More DS9 books in this batch of five than in the previous thirty-five combined!
But with a lot of TNG characters if I remember correctly
More DS9 books in this batch of five than in the previous thirty-five combined!
I hadn't quite clocked it 'til you said it (about halfway through), but you are right, with Pulaski and Crusher, and then each chapter beginning with an excerpt from Picard's writing. But to be honest, there aren't really many DS9 characters left unless we want to read the ongoing adventures of Starfleet's worst chief of security, Jefferson Blackmer.But with a lot of TNG characters if I remember correctly
It's been a while, but I think at the time I assumed it was a reference to Dayton Ward's runner about Strangers From the Sky being Jean-Luc and René's favorite book to read together.I want to know what "excellent speculative novel" about a first contact Picard mentions reading. It sounds Le Guinnish but doesn't map onto anything I can think of from Le Guin.
I don't think that can be it; the book is about humans trying to decide if a new civilization is ready for contact and solving the problem by just asking the civilization what it thinks.It's been a while, but I think at the time I assumed it was a reference to Dayton Ward's runner about Strangers From the Sky being Jean-Luc and René's favorite book to read together.
Happy sixth anniversary to this thread... a thread I originally estimated would wrap up in two-and-a-half years! Good thing Picard came along and destroyed the Destiny timeline because otherwise I probably never would have caught up. At my established rate, I estimate Coda, Book III in August 2026!So, at a certain point I started to fall behind when it came to Star Trek novels. While I used to read them avidly as they came out, I started to slip further and further behind, especially when it came to what I've come to think of the "Destiny Era" books, those novels set after Nemesis, the chronologically final part of the canon. Though I have read almost a hundred Star Trek books over the past seven years, the last Destiny Era novel I read was Titan: Synthesis by James Swallow, way back in February 2010! I've been keeping a list, of course, and now I'm nearly fifty books behind. I've read the set-up of the Typhon Pact in Destiny: A Singular Destiny, but never actually read the Typhon Pact novels themselves; I basically left off just before they got started.
Now, finally, I'm going to start tackling that list. Forumgoers may be familiar with my Deep Space Nine reread, and I'm going to take a similar format here, writing up my general thoughts on each novel, plus other random ideas as may occur to me. So that I don't drown in Star Trek novels, I'm going to do them in batches of five in chronological order: read five, then do some other books, then do five more, and so on. I did something similar to this for Star Wars: The New Jedi Order, and it took me nineteen months to get through 34 books, so I anticipate that this will take me something on the order of 30 months, so I guess I can look forward to wrapping up in December 2019. By which time there will be even more books!
I said I'd be starting with the Typhon Pact novels, but that's not quite true. There are some books set before Typhon Pact: Rough Beasts of Empire that I think will provide some context and set-up and otherwise tie into the Destiny Era stuff, so I'll start with them. (I briefly considered titling this The Typhon Pact and Beyond and Before, but decided that was too silly.) So as soon as I post this, I'll start to read the first of my first five:
Phase One: 2268-83, 2377-81
1. The Original Series: From History's Shadow by Dayton Ward
2. The Original Series: Allegiance in Exile by David R. George III
3. The Rings of Time by Greg Cox
4. The Original Series: Elusive Salvation by Dayton Ward
5. Mirror Universe: Rise Like Lions by David Mack
Comments as I go are of course welcome.
Good thing Picard came along and destroyed the Destiny timeline
Good thing Picard came along and destroyed the Destiny timeline because otherwise I probably never would have caught up. At my established rate, I estimate Coda, Book III in August 2026!
That would be fun. I'll talk about this when I write up Sacraments of Fire, but George really dropped the ball when it came to repopulating the station with interesting characters following the Destiny time jump. There are a lot of a humans whose main personality attribute is "Starfleet officer."I do enjoy how you always refer to Blackmer as Starfleet's worst security chief because I really can't argue - not only is he bad at his job but he's such a non-entity as a character. That's part of why, when I was adapting Plagues of Night / Raise the Dawn, I removed him altogether and replaced him with Rwogo, the Ferengi woman investigator mentioned in Satisfaction Is Not Guaranteed, who comes aboard as the Ferengi exchange officer after the Alliance joins the Khitomer Accords and acts as the new security chief. Come to think of it, that would fit perfectly with this story by adding another Ferengi character and one who's a competent investigator.
I think Force and Motion (I am three books away) is set in January.I think the Nog off the station thing is a reference to Force and Motion, the Nog-and-O'Brien buddy movie novel by Jeffrey Lang, yet another story that takes place around the same time. It doesn't surprise me if the continuity doesn't line up perfectly because, as you've well established, that is clearly not a priority for them around this time.
That would be fun. I'll talk about this when I write up Sacraments of Fire, but George really dropped the ball when it came to repopulating the station with interesting characters following the Destiny time jump. There are a lot of a humans whose main personality attribute is "Starfleet officer."
Perhaps this worth digging into/analysing with the benefit of hindsight. How does one crew of novel characters become memorable but another one forgettable? Like DS9 Relaunch vs DS9 Re-relaunch.Seriously! How we have the whole crew of the station and the whole crew of the Robinson, and there's not a memorable character among them. I'm not quite sure how it's even possible to do that.
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