the Nero-V'ger merge in the Nero comic
What.

the Nero-V'ger merge in the Nero comic
What.
Hard not to do that, given she uses every and all opportunities to pontificate about politics and how horrible is living under the jackbooted, brainwashing heel of the Federation.I've read that "Double Helix: Red Sector" angered people, who seemingly read Diane Carey's political agenda into everything she writes
the gimmick age of Trek books, which struck me as deeply cynical. Crossovers! Galaxy-spanning disasters with no lasting effects! Trilogies with enough material for a single book!
Hard not to do that, given she uses every and all opportunities to pontificate about politics and how horrible is living under the jackbooted, brainwashing heel of the Federation.I've read that "Double Helix: Red Sector" angered people, who seemingly read Diane Carey's political agenda into everything she writes
she uses every and all opportunities to pontificate about politics and how horrible is living under the jackbooted, brainwashing heel of the Federation.
Hard not to do that, given she uses every and all opportunities to pontificate about politics and how horrible is living under the jackbooted, brainwashing heel of the Federation.I've read that "Double Helix: Red Sector" angered people, who seemingly read Diane Carey's political agenda into everything she writes
I'd say her characters are entitled to their own opinions.
IDIC, and all that.
TNG: Losing The Peace was another, but it really wasn't a bad book at all, but it just wasn't what I was expecting. I was looking for an immediate follow-up to A Singular Destiny, but what I got was a side story instead. Had I been more patient at the time, I might have finished and kept it.
I mean, Countdown sucked, and sucked bad, but...the Nero-V'ger merge in the Nero comic
What.
You know, people love to diss fan fic, even the well-written stuff, but when it comes to small universe syndrome, the professionals are often just as bad as anybody.
Hard not to do that, given she uses every and all opportunities to pontificate about politics and how horrible is living under the jackbooted, brainwashing heel of the Federation.
I'd say her characters are entitled to their own opinions.
IDIC, and all that.
So her characters can have their own opinions, you know, IDIC and all that, but if an author has an opinion and puts it in a dedication to a book, your head explodes?
As long as Decker's around and willing to screw it, potentially.^ I suppose they had to do something to make sure that V'Ger didn't approach Earth in the Abramsverse. You really think that the ST XI crew could handle it?![]()
IMO, A Singular Destiny and Losing The Peace both told the same story--the terrible aftermath from Destiny and the emergence of the Typhon Pact--but with the primary difference being that Losing The Peace concentrated on what the crew of the Enterprise-E were doing during that time whereas A Singular Destiny was far more widespread. I could almost have chosen one or the other because they both pretty much take you to the same place in the end. It's not a criticism, because I think Losing The Peace continued TNG where Destiny ended.TNG: Losing The Peace was another, but it really wasn't a bad book at all, but it just wasn't what I was expecting. I was looking for an immediate follow-up to A Singular Destiny, but what I got was a side story instead. Had I been more patient at the time, I might have finished and kept it.
I very much enjoyed LtP because it followed up on the concept of "paradise saints" that started in DS9 and showed us how the Federation (in my opinion realistically) might start to crumble under the weight of catastrophe. I don't think they needed the Uberinvasion of the Borg to do it though, the carnage of the Dominion War should have been quite sufficient.
This theme of "paradise saints" was what I was hoping to get out of a post-DS9 TV series. Explore the dichotomy between the developed core worlds and their attitudes and the frontier worlds/colonies that had to live in the real universe.
I would have used the "sell line" (which I came up with LONG before I'd even heard of the book): "They won the war...will they lose the peace?"
Of course they are. And I enjoy reading characters with opposing opinions. It makes for excellent drama. But when she puts the same stuff in the mouth of every other character, often warping characters' personalities to make her point, you start wondering if there more to that than good drama.I'd say her characters are entitled to their own opinions.
Well, I guess it's a matter of different sensibilities. I don't mind character friction. What I don't like is new characters getting preachy on the established characters and our heroes suddenly realizing "d'oh, I guess everything I believed until now was wrong!" It reeks of Mary-Sueism.I never got anti anti-Federation vibes from any of her other books. Sometimes anti-Starfleet, but this was the character friction people always claimed was missing in TNG.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.