I read it when it first came out. It had been excerpted in "Starlog" and caused a controversy from fans protesting a novel in which Kirk dies, even after they were told that it happened before ST:TMP. Having found most of the Bantams second hand, it was wonderful to hold a new Trek novel in my hands. This frustratingly-delayed book (due to Bantam's license) is still a favourite. It also made me seek out "Dreamsnake". (EDIT: Also have her "Fireflood and Other Stories".)I really, really didn't care for The Entropy Effect.
TEE felt like a science fiction novel, as had David Gerrold's "The Galactic Whirlpool".
Not once in all of that does anything set the universe on a headlong plunge towards an early heat-death.
Wasn't it due to the unusual experiments of Mordreaux that had caused the entropy effect?
I can't figure out how, on the strength of that, she got the contracts for three film novelizations.
Because the novel was hugely successful and McIntyre was easy to work with? She got the contract for ST III because her ST II novelization was hugely successful. She got the contract for ST IV because her ST III novelization was hugely successful - and is not only a good novelization, it's a great novel.
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