Metamorphosis is a really well known novel, though.
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 thought I was was reading a Star Trek version of Clancy's story.
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Not sure if it has much mention, but I recall always having enjoyed TNG's "Dragon's Honor". Good story with abundant humour.
I absolutely love that one! And Sonni Cooper is a really nice lady - she was a Guest of Honor at a Calgary convention back in the '80s.DorkBoy [TM];5332508 said:Black Fire was good - it started with a real BANG!![]()
I absolutely love that one! And Sonni Cooper is a really nice lady - she was a Guest of Honor at a Calgary convention back in the '80s.DorkBoy [TM];5332508 said:Black Fire was good - it started with a real BANG!![]()
My choice is one of the few books I actually considered returning to the store because I found it utterly unreadable: How Much For Just the Planet?
Luckily I gave it another chance once I figured out the secret to enjoying it. It really helps to have a theatrical background to fully imagine the action in this one!![]()
It would be such a hoot to see that book performed as a real-life operetta!
I still wonder what a plomeek milkshake tastes like...
drawing on snippets of different song melodies/rhythms.
Diane Carey's Starfleet Academy, loosely based on the PC/Super Nintendo game, was enjoyable. Ditto Susan Wright's The Best and Brightest. Both books follow the adventures of groups of (unknown) Starfleet cadets in the TOS movie and TNG eras.
I'd love to know what became of all those cadets.
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