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Seven Deadly Sins--cover on amazon

Greg Cox

Admiral
Premium Member
FYI, amazon has posted the cover of the SEVEN DEADLY SINS anthology. Looks pretty snazzy to me.
 
Ah, I was wondering when they'd put it up. S&S has had a tiny thumbnail version up for most of last week.

So, Jimmy Diggs is no longer contributing, then? And is that how Britta Dennison will be credited from now on?
 
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Cool, I've been waiting to see a color version of this ever since the last PB catalog. I'm really excited for this one, I really like all of the races picked for this. I'm especially curious about the Pakled story. Will it be the first time they've played a major role in a Trek story since Samaritan Snare?

EDIT: I just checked S&S's website and they also have the final description up.
PRIDE. GREED. ENVY. WRATH.LUST. GLUTTONY. SLOTH.The Seven Deadly Sins delineate the path to a person’s downfall, the surest way to achieve eternal damnation. But there is a way out, a way to reclaim salvation:blame it on the demons—taunting you, daring you to embrace these sins—and you shall be free. The painful truth is that these impulses live inside all ofus, inside all sentient beings. But alas, one person’s sin may be another being’s virtue.The pride of the Romulan Empire is laid bare in “The First Peer,” by Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore.A Ferengi is measured by his acquisition of profit. “Reservoir Ferengi,” by David A.McIntee, depicts the greed that drives that need. The Cardassians live in a resource-poor system, surrounded by neighbors who have much more. The envy at the heart of Cardassian drive is “The Slow Knife,”by James Swallow. The Klingons have tried since the time of Kahless to harness their wrath with an honor code, but they haven’t done so, as evidenced in “The Unhappy Ones,”by Keith R.A. DeCandido. Humans’ darkest impulses run free in the Mirror Universe. “Freedom Angst,” by Britta Burdett Dennison, illustrates the lust that drives many there. The Borg’s desire to add to their perfection is gluttonous and deadly in “Revenant,”by Marc D. Giller. To be a Pakled is to live to up to the ideal of sloth in “Work Is Hard,” by Greg Cox.
 
Very nice :techman:. I'm really looking forward to KRAD's Klingon story (his only treklit of 2010 :(), and the Ferengi story which I take will have some Tarantinoesque sequences by way of its title :)
 
Can't wait. I've been looking forward to this ever since it was first announced.

Interesting how the cover depicts TOS Klingons and Romulans...
 
^Neither am I :). I prefer the Romulans that don't have the cranial ridges like the ones in the new movie (they seem more Vulcan), and I've always liked idea of the whole Qu'Cha / Hem'Quch Klingon seperation since it was first introduced in Enterprise's last season and in some books that followed (like M&M's Forged in Fire).
 
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I think that the theme for the anthology is rather silly, but I've ordered it anyway, and I don't mind if we get some good stories out of it.
 
^I, on the other hand, find the premise and theme to be quite interesting. I think exploring some of the defining character traits of the various trek alien cultures is a great idea. Wrapping it all around a concept like sin (the "deadly" one's to boot :rolleyes:) seems kind of natural. I'm actually kind of surprised that something like this wasn't produced before now...
 
^I, on the other hand, find the premise and theme to be quite interesting. I think exploring some of the defining character traits of the various trek alien cultures is a great idea. Wrapping it all around a concept like sin (the "deadly" one's to boot :rolleyes:) seems kind of natural. I'm actually kind of surprised that something like this wasn't produced before now...
I've never liked the idea of a single defining trait for an entire alien race - feels too much like ethnic stereotyping - and wrapping it up around the Christian concept of deadly sin feels particularly cheesy.

Not to mention that using Borg as an epitome of some sort of metaphorical gluttony is... a bit of a stretch, to put it that way. :borg:
 
The sins aren't being used to "define" an alien race. They were simply matched up on the basis of what was considered to be the best way to tell a story featuring a character or characters from a particular race, and whatever actions they take (or fail to take) that could be described as falling prey to a given "sin." You could swap the sins around to the selected species, or substitute new ones, and come up with a completely different collection of stories. The seven here simply represent what those involved in the planning of the anthology considered to be the strongest selection. If it works, there might well be another collection somewhere down the road where the matchups/species are completely different. One never knows.
 
The fact that they were using a certain species matched up with a certain "sin" at first made me think of stereotyping as well, but to paraphrase Dayton, it's just a launching point for a story. I think that they used the whole "sin" thing because it's a concept that most people are familiar with, and will understand right away when they pick up the book.

It actually seems like a good theme as people who are only fairweather trek fans may see the book and be like, "Seven deadly sins? I know about those. And combining them with star trek aliens? Sounds interesting...". They'll probably sell more books because of the "sin" angle then they would have if it was just a collection of short trek stories. Which in turn, is great for treklit fans. We all know that the more a book sells, the more likely they are to keep on publishing more :)
 
Not to mention that using Borg as an epitome of some sort of metaphorical gluttony is... a bit of a stretch, to put it that way. :borg:
I disagree -- that's how the Borg were originally presented in "Q Who." The exact phrase Q used was that the Enterprise was something to "consume." And their "assimilation uber alles" attitude is pretty consistent with gluttony....

As for that being the TOS iteration of Kang on the cover -- youbetcha! :klingon: When Marco first came to me about doing this story, the way he pitched it to me was, "How'd you like to write TOS-era Klingons for a change?"

My story specifically deals with the QuchHa'/HemQuch dichotomy, and how Kor, Kang, and Koloth in particular handled it as high-ranking QuchHa'. The story takes place after "Errand of Mercy" and "The Trouble with Tribbles," but before "Day of the Dove," and is the first time the Big Three worked together.

(The story title is the literal translation of QuchHa'.)
 
^Fantastic!!! I loved the way those three were portrayed in Forged in Fire, and can't wait to read the story of the first time that they worked together. KRAD + Klingons = AWESOMESAUCE!!

Sorry for the sucking-up. I just like KRAD klingon stories...

..you know...

...a lot :).
 
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