling it's own stories.
It's been doing that for two books now, Over a Torrent Sea (whence my current avatar) and Synthesis.
Once we're past The Typhon Pact I'm homing that the crossovers are put on the back burner for a while. It's a big galaxy. How likely is it that these ships will keep meeting up? Let's get each series standing on it's own for a while.
Typhon Pact isn't the "everybody meets up to deal with the same thing" kind of crossover. It's more in the vein of something like the Invasion! and Gateways crossovers of years past; each story is a separate tale, a different crew or team dealing with a different situation in a different place and time, but there's a common background or theme loosely connecting them.
Best of the recent crop, a tie between Orion's Hounds and Reap the Whirlwind. Big thumbs up to both!
I'm very flattered.
Typhon Pact may not be a Let's Meet Up sort of cross over but still reduces the feeling that Titan is way out there on the frontier.
Typhon Pact may not be a Let's Meet Up sort of cross over but still reduces the feeling that Titan is way out there on the frontier.
No, I think it just creates the feeling that the Typhon Pact (specifically the Gorn) is also way out there on the frontier.
Also the Eugenics war, (parts one-three) that talks about Khan Noonien Sing, and his rule on earth and his exile on the planet Ceti-Apha 5. A powerful and very in depth look at the all time Best villian of trek, Khan.
Nathaniel
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