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List of lesser known TOS era books

Another oldie, that is a fun read is How Much For Just The Plant? by John Ford. I have not read it in years, but I just remember it as being really funny. I do know a few Trek fans that hate is, so be warned it is very ridiculous.

Tears of the Singers is an excellent book, and gives Uhura a chance to shine.
 
Sound like an episode of the 1977 TV show, "Quark".
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No, not the Ferengi.
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You know, with the character named Ficus?
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:brickwall:

Ok, I'm old. Look it up on IMDB.com
 
I got How Much.. froma used bookstore, but I still haven't gotten around to reading it yet though.

Just read about Quark on wikipedia and it souds like it must have been really funny.
 
^^There are people who think Quark was brilliant and people who think it was mediocre, as with most anything. I think it was one of the better attempts to do a science fiction farce on American TV (it was certainly vastly superior to Homeboys in Outer Space), but I think that SF farce is fundamentally hard to do, because successful SF/fantasy requires getting the audience to suspend disbelief and invest in the reality of the characters and their world, and if a show treats its own premise and setting as one big joke, that undermines suspension of disbelief. The SF sitcoms that have worked best -- Red Dwarf and Futurama -- have been those that haven't just made fun of SF but have actually told worthwhile SF stories in their own right (although they did both to a degree).
 
That was actually one of the things that suprised me most when I started watching Futurama earlier this year. I didn't expect it to actually be a legitimate sci-fi series, I figured it was just going to be one big parody of every other sci-fi series.
 
On the original topic, I just finished Twilight's End, and thought it was quite good. Oltion did a good job of making it sound like he knows his science (understand, I don't know jack about science, so all the matters to me is that the author "sells it," that is, makes me believe he knows what he's talking about). He poses an interesting problem and then implements a lot of mini-conflicts along the way to ensure it never drags. Even so, it wasn't white-knuckle excitement, it wasn't edge-of-your-seat, but it was still pretty entertaining and interesting.
The other thing I liked was how he posed a theoretical philosophical problem (whether or not they should spin the planet) and representing both sides of the argument fairly (even the "idle rich" came off looking like they might've been right, though with dubious motive). I really like it when a fictional story poses a moral or philosophical problem, and then represents both sides fairly instead of just making out one side to be a stupid, one-dimensional antagonist (something that I think Boston Legal usually does very well, also). It's also interesting when it's a purely hypothetical argument; in the real world, I'm pretty sure we'll never have to have the debate that went on in this book, but it's still fun to see well-reasoned arguments from both sides, and it's nice because you don't feel emotionally vested in one side or the other (I thought X3 did also did that quite well). Anyway, just a little review while the book is still fresh in my mind. I'd definitely say that qualifies as a lesser-known TOS book; it won't be remembered as one of my favorites, but it was entertaining enough.
 
^^Jerry Oltion's a well-established SF writer outside of Trek, a regular in Analog, a magazine whose content tends toward the hard-science side. So yeah, he knows his stuff, and the science in Twilight's End is pretty good, at least insofar as it was known at the time. Unfortunately, as so often happens in SF, its assumptions have been contradicted by new research and theory. It's now known that a tidally locked planet would probably be habitable over a much larger percentage of its surface due to heat transfer by atmosphere and water.
 
Lorraine Anderson said:
Sound like an episode of the 1977 TV show, "Quark".
Ignore the fuddy-duddies on this list. Quark was hysterically funny, and anyone who thinks otherwise is a big fat stinky.
 
voggmo said:
Equicon 75 Filmcon 3 - A Star Trek / Science Fiction & Fantasy Film Convention in Ca - May 24-26, 1975, Progress Report 2 by Equicon / Filmcom Committee 1975 (Paperback - 1975)

Um, that's a second hand progress report newsletter to a science fiction convention that happened in 1975.
 
voggmo said:
Ah I see. It does say paperback 75.

Yes, but it also clearly says "Progress Report 2", so unless your original post was for early amateur Star Trek publications of any kind, most of us were assuming you were after early novels.
 
The Rihannsu series by Diane Duane is good. They are about the romulans.
Here are the titles.
TOS #18: "My Enemy, My Ally"
TOS #35: "The Romulan Way" (with Peter Morwood)
TOS #95: "Swordhunt"
TOS #96: "Honor Blade"
 
^The four books mentioned above have been republished in an omnibus trade paperback called "The Bloodwing Voyages" last year when the fifth book "The Empty Throne" was published.
 
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