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List of lesser known TOS era books

voggmo

Commodore
Can someone pitch some booktitles about TOS written by lesser known authors, or perhaps by people associated with the show. Ones that haven't got much press etc.
 
ah go on... leave it here..

none of you can, can you?

it breaks ur skull to have a little post like this in the wrong forum..
 
Moving the thread would be a service to the OP: he'd get replies from people who actually know (better) and care (more).

FWIW, I suggest going to psiphi.org for a full listing of Trek novels: they are sorted by series in the Book Database there.

Timo Saloniemi
 
The first Trek book I ever read was a little number called Trek to Madworld. Does that count as lesser known? As I recall, it was pretty bad.
 
Vulcan! by Kathleen Sky is one that's sitting in my collection. Interesting story about a new female specialist coming aboard the Enterprise with a deep-seated hatred of all Vulcans. It's been awhile since I read this book, but I recall bits and pieces about a good number of Vulcans in Starfleet along with Spock, I think...
 
I think Barbara Hambly's last two novels--Ishmael gets all the press--are oft-overlooked gems. Ghost-Walker and Crossroads are both favorites of mine-- they're atmospheric and imaginative, they cover ideas that could only be done in novel form, and Hambly captures the character of Kirk with such nuance that basically only Duane can excel her at.
 
I really enjoyed Barbara Hambly's book Ishmael. I know it seems ridiculous to do a crossover with Here Comes the Brides, but I think she did a really great job of pulling it off.

Another oldie I love is Black Fire by Sonni Cooper. All I have to say is Spock as a space pirate.
 
"Devil World" is and old one I have - Kirk and co. meet up with the remnants of a galactic empire whose beings look just like the devil from earth mythology. Don't remember the author though.
 
This thread is bringing back memories. Many of these titles are back from the day when one could read all of the Trek novels, and still have a life.
 
^ Prime Directive is by Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens, who also wrote Memory Prime, Federation, the Millennium trilogy, the framing short stories in The Lives of Dax, and several nonfiction/coffee-table books. They also coauthor William Shatner's Kirk novels.
 
My long-time (meaning like, a year or two) favorite "sleeper" is Web of the Romulans, despite the amorous computer subplot. I thought it had a nice mini-epic quality to it.
Newly challenging it for the position, though, is The Vulcan Academy Murders. In truth, I found the A-plot to be lacking, and I guessed who the murderer was pretty much the moment that character was introduced, just based on genre cliche. But what the big did do well was give a very interesting, in-depth look at certain elements of Vulcan culture. Since I haven't yet read Spock's World or the Vulcan's Noun books, this is pretty much my first really exposure to that type of thing, and I quite enjoyed it.
 
I thought The Three Minute Universe was pretty funny. From the aliens who are so sickening that anyone who is in the same room with them immediately projectile-ralphs, to immortal lines like "I have been named! Henceforth you may address me as Orangejuiceandwodka!" :guffaw:
 
Ah, The Three-Minute Universe was probably the first non-YA piece of Trek fiction I ever read. It was certainly the first one I ever owned, and I must have read it a dozen times. Who can forget the starship Babe-in-Arms?
 
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