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So What Are you Reading?: Generations

I completed my reread of Sacraments of Fire. It was a frustrating experience, especially knowing that most of the threads are not going to pay off in big ways in the next three books before Coda. On their own, the scenes are all fine and sometimes even great. Seeing the Even Odds characters again is fun, and the introduction of Kai Pralon proves that DRG3 can give us characters that make an impression in a short amount of page space. However, on the macro level, not a whole lot is happening, and much of the action is related in retrospect.

The next book up for me is The Light Fantastic. It also follows up on a lot of prior book-only events, but the way the reader is filled in is so much more elegant in Lang's book. By the end of Chapter 2, we know what the status quo is, how we got there, and what the main characters want, and we also have gotten some great character work and interactions.
 
I finished up Star Wars: New Dawn, which I thought was great, and I'm not reading ST:TNG: Doomsday World by Peter David, Micheal Jan Friedman, Robert Greenberger, and Carmen Carter. I've read and really enjoyed stuff by David, Friedman, and Greenberger, and I've been curious to check out of the books they wrote together.
 
ROBYNE OF SHERWOOD by Peter David.

A novel about Robin Hood's daughter, picking up where her father left off.
Our Peter David? It sounds rather tongue-in-cheek.

I just took delivery on used copies of Asimov's The Sensuous Dirty Old Man, and a fairly early British edition of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, neither of which I've read, and (given that today is Ash Wednesday) I might not have time to squeeze in for another nearly 6 1/2 weeks.

Genesis. And I don't mean some new treatise on a flawed "instant terraforming" technology.
 
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Yep. Our Peter David, and it's not tongue-in-cheek. It's actually a rather brutal depiction of the times.

I don't think it's too spoilery to reveal that the opening scene features our young heroine witnessing her father, Robin Hood, being killed and decapitated by the Sheriff of Nottingham. (In that order.)
 
I decided that it was time to read The Autobiography of Benjamin Sisko alongside The Light Fantastic. Though we know quite a bit of his backstory, there was also plenty of new material to deepen our understanding of Ben and his family. I'm at 79% finished, and that is the point that Wolf 359 enters the book.

Ben's grandparents both die pretty early on in the book. It is an indicator of the author's skill that I was emotionally moved both times, even though they were not a part of the TV show and appeared in a relatively small amount of pages.
 
Just finished Star Trek Picard rogue elements! That book was amazing. Reading the metaphysics of Star Trek, and started Star Trek Picard second self.
 
Just finished To Reign in Exile. An outstanding story about Khan's years on Ceti Alpha V. One of the best Trek books I've ever read despite of my dislike of those disgusting Ceti Eel creatures.
 
Currently, I am rereading Star Trek: The Missing from Una McCormack and The Mighty Thor Omnibus from Walt Simonson.

On the new-to-me front, I am trying out George Lucas: A Life by Brian Jay Jones.
 
This Book Kills by Ravena Guron.

A YA thriller about a boarding-school student whose creative-writing assignment ends up inspiring an actual murder, much to her dismay.

(I'm a sucker for stories about writers and writing.)
 
Joshua.

From the first season of DSC, "Voq, Son of None" has always reminded me of Joshua, son of Nun. No idea whether that was an intentional allusion (particularly since I've never pronounced "Nun" quite that way, in that context).
 
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