Yeah, I have all of VGD and TTN, I just need to read them lol... I have about 68 or so ST books in my 'cue' lol
I've got my own mixed feelings about NF, and it's certainly not hard science fiction... but to accuse it of abusing the ST universe? Seriously? A universe where ancient Greek gods can create a giant hand in space to grab starships, immortal humans roam the cosmos for millenia, hyperevolved species lurk around every other planet, and entering parallel universes is as easy as falling off a log? What exactly does PAD do to the ST universe that hadn't been done by Gene and Co. way back when?I have misxed feelings about New Frontier. I like it OK but to me it's not really Star Trek. It uses/abuses? the Star Trek universe. They are very comic book like with a lot more text. If you like fantastical stories you may enjoy the series but I would not consider it sci-fi.
Kevin
Well, the last (mainline) NF novel took place more or less simultaneously with Nemesis, which puts them just over a year before Destiny (and almost a year before the Excalibur's cameo in Before Dishonor).IIRC, it was said somewhere that the next New Frontier book won't mention Destiny in any way? Is this true? Does the next NF book happen before Destiny in the timeline or something? If anyone knows...
Well, the last (mainline) NF novel took place more or less simultaneously with Nemesis, which puts them just over a year before Destiny (and almost a year before the Excalibur's cameo in Before Dishonor).IIRC, it was said somewhere that the next New Frontier book won't mention Destiny in any way? Is this true? Does the next NF book happen before Destiny in the timeline or something? If anyone knows...
I read the first four when they came out. I remember liking them just fine, but not really keeping up after that.
More recently I read the NF installment in the Gateways crossover. For completeness sake, since I'd read all the others. I was less than impressed. Steve Roby mentioned the whole Pheytus thing. That, in particular made it read more like Star Trek: Middle School.
Actually, Arthur C. Clarke isn't exactly the benchmark of subtle wit and sophisticated humor. Offhand, I recall the example of the "Ha, ha! Your wang looks funny!" scene in 3001.
The whole Pheytus thing was just a joke that ran through one book. I don't see how it brought the quality of the entire story down to "Star Trek: Middle School" with just one joke. This series is known for its humor and outrageousness (just look at some of the plot points and characters), and it has been since the series came out in 1997. It's not like it's Arthur C. Clarke or anything.
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