I finished a reread of Star Trek: Dujonian's Hoard by Michael Jan Friedman. If you liked "Gambit" but wished it had more Worf, romance, and first-person Picard narration, then this book will do the trick.
I also reread The Candymakers by Wendy Mass. The setting is as wondrous as Willy Wonka's factory, and it has the bonus that the young protagonists all end up being pretty awesome, even the one who is acting obnoxiously at the beginning. Its structure is one of my favorite things about the book. The author retells the same few days as Part One in Parts Two, Three, and Four, but from the perspective of another one of the children. This results in many puzzling bits from earlier chapters making so much more sense as further details are revealed. If anyone knows what to call this literary device, please chime in, as I feel it probably does have a name.
Now reading: Star Trek: Time's Enemy by L.A. Graf and The Candymakers and the Great Chocolate Chase by Wendy Mass (a rare sequel to a five-star book that is also worth five stars and does not wreck the ending of the original book)
I also reread The Candymakers by Wendy Mass. The setting is as wondrous as Willy Wonka's factory, and it has the bonus that the young protagonists all end up being pretty awesome, even the one who is acting obnoxiously at the beginning. Its structure is one of my favorite things about the book. The author retells the same few days as Part One in Parts Two, Three, and Four, but from the perspective of another one of the children. This results in many puzzling bits from earlier chapters making so much more sense as further details are revealed. If anyone knows what to call this literary device, please chime in, as I feel it probably does have a name.
Now reading: Star Trek: Time's Enemy by L.A. Graf and The Candymakers and the Great Chocolate Chase by Wendy Mass (a rare sequel to a five-star book that is also worth five stars and does not wreck the ending of the original book)