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Spoilers TNG: A Singular Destiny by Keith R.A. DeCandido review thread

10) Which leads me to ask, why aren't Trek books sold here in Israel?

As an Israeli TrekLit reader, this just begs for an answer :p

Trek books have traditionally been sold in the leading chain(s) of bookstores, but for some reason the amount of Trek books in stores, as well as stores where you can find Trek books, have greatly decreased in the last 1-2 years. Could be a decline in popularity among the Israeli readership...

Either way, my primary sources for Trek novels have been Amazon and eBay until I started ordering them via my local Comicbook store (by way of Previews)...
 
Tirius said:
What, did someone major get killed off in a footnote? First you think they've survived Destiny, and then they get killed off in a footnote in the following book. It is most distressing. :D (Oh well, better than being killed off in the Appendix, anyway...)

It was Janeway. She was resurrected *and* killed off again, all between books....just to piss people off.
 
Tirius said:
What, did someone major get killed off in a footnote? First you think they've survived Destiny, and then they get killed off in a footnote in the following book. It is most distressing. :D (Oh well, better than being killed off in the Appendix, anyway...)

It was Janeway. She was resurrected *and* killed off again, all between books....just to piss people off.

cooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool :rommie:

And wow, a Welshman has this already! I guess I shouldn't have ordered it through my local bookshop.
 
10) Which leads me to ask, why aren't Trek books sold here in Israel?

As an Israeli TrekLit reader, this just begs for an answer :p

Trek books have traditionally been sold in the leading chain(s) of bookstores, but for some reason the amount of Trek books in stores, as well as stores where you can find Trek books, have greatly decreased in the last 1-2 years. Could be a decline in popularity among the Israeli readership...

Either way, my primary sources for Trek novels have been Amazon and eBay until I started ordering them via my local Comicbook store (by way of Previews)...


Ron,

Where in Israel are you?

The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.
 
The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.

I'm sure you are aware of this minor detail, but the UK is in Europe and The European Union (which I'm assuming you mean) unlike America or Australia is not a country just yet but it's on its way.
 
The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.

I'm sure you are aware of this minor detail, but the UK is in Europe and The European Union (which I'm assuming you mean) unlike America or Australia is not a country just yet but it's on its way.

Was aware. Just noticed the typo now. Sorry about that mate.:techman:
 
The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.
I find it hard to believe that, if all these other American authors are available, Trek books would be so difficult to attain. Do Israeli bookshops not accept customer special orders? Or might there be a SF specialty shop somewhere in town that maybe has sources the general interest stores don't?
 
Got my copy today. I'll start reading it tonight.

Bitter sweet experience though as it's probably the the last Star Trek book I'll be getting at Stacey's, my usual source for ST books. They are closing down in a few weeks after 85 years in business. I need to find another independent source. Not that many left...

EDIT: forgot to mention, love the cover. hefty book, just the way i like'em. i'm really looking forward to this. back to this thread when i'm done.
 
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10) Which leads me to ask, why aren't Trek books sold here in Israel?

As an Israeli TrekLit reader, this just begs for an answer :p

Trek books have traditionally been sold in the leading chain(s) of bookstores, but for some reason the amount of Trek books in stores, as well as stores where you can find Trek books, have greatly decreased in the last 1-2 years. Could be a decline in popularity among the Israeli readership...

Either way, my primary sources for Trek novels have been Amazon and eBay until I started ordering them via my local Comicbook store (by way of Previews)...


Ron,

Where in Israel are you?

The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.

I live in the Tel Aviv area, filled with second hand bookstores (some of which do carry older Trek novels). Also, Star Wars is a lot easier to find :scream:

The strange thing is that every book under the sun is sold here from Grisham to Patterson to Star Wars and if Trek can be sold in the UK, Europe, Aussie why not here? Man am I glad I live in America where everything is easy to get.
I find it hard to believe that, if all these other American authors are available, Trek books would be so difficult to attain. Do Israeli bookshops not accept customer special orders? Or might there be a SF specialty shop somewhere in town that maybe has sources the general interest stores don't?

