TomSwift2002 wrote: "or else Pocket figure people had better eyesight in February 1982." I know I did.
I'm 105 pages in, and this book is absurd!
- Savaj ("Savage"- get it?) the Vulcan boards, and immediately makes Kirk Science officer & Spock, captain? In what scenario would this ever happen!? "Mr. Kirk" is some fantasy scenario by the authors;
-Vulcans apparently have an internal switch to go into a state of "Vulcan Command Mode"?
-Why is Spock naked twice in scenes within the first 100 pages? More author fantasy;
Now, This really is dumb:
-Every other page has- footnotes! Footnotes- in a trash "Star Trek" novel!
Too funny- if the authors aren't footnoting a TOS episode, they're referencing their own works, as if to put their bizarro ideas on the "same level" of classic episodes!! Please!
Also, does referencing old episodes constantly somehow make your book more legit? Plus, how often do these characters have to reminisce about the vampire cloud from "Obsession"???
Other musings-
-The writing style is really creepy. I feel like the psychology and singular perverted viewpoint of the writers toward the Star Trek series and the characters is NOT what the rest of US see when we watch Star Trek. I don't know what these authors are watching!
I thought it would be fun this summer to read the old novels- the fun is the perspective of time, and how bad "The Prometheus Design" (and "Covenant of the Crown" for that matter) are. Trek novels can be the SCI FI novel equivelant of Harlequin Romance novels.
From the authors of "Shatner: Where no Man", of course.
But with the Vulcan Command mode, I thought they were just building off of 'The Immunity Syndrome' where the Intrepid was mentioned as being an all-Vulcan ship.
As I recall (and it's been quite a few years since I read this, and I don't remember how this whole "Admiral Savaj" thing tied into the business of being some superbeing's lab animals), the authors attempted to justify this with the premise that a Vulcan crew would be able to follow their commander's chain of reasoning in a split second, with no need for explanation, and would likely have anticipated it.
And "Daddy Todd," I'm doubly surprised at your reactions: I found the Haldeman and Eklund novels to be extremely formulaic, little more than trite variations on the "Kirk sticks the Enterprise's nose someplace it isn't wanted, and the entire crew gets their ass kicked by a superbeing beyond their understanding" idea. Conversely, I found Gerrold's opus (and anybody who has read his memoir on how "The Trouble with Tribbles" made it on the air will recognize it as being based on the very first spec outline he pitched) to be one of the better books from the Bantam era.
I found Gerrold's opus...to be one of the better books from the Bantam era.
I've been re-reading the Bantams. Currently gagging down The Galactic Whirlpool".
It's not the kewl science that puts me off, it's the boring, pedantic infodumps and weird digressions and incessant quotes from Solomon Short (Gerrold's riff on RAH's Lazarus Long).
Tedious.
I'd rather write than be President.. . . if I went my whole life without reading another Solomon Short "witticism," it wouldn't be long enough.
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