For the last few years now Tuesdays have been the release day for the majority of books, video games, and DVDs/Blu-Rays. I'm not sure why though.Can anyone explain to me, what’s the marketing reasoning behind the release of these books on Tuesdays!!??
Here I’m dying to talk about the book with somebody and everybody I know is working! DAMN!
Can anyone explain to me, what’s the marketing reasoning behind the release of these books on Tuesdays!!??![]()
It’s always exciting when your favorite band releases a new album. But, why do they always come out on Tuesday?...
This wasn't very good - on the plus side it's well-written and the character of Bashir get some good moments but that is outweighed by the problems with the book that are numerous.
The first and major one is the central dilemma is poorly set-up, some lip service is paid in the first third of the book to the idea that the information Bashir gets hold of could be used for negative consequences but that idea soon drops away and the reader is hit over the head with how right he is (because he has to be given the structure of the story and the simplistic actions of others).
This is compounded by opponents who aren't really characters as they are strawmen caricatures who only exist to further confirm how right he is in his actions - so there isn't any tension in the book. lead strawman is the President who although it's been hinted in previous books is either not whom he seems or has other problems is simply portrayed without any hint of nuance and might as well be twirling a black mustache. Following his progress in this series, I expect him to be tossing babies in a fire in the next book. Most of the other characters suffer from the same problem to varying degrees (including starfleet Captains who fire on their own without question and invade sovereign worlds at the drop of a hat).
The book then completely falls to pieces when the Andorians seemingly change Government and rejoin the federation over the space of a single weekend in a rather hasty conclusion.
This wasn't very good - on the plus side it's well-written and the character of Bashir get some good moments but that is outweighed by the problems with the book that are numerous.
The first and major one is the central dilemma is poorly set-up, some lip service is paid in the first third of the book to the idea that the information Bashir gets hold of could be used for negative consequences but that idea soon drops away and the reader is hit over the head with how right he is (because he has to be given the structure of the story and the simplistic actions of others).
This is compounded by opponents who aren't really characters as they are strawmen caricatures who only exist to further confirm how right he is in his actions - so there isn't any tension in the book. lead strawman is the President who although it's been hinted in previous books is either not whom he seems or has other problems is simply portrayed without any hint of nuance and might as well be twirling a black mustache. Following his progress in this series, I expect him to be tossing babies in a fire in the next book. Most of the other characters suffer from the same problem to varying degrees (including starfleet Captains who fire on their own without question and invade sovereign worlds at the drop of a hat).
The book then completely falls to pieces when the Andorians seemingly change Government and rejoin the federation over the space of a single weekend in a rather hasty conclusion.
I enjoyed it more than you but would agree the portrayal of the President went way over the top - I expected him to give an evil cackle after every line.
It's interesting - we've had a lot of books in the first few years covering the political aspect of the Federation and its members and it does feel that the politicans rarely come out of it well. It fits with our cynical world but jars somewhat in the supposedly more muture & open society of the Federation.
Bashir recalls being a prisoner of the Breen during the Dominion War.
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