I agree. Of the seven novels, in my opinion three were very good (Serpents among the Ruins, Catalyst of Sorrows and The Art of the Impossible), three were good (The Sundered, Deny thy Father and The Buried Age) and only one was average (Well of Souls). So a pretty good overall performance for the series.Well of Souls was one of the books that polarized readers. I liked it. Actually, of the original six Lost Era novels, imho five of them ranged from pretty damn good to holy-crap-this-is-amazing. The one I found disappointing was Deny Thy Father; it felt like a book of two parts that didn't really mesh.
Overall, though, "Lost Era" is a trademark of quality. You can tell the writers are having a great time and making the most of the opportunity to play outside the usual sandboxes.
there's a David in the author's name, but it's a first name: David R. George III...Serpents Amongst The Ruins also by Peter David
I'll put a caveat on Serpent Among the Ruins: I liked all of its component pieces, but not the dénouement.I'm interested in "The Lost Era" books after hearing about KRAD's "The Art of the Impossible". Are they all pretty good or are there ones to avoid?
Also in the Generations-to-Farpoint era but not technically "Lost Era" books:^^Well, by that standard, Vulcan's Forge and Vulcan's Heart by Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz also fall into the Lost Era period, although they aren't officially under that heading. Also in that period are the short stories "Shakedown," "Iron and Sacrifice," "The Music Between the Notes," "Maturation," "Darkness," and a number of entries in No Limits and Strange New Worlds; the Captain Sulu audios; the Stargazer novels; and most of the TNG-era Starfleet Academy young-adult books.
Also in the Generations-to-Farpoint era but not technically "Lost Era" books:
The Captain's Daughter by Peter David ...
The Buried Age ...
The currently-released Terok Nor trilogy
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