^Wow, thank you so much for that very complimentary review. I needed some cheering up, and this helps.
Could you do me a favor and repost that review on Amazon, if you haven't already? The more reviews our books get there, the higher they rank in Amazon's search algorithms, or something like that. And this review is a keeper, I think.![]()
@Thrawn, were you planning on reading the non-Pocket books that have come out over the last few years, like Prometheus, the Hidden Universe travel guides (which were written by @Dayton Ward), or the autobiographies? I read the travel guides, and the Kirk autobiography and really enjoyed.
I read The Buried Age back when it first came out, and loved it.There are at least 15 years not covered to any great degree of his command of the Stargazer between the last book and Christopher's "The Buried Age" which starts off at the very end of the Stargazer and its aftermath. That's another excellent book BTW. It's counted as a "Lost Era" book, and not really a Stargazer book, but it does include the Stargazer's last moments and Christopher does reference Friedman's earlier stories (particularly in using the same characters). I believe, IIRC, that it's in the same continuity.
Something to keep in mind, and John will correct me if I'm wrong: he wrote this without having seen Anson Mount actually play Pike. So he was probably taking more cues from Jeffrey Hunter than he was Mount (with perhaps a bit of Bruce Greenwood thrown in). I mean, "kind of aimless and depressed and this sort of weird triumphant vindictiveness," is a perfect description of how Hunter played the role......
I'm really excited about that one. She's a great character, but Disco hasn't always been so awesome with the character work and I think there are some real missing pieces in her story that need to be addressed. Your Trek work has been outstanding so far at that kind of continuity work, and as you say, "badass" seems like a good fit too!(And “badass” is certainly at work in my upcoming Emperor Georgiou book, Die Standing — though perhaps in a Star Trek context you’ll feel it fits more comfortably with!)
Drastic Measures
Um...
I think this might've been even worse than Hearts & Minds? [...]
I'm not trying to be mean, I'm really not! I'd love to hear what anyone thought was great about this novel (apparently lots of people did, because it won the Scribe award) but man, I do not get it.
Im getting caught up on the last 15 years of treklit lol. at the time i was reading everything up to and including the Destiny trilogy. I kept buying the novels as they came out, so I have everything up to TNG: Collateral Damage. I just never got around to reading them. So now after the Picard season 1 ended, along with my recent re-watches of TNG/DS9/VOY, im back in the mood to read trek again. I have 50+ books on my plate to get through yet. I decided to do a re-read of the Destiny trilogy as a good jumping back-on point.I’m getting back into Trek novels lately myself, after about ten years away. I’ve been struggling my way through Drastic Measures for a few weeks now, and finally finished it today. Thrawn’s review captures much of what I felt about the book, particularly the frustration of its being neither much of a Discovery novel nor an effective prequel to “The Conscience of the King.” I posted some of my own thoughts on Facebook here.
Next up for me is Fear Itself.
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