Sure, I'll bite...
Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore - Summon the Thunder
Christopher L. Bennett - Orion's Hounds
Peter David - Stone and Anvil
Keith R. A. DeCandido - Articles of the Federation
David Mack - Destiny trilogy
I haven't read Destiny, and I'd substitute Buried Age for Orion's Hounds, but otherwise
So far, I'd say Reap The Whirlwind is Mack's best, but from what I hear, Destiny will likely dethrone it.
Sweet.
Reap the Whirlwind is a great book, and I would have put it down as well had it not been for Destiny.
Thrawn, what would you say made the Buried Age better than Ex Machina in your estimate?
I would like to correct my OP, as after reading Ex Machina for the last couple of days, I have to say that it is one of the deepest and overall best Trek novels I'd read.
I'm thinking about posting a thread about this book, but for now I'll just say that the level of character development for all the TOS cast - their development on each personal journey and the insights to their characters - put CLB (IMO) in the uper echelon of Trek novelists.
It's also quite ironic that CLB's first Trek novel is also his best and a true Trek masterpiece... maybe this has to do with Ex Machina being a "dream novel" for CLB (as I remember reading about, and also touched upon in the Acknowledgements section)?
But what made The Buried Age better for me was that it had a lot more to offer, as well as hitting the same high points of Ex Machina. Early TNG is, to put it bluntly, quite crap; the characters hadn't solidified, the writing was shallow and inconsistent, and the spirit of the show hadn't come close to landing yet. Bennett takes that strange, disjointed atmosphere, and writes a prologue to it that makes it all make sense in-universe. I actually got to the end of the book and wanted to immediately go watch Encounter At Farpoint again, feeling as though I at last understood where the characters of Troi, Picard, Yar, and Data were coming from at the beginning of the show. It turned one of the most horrible seasons in all of Star Trek into a story about a bitter, isolated man slowly warming to a new situation, as well as adding similar arcs for Data and Troi. It made what I'd previously considered one of the biggest flaws in all of Star Trek make perfect sense to me.
Orion's Hounds was, so far, the best entry in the Titan-series (not counting Destiny), but I couldn't get over the first 100 pages of The Buried Age. I don't know why exactly because I was very much looking forward to that novel... but somehow it just didn't work for me.
Early TNG is, to put it bluntly, quite crap; the characters hadn't solidified, the writing was shallow and inconsistent, and the spirit of the show hadn't come close to landing yet...Thrawn, what would you say made the Buried Age better than Ex Machina in your estimate?
...It turned one of the most horrible seasons in all of Star Trek...
...It made what I'd previously considered one of the biggest flaws in all of Star Trek make perfect sense to me... ...In my opinion, anyway![]()
So would you say it referenced a lot of Continuity? Filled in a lot of blanks?Bennett takes that strange, disjointed atmosphere, and writes a prologue to it that makes it all make sense in-universe. I actually got to the end of the book and wanted to immediately go watch Encounter At Farpoint again, feeling as though I at last understood where the characters of Troi, Picard, Yar, and Data were coming from at the beginning of the show.
... I couldn't get over the first 100 pages of The Buried Age. I don't know why exactly because I was very much looking forward to that novel... but somehow it just didn't work for me.
Well, the meat of the story doesn't really begin until after the first 100 pages. I pretty much structured TBA as a collection of four novella-length "episodes" that add up to a larger story arc. And 100 pages only gets you through the first and shortest "episode" (which is the least relevant...
In order - yes; why bother having opinions if they aren't strong ones? And no, I rather liked 6th and 7th. A few bum episodes, to be sure, but the cast chemistry was stronger than ever.haha, nice I see that your opinion on the matter of Season 1 is quite impassioned. Though it makes me wonder what you thought of seasons 6 and 7 of TNG, about which I've had similar feelings.
...
So would you say it referenced a lot of Continuity? Filled in a lot of blanks?
...
The first 100 pages is the shortest episode? How long is this book again?![]()
The first 100 pages is the shortest episode?
...I rather liked 6th and 7th. A few bum episodes, to be sure, but the cast chemistry was stronger than ever.it makes me wonder what you thought of seasons 6 and 7 of TNG, about which I've had similar feelings.
Yes, it filled in a ton of blanks. It filled in blanks you never realized were blanks.
If you need to ask that question, then you need to read Wil Wheaton's series of TNG retro-reviews at TVSquad.com....I rather liked 6th and 7th. A few bum episodes, to be sure, but the cast chemistry was stronger than ever.it makes me wonder what you thought of seasons 6 and 7 of TNG, about which I've had similar feelings.
Maybe it was because I was ten or so When I watched with my dad on it's first airing, so it is perhaps a bit canonized in my personal psyche, but what were the real crappers to you about Season 1?
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