^ Are you thinking of Vonda McIntyre's take on Janice Rand in "Enterprise, The First Adventure"?
Death's Angel was during the Bantam period I believe.
I just remembered another one, Burning Dreams, about Captain Pike. I really liked that one, and it was somewhat more recent, right?
I read a lot of them in the late 80s, and none since. I also wrote one, but never tried to get it published.
For a while there, Vonda McIntyre's name was synonymous with Star Trek novels. And I remember they all had those marvelous covers by Boris Vallejo.
I remember this one dreadful Mary Sue book that got published. I don't remember the title or who wrote it. Anyone?
"Dreadnought" & "Battlestations" by Diane Carey. Both had Star Trek adventures as seen from the point of view of a young woman in Starfleet named "Piper". Basically most of the books focused on her and the minature "crew" of fellow young officers she surrounded herself with
I actually like those novels. They were a different take on the Star Trek universe and I liked how they showed how the more "regular" people in Starfleet viewed the "heroic" Kirk, Spock and company.
Anyone read the Star Trek novels when they were published by Bantam and not Pocket?
The Bantam novels were generally poor. Of those only The Galactic Whirlpool, Planet of Judgement, Vulcan, and Death's Angel were worth reading.
Avoid The Starless World, Trek to Madworld, Perry's Planet, Spock Messiah!, and various others.
Pocket has published so many that it is mainly a matter of taste.
I enjoyed Black Fire, even more Price of the Phoenix and Fate of the Phoenix since I really enjoyed seeing Linville's Commander in action.I, too, shall defend "Black Fire". I love campy Star Trek. But my real favorites are the Rihannsu books.
Don't care for the Sondra Marshak & Myrna Culbreath books. Or for "Shadow Lord".
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Now, someone mentioned Bantam's Death's Angel before. That novel features just about the most blatant, textbook Mary Sue character I've ever seen in professional Trek literature -- though it may be tied on that count with the early Pocket novel Triangle.
Perhaps but in regard to "Death's Angel" I think the actual story was pretty well done. Plus, kudos for nice cover art.![]()
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