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Books set in TNG first season

Landru1000

Lieutenant
Red Shirt
I was watching the blu-ray set of the first season of TNG, and I was wondering whether someone would ever go back and retrospectively write some stories set during that period. Currently most of the novels and comics set during the first year of the mission were written in the late '80s, and suffer from the same growing pains as the show. But it's a potentially really interesting era in terms of character relationships, and ripe for "rehabilitation" by an intrepid contemporary writer. Thoughts?
 
Christopher's The Buried Age is set right before first season starts, and does a lot of the "rehabilitation" that you might be speaking of. It's a fabulous book.
 
I'm a big fan of Ghost Ship, Diane Carey's novel written prior to TNG's premiere. It features some stuff from the series bible which didn't make it into the series proper, like Riker's dislike of Data. I also like Peacekeepers, although to a lesser extent.

New novels written in those early eras never seem to have the same atmosphere as the ones from the time. I guess I just enjoy those "growing pains".
 
The short story "Meet With Triumph and Disaster" from the TNG 20th anniversary anthology The Sky's the Limit is set shortly before "Encounter at Farpoint", concurrent with the final section of The Buried Age. Also in The Sky's the Limit is "Acts of Compassion", which is set during Season 1 shortly after "11001001"
 
Carmen Carter's The Children of Hamlin and Jean Lorrah's Surivovors are probably the two best S1 stories. The former is just a really solid Trek story with some great ideas and the latter is basically the only good Tasha Yar story ever written.
 
Also the first book of the "Double Helix" series (TNG#51) was written in 1999 and was set in the first season.

That one and the also-mentioned short-story in the anthology are about the only occasions I can think of that a story has been primarily set in the first season since TNG ended (unless I'm forgetting some Strange New Worlds entries). "Infection," the Double Helix novel, was pretty much forgettable for me, and no one's really been given an opportunity to do series 'rehabilitation' work on Season 1, or even play with that particular time frame, which, in retrospect, feels almost like a different show from what TNG later became.
 
Part of Q-Squared takes place in the first season.
Double Helix: Infection
Ghost Ship
The Peacekeepers
Survivors
The Children of Hamlin

That's straight up it other than some comics.
 
Part of Q-Squared takes place in the first season.
Double Helix: Infection
Ghost Ship
The Peacekeepers
Survivors
The Children of Hamlin

That's straight up it other than some comics.

You could even add the novelizations of Encounter At Farpoint & All Good Things... to that list.

I just looked on Memory Beta, and it lists Flashpoint from SNW IV as occurring just before the Binar episode (apparently it's a Ro Laren story). TNG #8 The Captain's Honor takes place on stardate 41800.9, after Skin of Evil but before The Neutral Zone.
 
Oh yeah, the Next Generation trade paperback Beginnings collects six comic stories set during Season One. They're sort of weird and wonderful in their own way. My review from a couple years ago:

This graphic novel collects DC's initial six-issue TNG comic series, set during the show's first season. It's clunky in spots, even excusing the fact that Carlin probably had very little of the show to go on while writing; nothing really justifies the Bickleys! It's obvious that Carlin was writing from a series bible in the way he handles the characters: Picard is aloof and constantly mentions how he dislikes having families aboard, Troi uses her "talents" a lot (which apparently include precognition), Data has an internal tricorder and everyone brings up his "adrenal fluids", Yar grew up on "the colony" (this is reiterated on basically every page she's on), Wesley's sneaking onto the bridge, and Geordi... well, he's blind. (All that said, Carlin's Picard is impressively spot-on.) The onboard families are mentioned constantly, and the book even gets in one use of saucer separation. But despite all the oddities, some of the stories (though, not the Christmas one) are actually pretty good, especially the trilogy of Q ones, which anticipate things that the TV show would do with Q by several years. It's also got good parts for Yar and Data as the former confronts some of her past and the latter anguishes over Geordi's death. And the idea of a large group of Q all looking like John de Lancie is a great idea; it's a shame that the TV show never tried this and that Pablo Marcos's de Lancie likeness is so poor that I needed the dialogue to understand what was happening. (Oh, and only in a comic book would the Enterprise crew, male and female, consider highly revealing skintight clothes appropriate attire for a holiday party. Yar seems to be dressed in some kind of leather bondage outfit!)
 
I think those were the Bickleys referred to in the review, there (the "Bickering Bickleys," more like). Back in the fifth grade, I found them odd, too.
 
Don't forget that squabbling couple who were wearing uniform variations with superhero-esque trunks, bare legs, and capes..!

Mark
I wondered recently if the Bickleys are entirely human- my comics made them look very pink or orange- possibly a lineage mixed with Vaalians?
 
I wondered recently if the Bickleys are entirely human- my comics made them look very pink or orange- possibly a lineage mixed with Vaalians?
Wow, what a thread to resuscitate. I feel like a lot of Latino comics characters had a weird pinkish tinge in the 1980s. (I've been reading Infinity, Inc., and it's true of Yolanda Martez's early appearances, though not later on. So did Extraño in Millennium if I remember right.)

I'm not saying the Bickleys are meant to be Latino, just that it doesn't necessarily indicate nonhuman to be pinkish in a 1980s DC comic.
 
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I dig those early TNG novels that go into detail about Riker's acute sense of smell. It's a shame the TV series and movies never put this intriguing character trait to good use.

Edit: wait, necro-thread. It's aliiiiiiiiive! :ack:

Kor
 
Carmen Carter's The Children of Hamlin and Jean Lorrah's Surivovors are probably the two best S1 stories. The former is just a really solid Trek story with some great ideas and the latter is basically the only good Tasha Yar story ever written.

If we're reviving the necro-thread, I want to second @Stevil2001 here. I really love both of these books.
 
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