Anyone remember Dreams Of The Raven by Carmen Carter? Good book.
Ooh, Dreams of the Raven is another good one. An excellent McCoy story, and some genuinely creepy aliens.
What was that title again? I seem to have forgotten.Kobayashi Maru by J. Ecklar shouldn´t be forgotten.
One of the first Trek novels I ever read, the TNG-era Metamorphosis (the first GIANT novel) was quite enjoyable to my 10-year-old eyes. I even re-read it a number of years later and found I liked it even better than before. And boy, it sure *was* giant. This was before the Trek novel miniseries craze hit, and this book had a huge story to tell -- it was about twice the size of a regular Pocket Books novel.
Tell me about it, I remember back when the third Harry Potter book came out I thought it was huge. But now that I look back, it's actually smaller than alot of the Trek books (like the first Mission Gamma book) and half the length of the last Harry Potter.One of the first Trek novels I ever read, the TNG-era Metamorphosis (the first GIANT novel) was quite enjoyable to my 10-year-old eyes. I even re-read it a number of years later and found I liked it even better than before. And boy, it sure *was* giant. This was before the Trek novel miniseries craze hit, and this book had a huge story to tell -- it was about twice the size of a regular Pocket Books novel.
I remembered Metamorphosis as a huge book too, so I decided to check it out again, pulled it off the bookshelf and the mmpb is only 370 pages, on the lower end of the current lot of books. Interesting how our memory plays tricks with us because we remembered it as a comparison with the other books of that era. It certainly was a great book though, no questions.
"Web of the Romulans" is rarely mentioned, and I recall that this was the first novel to give almost equal time to the enemy race as to the Enterprise crew.
Anyone remember Dreams Of The Raven by Carmen Carter? Good book.
Ooh, Dreams of the Raven is another good one. An excellent McCoy story, and some genuinely creepy aliens.
What was the last line?The ST:TNG sequel was "Possession".
And I will never forget that last line from "Possession".
Never.
Peter Morwood's Rules of Engagement is another book I've had real fondness for. It's the last hurrah of the John M. Ford Klingons.
I'd rhyme with that. It's a shame Peter never wrote more Trek.
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