I finished Vulcan! about a week ago, not as good as Kathleen Sky’s other TOS novel, Death’s Angel (Richard Arnold would not have approved those cool aliens!). Vulcan! was alright until the mindmeld at the end when all sense went out the window.
I finished Reunion, which was alright (I find MJF’s books decent but unspectacular). All the new characters were interesting (as I’d hope considering it spawned a whole Stargazer series).
I’m now reading Dark Victory, and I’m loving every minute of it. But if I didn’t know better (that the book was released in 1999), I’d think it was packed with Star Trek XI references:
Kirk wears a T-shirt for the 75th annual James Kirk memorial orbital skydiving championships (okay, that one is based on the Generations deleted scene now on YouTube).
Kirk suspects the captain of the Sovereign is a bumped-up space cadet (pot calling the kettle black!).
The Heisenberg (which, admittedly, may not exist) is equipped with Countdown-style holographic screens floating over the control consoles.
I know Bob Orci (claims to) love the Trek novels and draws inspiration from them, but it’s seeming more and more likely that Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens are, in fact, from the future.
I finished Reunion, which was alright (I find MJF’s books decent but unspectacular). All the new characters were interesting (as I’d hope considering it spawned a whole Stargazer series).
I’m now reading Dark Victory, and I’m loving every minute of it. But if I didn’t know better (that the book was released in 1999), I’d think it was packed with Star Trek XI references:
Kirk wears a T-shirt for the 75th annual James Kirk memorial orbital skydiving championships (okay, that one is based on the Generations deleted scene now on YouTube).
Kirk suspects the captain of the Sovereign is a bumped-up space cadet (pot calling the kettle black!).
The Heisenberg (which, admittedly, may not exist) is equipped with Countdown-style holographic screens floating over the control consoles.
I know Bob Orci (claims to) love the Trek novels and draws inspiration from them, but it’s seeming more and more likely that Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens are, in fact, from the future.