• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

So What Are you Reading?: Generations

About 100 pages into 'Star Trek: The Art of the Impossible'. Once again, KRAD is delivering an awesome story
 
Currently reading "Caliban", by Roger MacBride Allen. It is an Isaac Asimov Robot novel.

Huh. I thought I'd read all of Asimov's Robot and Federation novels, but somehow I had no idea this existed.
 
I'm reading Startrek Tng A time to havrvest by Dayton Ward&Kevin Dilmore I've really like the stories in book s 3&4 so far it's .I like the way Beverly&Geordi Laforge and other Enterprise crewmembers get a good storyline and have an important part to play in trying who's trying to sabotaging their mission to help the Dolkaalan people.
 
Currently reading "Caliban", by Roger MacBride Allen. It is an Isaac Asimov Robot novel.

Huh. I thought I'd read all of Asimov's Robot and Federation novels, but somehow I had no idea this existed.
Byron Preiss Visual Publications licensed the rights to do books based on Asimov's Robot cycle back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There were three six-book series, ROBOT CITY, ROBOTS AND ALIENS, and ROBOTS IN TIME, with novels by Bruce Bethke, Rob Chilson, Arthur Byron Cover, Stephen Leigh, Michael P. Kube-McDowell, Mike McQuay, Jerry Oltion, Cordell Scottsen, Robert Thurston, and William F. Wu. Then there was the "Caliban" trilogy by Roger MacBride Allen, which included CALIBAN, INFERNO, and UTOPIA. (I edited the last three ROBOTS IN TIME books and UTOPIA when I was working for Byron.) All of them were titled with Asimov's name as a possessive (e.g., ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOT CITY: CYBORG by William F. Wu, or ISAAC ASIMOV'S UTOPIA by Roger MacBride Allen).
 
Since my last post I finished Christopher L. Bennett's Only Superhuman. I really enjoyed and would definitely read any sequels, or anything else set in the same universe.

I also read Volume 3 of the Star Trek ongoing comics. The stories included in this volume are The Return of the Archons and The Truth About Tribbles.

I'm now reading Star Trek: The Fall: The Poisoned Chalice by James Swallow.

Also, while it's not something I read, I'm going to include an audio drama I listened to: Torchwood: The Lost Files: The Devil and Miss Carew.
 
I am still reading different bookforms on this planet. Currently reading The Buried Age by Christopher L. Bennett (July 2007) and enjoying it. Going through Green Political Theory by Robert E. Goodin (1992) which is revisionist Green theory that desires to rescue Greens from themselves and is thus a bit paternalistic but immensely enjoyable. Still reading "The Modern Democratic State" by A. D. (Lord) Lindsay (1962) which is good entertaining reading for a polisci graduate.
 
Since my last post I finished Christopher L. Bennett's Only Superhuman. I really enjoyed and would definitely read any sequels, or anything else set in the same universe.

Thanks!

Could I ask a favor of people who've read Only Superhuman? Could you please post reviews of the book on Amazon and/or B&N, regardless of whether you bought it there? It has surprisingly few reviews on either site, and I gather that reviews and discussion posted on Amazon or the like help create attention for a book there. They don't have to be glowing reviews, they should be honest, but just make your opinions heard. I'd appreciate it. Ditto for any of my other books, although OS is the one that could benefit the most.

And of course, feel free to do the same for other Trek novelists' original works, like KRAD's numerous books over the past few years, Dave Mack's The Calling, etc.
 
I just finished off Dayton's Peaceable Kingdoms, which i liked very much, and have jumped back into my IKS Gorkon re-read.
 
I just finished my copy of Star Trek Annual 2013 - I liked it. And - I'm really, really, REALLY looking forward to more from John Byrne. I understand this is going to be an ongoing series now. Finally something from IDW that is well done - it's been along time coming.

ME
 
Finished out Titan: Synthesis the other day. Really enjoyable. Probably my favorite of the Titan novels. Really nice to see some of the background characters get some elevation. And an excellent take on Tuvok. I must admit, though, that I am very tired of Ranul Keru always being so contrary. Keru is pretty much unlikable throughout Titan, just a glowering guy with a bad attitude. It gets boring very quickly, even when he is right. It also isn't a glowing recommendation for his skills when pretty much everyone is constantly saying "You're right, but let's try this just incase." Still, though, Synthesis was a great read.

Now onto Typhon Pact: Zero Sum Game.
 
I've read 3 more books in the TNG miniseries series A time to harvest. A time to love,And a time to hate by Robert Green burger
 
The Days of Anna Madrigal by Armistead Maupin -- the final "Tales of the City" book. I'm "reading" the audio, read by Kate Mulgrew. She does a great job.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top