There are two main Israeli bookstore chains, which (as far as I know) do accept special orders in general. I once (a couple of years ago) tried to order a Trek novel, but they couldn't get it done, so I haven't tried it since and order Trek novels mainly through my LCS or online...
 
You guys from Israel could always buy a Sony Reader or a Kindle and not have to pay such outrageous postage fees and also get the books in a more timely manner in most cases. I personally prefer paper copies but if I lived in a place like you do I would do what I needed to.

Kevin
 
You guys from Israel could always buy a Sony Reader or a Kindle and not have to pay such outrageous postage fees and also get the books in a more timely manner in most cases. I personally prefer paper copies but if I lived in a place like you do I would do what I needed to.

Kevin

Well, I prefer the dead-tree versions as well...

I think that my LCS does a great job in that regard:

1. While the cost of a Trek novel when ordered or bought in one of the main bookstore chains is approx. 15.5 USD, the cost through my LCS is approx. 11 USD (including all costs) so it's not THAT expensive...

2. The LCS guys know what a Trek fan I am, so they often order a Trek novel just for me (thy did it in the case of Mere Mortals, which Id missed in Previews...). If for some reason I don't want the book, they just put it on display (though in several years, there was only time I declined a Trek book :cool:)
 
You guys from Israel could always buy a Sony Reader or a Kindle and not have to pay such outrageous postage fees and also get the books in a more timely manner in most cases. I personally prefer paper copies but if I lived in a place like you do I would do what I needed to.

Kevin



Ya know Kevin, I live in NY and it's never a problem for me to get the books. However, I happen to have an apt here in Jerusalem where I am staying for a few months visiting friends and family and I am still getting my stuff in a timely matter.

At one point, Barnes and Nobles was going to open a store near the Western Wall Mall but the deal fell through over a few disagreements but rumor has it that they have restarted negotiations to bring them here.
 
So, I managed to write a full review of the novel, reposted here from my blog:

So, Destiny has reshaped the state of the Star Trek universe. And now, the ripples from that catastrophic trilogy are beginning to spread. A Singular Destiny is the first novel to explore this new horizon - and it sets the seeds for the next two years’ worth of stories.

Ever since ASD was announced, I’ve been looking forward to its release, particularly since Keith R.A. DeCandido described it as “Clancy-esque” (I’ve been a fan of Tom Clancy ever since I read Red October at about age ten - well, of everything up until The Bear and the Dragon, anyway… but that’s an entirely different post). It’s a rare beast, this - a political thriller - which, like Clancy’s work, fits a lot of apparently unconnected events into a grand tapestry that leaves us hurtling along with the story.

It’s a few months after the end of Lost Souls, and the devastation isn’t going anywhere. Across the galaxy, empires and civilizations are struggling to rebuild, and to cope with the enormous refugee crisis that has accompanied the Borg invasion. Supplies are shorter, fleet resources are scarce, and hungry eyes are focusing on those weakened by invasion.

As the first book in the sequence helpfully titled “Cleaning Up Mack’s Mess”, A Singular Destiny has a lot to deal with. But, by not tying the story to any of the main casts, DeCandido is once again able to encompass a larger portion of the Star Trek universe, and address issues that have a more wide-ranging impact. After such a universe-affecting event like Destiny, this is exactly the book to follow it - showing how that universe as a whole is affected, instead of focusing on the effects on one small group of people.

Blending in between chapters are snippets of various documents, transcripts, and other material - along the lines of DeCandido’s work in the Shards and Shadows story “Family Matters” - to further establish the situation the Star Trek universe finds itself in. And these aren’t just throwaway asides, either - two in particular have major impact, one (between Chapters 7 and 8) especially so, which had me cursing DeCandido rather loudly for being such a magnificent bastard…
icon_biggrin.gif


The new character we are presented with, Sonek Pran, is very much in the Jack Ryan mould - the man in the middle of it all, slowly piecing things together to realise the full scope of what’s unfolding. Being a brand new character thrown straight into the narrative, there is always the danger of appearing far too good to be true; whilst there are brief moments the character grates, it never gets to the point where the character appears larger than life - there’s no convoluted past relationship with every major character, nor endless discussions about his history (the bits that do appear are relevant to the plot, or right at the start, when the character is introduced) - or overpowers the storyline.

