^Yes, Chain of Attack was overtly a sequel to The Abode of Life, albeit peripherally so.
I haven't read Ishmael or Ghost-Walker, but agreed on Crossroad.Forget Ishmael; the real underrated Barbara Hambly books are Ghost-Walker and Crossroad. Marvelously moody works of character with neat ideas.
I haven't read Ishmael or Ghost-Walker, but agreed on Crossroad.Forget Ishmael; the real underrated Barbara Hambly books are Ghost-Walker and Crossroad. Marvelously moody works of character with neat ideas.
(I was going to say "I don't know how she could get that so right and Children of the Jedi and Planet of Twilight so wrong," but now that I think about it, the mood's not that different between Crossroad and her two Star Wars novels. Maybe dark-and-moody just works better in Trek than Wars?)
Is the book really about brainsucking bird people?![]()
Best destiny by Diane Carey from 1992. I love it and dont hear it mentioned very much. There were was another book with same characters in it about Kirk's Dad but having real problems finding that one.
I'm also quite fond of TNG: Gulliver's Fugitives by Keith Sharee, who unfortunately never wrote another Trek novel.
I had just finished Tom Clancy's The Hunt for Red October, then I read Rules of Engagement.Rules of Engagement by Peter Morwood.
I have a vague memory of liking Children of the Jedi and Planet of Twilight, but I was probably 13. Even then I hated Darksaber, though.
There were was another book with same characters in it about Kirk's Dad but having real problems finding that one.
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