Yes, her novels are amazing. My favorite current Trek series running, and I didn't like Voyager the show much at all.
I'm with you she made me like Chakotay and I never thought that would happen in our prime universe

Yes, her novels are amazing. My favorite current Trek series running, and I didn't like Voyager the show much at all.
really needs to be read in order to get the full impact.
really needs to be read in order to get the full impact.
Not really. I've hopped around the stories and they still made sense. I read "Unity", "Rising Son" and "Avatar" and Mission Gamma 1 ten years ago, but then I didn't read the remaining 3 MG books until the last two years, even though they've been on my shelf for the last ten, and I still need to read the "Left Hand Of Destiny" duology.
really needs to be read in order to get the full impact.
Not really. I've hopped around the stories and they still made sense. I read "Unity", "Rising Son" and "Avatar" and Mission Gamma 1 ten years ago, but then I didn't read the remaining 3 MG books until the last two years, even though they've been on my shelf for the last ten, and I still need to read the "Left Hand Of Destiny" duology.
Making sense and getting the full impact are two very different things though. I would agree, there's nothing stopping you from enjoying and understanding them while skipping around, but they were certainly meant to be read in a particular order and that's the only way you experience them the way they were intended.
But you're not getting to follow the storylines as they build and grown from book to book. Sure you can read them in a different order, but there's no way it would be the same experience as if you read them in the intended order.Not really. I've hopped around the stories and they still made sense. I read "Unity", "Rising Son" and "Avatar" and Mission Gamma 1 ten years ago, but then I didn't read the remaining 3 MG books until the last two years, even though they've been on my shelf for the last ten, and I still need to read the "Left Hand Of Destiny" duology.
Making sense and getting the full impact are two very different things though. I would agree, there's nothing stopping you from enjoying and understanding them while skipping around, but they were certainly meant to be read in a particular order and that's the only way you experience them the way they were intended.
I disagree. You can get just as much impact by jumping around.
Since it's impossible for one person to judge both methods how about we leave the subject of reading in order vs dancing around alone for now. Thank you![]()
Since it's impossible for one person to judge both methods how about we leave the subject of reading in order vs dancing around alone for now. Thank you![]()
To be fair though, isn't that what makes it such a good conversation topic? Because the only way to get the other perspective is to talk to another person about it?
Horn and Ivory - B-
Again, I'm reviewing this from the perspective of the DS9 Relaunch, and I haven't read the other Gateway books.
This book was decent, but also a little disappointing. Basically, it was Kira stepping through the Gateway from the desert planet and ending up in Bajor's past, where she witnesses several wars between various factions and realzes what she needs to to accomplish as commander of DS9.
It was very well written, but felt incomplete. I was trying to get interested in what was happening in Bajor's past, and what happened next to General Torrana, but the book ends with Kira finding a Gateway and going home. It was a reflexive short story, but considering what has come before (Again, based solely on the Relaunch), it seems like other than the end, this book could easily be skipped..
Horn and Ivory - B-
Again, I'm reviewing this from the perspective of the DS9 Relaunch, and I haven't read the other Gateway books.
This book was decent, but also a little disappointing. Basically, it was Kira stepping through the Gateway from the desert planet and ending up in Bajor's past, where she witnesses several wars between various factions and realzes what she needs to to accomplish as commander of DS9.
It was very well written, but felt incomplete. I was trying to get interested in what was happening in Bajor's past, and what happened next to General Torrana, but the book ends with Kira finding a Gateway and going home. It was a reflexive short story, but considering what has come before (Again, based solely on the Relaunch), it seems like other than the end, this book could easily be skipped..
Interesting.I hope you don't mind my jumping in, but I think Horn and Ivory might be the best thing KRAD's written for Trek. As a summary/exploration of Kira Nerys and her growth as a character, it's near-perfect. There are also a lot of surprising details that I thought suggested some very complex arguments on the part of the Prophets; for example, realizing that in the Ancient Bajor analogy, the Bajora play the role of the Dominion.
Horn and Ivory - B-
...
It was very well written, but felt incomplete. I was trying to get interested in what was happening in Bajor's past, and what happened next to General Torrana, but the book ends with Kira finding a Gateway and going home. It was a reflexive short story, but considering what has come before (Again, based solely on the Relaunch), it seems like other than the end, this book could easily be skipped.
Horn and Ivory - B-
...
It was very well written, but felt incomplete. I was trying to get interested in what was happening in Bajor's past, and what happened next to General Torrana, but the book ends with Kira finding a Gateway and going home. It was a reflexive short story, but considering what has come before (Again, based solely on the Relaunch), it seems like other than the end, this book could easily be skipped.
I think you'll find that's not the case as you continue reading. IIRC, its events have an ongoing impact on Kira. Perhaps that's why it felt incomplete -- because it wasn't a conclusive ending.
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