With the caveat that your mileage may vary on whether or not some of these are "standalone," because the word itself has no exact definition...
- Mirror Universe: The Sorrows of Empire by David Mack
- Mirror Universe: Rise Like Lions by David Mack
- The Lost Era: Serpents Among the Ruins by David R. George III
- The Lost Era: The Art of the Impossible by Keith R.A. DeCandido
- Crucible: Provenance of Shadows by David R. George III (part one of an interconnected trilogy, but you don't need to read the other two)
- Deep Space Nine: Hollow Men by Una McCormack
- Deep Space Nine: The Never-Ending Sacrifice by Una McCormack
- Terok Nor: Day of the Vipers by James Swallow (part one of the Terok Nor trilogy, but you don't need to read the other two)
- Section 31: Cloak by S.D. Perry
- A Time to Kill and A Time to Heal duology by David Mack -- technically part of the larger A Time to... miniseries, but I never read any of the preceding entries and never felt any need to
- A Time for War, A Time for Peace by Keith R.A. DeCandido - ditto; it comes after Kill/Heal
- Articles of the Federation by Keith R.A. DeCandido - a year in the life of the newly-elected Federation President; Star Trek meets The West Wing
- Titan: Orion's Hounds by Christopher L. Bennett - technically book 3 in the Star Trek: Titan series, but nothing about it requires you to read the other books in the series
- Burning Dreams by Margaret Wander Bonano
- Strangers From the Sky by Margaret Wander Bonano[/QUOTE]
Loved the former, hated the latter. Sorry Garamet!
Read it many moons ago but didn't really like it.Spock's World by Diane Duane
- The Next Generation: Immortal Coil by Jeffrey Lang
- S.C.E.: Wildfire by David Mack
- Department of Temporal Investigations: Watching the Clock by Christopher L. Bennett
The SCE series doesn't interest me an awful lot but the others are duly noted.
- Star Trek: Destiny trilogy by David Mack - honestly, not the least bit standalone, but so brilliant I can't not recommend it, and well-written enough to be able to follow and enjoy even if you haven't read related books
As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit, so I'd be happy enough to invest in a 3-book series, particularly given the rave reviews this one seems to have gotten. I think it's gonna have to be this one, on the basis of the responses.
Thanks for the comprehensive reply (and to anyone else who replied).
As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit, so I'd be happy enough to invest in a 3-book series, particularly given the rave reviews this one seems to have gotten. I think it's gonna have to be this one, on the basis of the responses.
- Star Trek: Destiny trilogy by David Mack - honestly, not the least bit standalone, but so brilliant I can't not recommend it, and well-written enough to be able to follow and enjoy even if you haven't read related books
As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit, so I'd be happy enough to invest in a 3-book series, particularly given the rave reviews this one seems to have gotten. I think it's gonna have to be this one, on the basis of the responses.
Thanks for the comprehensive reply (and to anyone else who replied).
God no, it sets up lots of plotpoints that are picked up by other books - it is very much within the continuity of the rest of treklit.As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit, so I'd be happy enough to invest in a 3-book series, particularly given the rave reviews this one seems to have gotten. I think it's gonna have to be this one, on the basis of the responses.
Indeed. I explained as best I could in the OP - I basically don't want to either have to go through tons of backstory to be able to follow the book or read a further dozen books to see how the story ends!
I read the TNG and DS9 Section 31 novels, I don't know why I didn't read the TOS one. I think it struck me as a bit of a retcon at the time. No-one in 24th Century Starfleet apart from Bashir had heard of the organisation, so I was sceptical as to how they could be fitted into a story featuring Kirk's crew and not leave any trace.
I did read and enjoy the first in the Titan series but to be honest, I'm not interested enough in Riker and Troi to really follow that series.
I'm a sucker for MU stuff, so sounds good.- Mirror Universe: The Sorrows of Empire by David Mack
- Mirror Universe: Rise Like Lions by David Mack
All I'll say is that it works. It absolutely works.I read the TNG and DS9 Section 31 novels, I don't know why I didn't read the TOS one. I think it struck me as a bit of a retcon at the time. No-one in 24th Century Starfleet apart from Bashir had heard of the organisation, so I was sceptical as to how they could be fitted into a story featuring Kirk's crew and not leave any trace.- Section 31: Cloak by S.D. Perry
Really? Then you've been gone for more than three years -- A Time to... was published in 2004, so you've been gone for 8 years now!I think it was around the time of the release of the ATT... series that I started to lose interest in Trek novels, certainly in TNG novels.- A Time to Kill and A Time to Heal duology by David Mack -- technically part of the larger A Time to... miniseries, but I never read any of the preceding entries and never felt any need to
- A Time for War, A Time for Peace by Keith R.A. DeCandido - ditto; it comes after Kill/Heal
Well, the A Time to... series led directly into the post-NEM novels; they set up both Star Trek: Titan and the post-NEM TNG series. And there were a lot of unexplained changes between INS and NEM that ATT addressed.The length of that series just seemed like too big an investment of either time or money. I also remember at the time being annoyed that Pocket were doing a series of books pre-NEM, when I wanted to know about what happened that crew post-NEM.
If you do come to a point where you're looking for a good old fashioned Star Trekian lone ship out there having a space exploration adventure story, I'd recommend this one.I did read and enjoy the first in the Titan series but to be honest, I'm not interested enough in Riker and Troi to really follow that series.- Titan: Orion's Hounds by Christopher L. Bennett
I'm not much of an S.C.E. fan either, but Wildfire is one of the most genuinely moving, beautiful, amazing TrekLit books ever written. It's so much more than just some techy adventure story.The SCE series doesn't interest me an awful lot but the others are duly noted.- The Next Generation: Immortal Coil by Jeffrey Lang
- S.C.E.: Wildfire by David Mack
- Department of Temporal Investigations: Watching the Clock by Christopher L. Bennett
As others have said, Destiny is very connected to much of the rest of the TrekLit line -- and not in a Red Skies Crossover sort of way -- but, you shouldn't need to read anything else going into it. The character arcs and conflicts that drive the story are all explained in the trilogy itself, even though it is building on prior books.As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit, so I'd be happy enough to invest in a 3-book series, particularly given the rave reviews this one seems to have gotten. I think it's gonna have to be this one, on the basis of the responses.- Star Trek: Destiny trilogy by David Mack - honestly, not the least bit standalone, but so brilliant I can't not recommend it, and well-written enough to be able to follow and enjoy even if you haven't read related books
If you'll allow me a shameless plug, The Rings of Time (which just came out a few months ago) is very much a standalone TOS adventure.
As I understand it, the Destiny trilogy is outside the continuity of the rest of Treklit
If you'll allow me a shameless plug, The Rings of Time (which just came out a few months ago) is very much a standalone TOS adventure.
I think writers should be allowed to promote their own works here, right?
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