Throwing more focus on newly-promoted Captain Ezri Dax and the Aventine is a good move, since we didn’t get a huge amount of time in Destiny to explore this new ship and her crew. The continuing look at the political figures of the Federation - established by DeCandido in A Time for War, A Time for Peace, and explored still further in the wonderful Articles of the Federation (to which there is a minor callback - or, at least, an addressing of a continuity question that resulted from AotF and Before Dishonor) - helps to further develop the universe. And there are lots of wonderful little hints about, and cameos by, familiar characters, in some cases pushing their individual stories forward a little bit more since we last saw them.

The Kinshaya intrigued me - I shall have to see if I can get hold of a copy of The Final Reflection,which introduces them - hopefully, we’ll get to explore them a bit more in the coming novels.

So, now we have a new power on the scene - the Typhon Pact - who outnumber, outgun and surround the Federation. Now, my hope is that we don’t just dive back into another war in 2010 when The Typhon Pact miniseries begins, but that we get a tale of political machinations and a cold war. Personally, I think that bouncing from crisis to crisis can get a little bit tiresome - note the ongoing discussions in the comic book world about “event fatigue” - and something a bit different could be called for this time around.

All in all, though, this is another strong novel from DeCandido - poignant, witty, exciting, and heartfelt. It leaves you wanting to know more about what’s coming next - and the handy release schedule on the inside back cover certainly helps with that!
 
The Kinshaya intrigued me - I shall have to see if I can get hold of a copy of The Final Reflection,which introduces them - hopefully, we’ll get to explore them a bit more in the coming novels.

The Kinshaya were only alluded to in The Final Reflection, not depicted or explored in any detail. ASD is the first novel that's ever portrayed them "onscreen" or established anything about their culture.

They also appear in a FASA role-playing game book that John M. Ford wrote, The Klingons, but their description there is incompatible with what's described in ASD. I found this description online:

The Kinshaya average 2 metres tall and mass about 200kg. They have no discernable head, and their sensory organs are set in the upper torso, between the massive armoured shoulders. They are bipedal, with two arms, from which hang thick folds of skin resembling wings or a heavy cloak. The legs are covered in overlapping bony plates. The shoulders have similar plates, from which project a number of spikes or horns. They are covered in short green/black fur. The “face” has two large round twin-lensed eyes, a flap-covered breathing orifice and a round mouth ringed with three rows of sharp teeth. A third sight organ is in back, and is capable of not much more than detecting motion and light or dark. The hearing organs are covered by skin. To a Human, they would resemble a huge bat (though no Human has ever seen one), and to Klingons they look much like demons of myth.

Keith's Kinshaya are quadrupeds with actual wings and large, expressive ears. I imagined something like griffins. They do have the spherical black ships mentioned in the gaming material, though.
 
The LCS guys know what a Trek fan I am, so they often order a Trek novel just for me (thy did it in the case of Mere Mortals, which Id missed in Previews...).
Unfortunately, Diamond cancelled orders on Mere Mortals, probably because they were too low. :(
 
The LCS guys know what a Trek fan I am, so they often order a Trek novel just for me (thy did it in the case of Mere Mortals, which Id missed in Previews...).
Unfortunately, Diamond cancelled orders on Mere Mortals, probably because they were too low. :(

So how come they were able to send out copies? Did they cancel orders other than the preliminary ones?
 
The LCS guys know what a Trek fan I am, so they often order a Trek novel just for me (thy did it in the case of Mere Mortals, which Id missed in Previews...).
Unfortunately, Diamond cancelled orders on Mere Mortals, probably because they were too low. :(
So how come they were able to send out copies? Did they cancel orders other than the preliminary ones?
Oh, Mere Mortals. My bad, sorry. I thought you meant Mere Anarchy. (It's the "Mere" that threw me.) Which was reported on Psi Phi as having had its orders through Diamond cancelled last week.

Obviously, I need more coffee.
 
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