Shakaar said:
As for Invasion!, I really loved the concept when I first heard about it, but the execution left something to be desired. I thought the Furies were pretty creepy in the TOS story, but got less and less interesting as the series continued. The DS9 book was the best, but it seemed to have little to do with the other books. Plus, I don't think the Furies have even been mentioned since.
Christopher said:
Shakaar said:
As for Invasion!, I really loved the concept when I first heard about it, but the execution left something to be desired. I thought the Furies were pretty creepy in the TOS story, but got less and less interesting as the series continued. The DS9 book was the best, but it seemed to have little to do with the other books. Plus, I don't think the Furies have even been mentioned since.
They have been, in the SCE/CoE story Ring Around the Sky by Allyn Gibson.
I don't know if they will cross over, but if you keep up with the DS9-R, they introduce a new enemy that seems like they might be tough. Well, at least I hope they will be since they've spent the last 4 or 5 books talking about them and getting ready for them to come.Shakaar said:
I'd like to see some kind of new alien race that just appears unstoppable like the Borg used to be. Something completely unknown. Something that would cross over with all of the series at some point. It's not necessary to have an all-out war ala the Dominion, though. In fact, it would be better if they just appeared every now and then, again like the Borg used to. I think the writers could create something really impressive in this regard since they aren't constricted by budget or special effects in print.
Babaganoosh said:
I mean, since when else have we ever actually seen what fictional programming would be like in Trek's time?
Definitely agree about the Sheliak and the Breen. The Sheliak seem pretty cool, and I would love to see a book that deat with them. I really think it's about time we learned about what the Breen's appearance and culture are like, they were in 10 episodes of DS9, and were mentioned several times in TNG, but we still no nothing about them.Vastator said:
Hmmm things I would like to see are perhaps maybe more of the Sheliak Corporate and the Breen.
I wouldnt mind learning more about the Furies and the Unclean... the Unclean were really freaky...
Ninja Edit: Oh and of course the Voth.
JD said:
...I really think it's about time we learned about what the Breen's appearance and culture are like...
FWIW, Meditations on a Crimson Shadow, a Cardassian novel mentioned in DS9's "The Wire," takes place in the(ir) future, and would therefore qualify as science-fiction. Other than the basic premise, though (Cardassians and Klingons at war, which eventually happened anyway), there was no indication of what "futuristic" elements the novel contained.Trent Roman said:
It is a curious notion to ponder. Particularly, what kind of science-fiction would such a society produce?Babaganoosh said:
I mean, since when else have we ever actually seen what fictional programming would be like in Trek's time?
*ducks and covers under desk*Christopher said:
Hah! As if even you could ward off my bad puns.
Trent Roman said:
Babaganoosh said:
I mean, since when else have we ever actually seen what fictional programming would be like in Trek's time?
It is a curious notion to ponder. Particularly, what kind of science-fiction would such a society produce? I do recall, however, one novel mentioning a program Alexander would watch, about a group of people bouncing around in the time-stream, visiting new periods with every instalment... sort of like a time-travelling Sliders. Drawing a complete blank on what book it might have been, though.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
Alexander was finishing his breakfast cereal, watching the latest issue disk of his comic on the holo-imagery padd. Tiny shifting images of humans, apparently this time the group was stranded in an underground cavern. Alexander’s favorite series, with the main thrust being the heroes’ attempts to escape from a time-slip that trapped them in different periods on Earth. Deanna had assured Worf it was very educational. Worf viewed one episode, found the focus on character interaction made it dull. Others, with space battles and personal combat between exotic alien rivals, looked more interesting, but Alexander didn’t like those.
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