I was not a fan of killing all of Shar's new loved ones (if I'm remembering this correctly).
Outside Trek, TOMORROW SUCKS started out as a joke title for a sci-fi vampire anthology I co-edited some years ago, but we ended up using it in the end. And as I understand it, Ellen Datlow's "Untitled Alien Sex Anthology" ended up titled ALIEN SEX . . . just because people kept calling it that and it stuck.![]()
I think I've read Datlow's anthology years ago.
While Coda fits, I gotta say, I'd kinda like to have seen Eternum have been the trilogy's title.
That's not what the word means, at all:I'm not a huge fan of Coda. In music it's something tacked on to the end. It kind of makes it sound like an afterthought to me.
Sorry. I used to play percussion for my church choir and in hymn a coda is sometimes a passage tacked on at the end, and many times it's skipped, esp. if you don't get through all the verses. So my thoughts on the word coda are probably colored by that. Still, whatever I think of the title, it will not affect my opinion of the books.That's not what the word means, at all:
co•da (kō’də)
n.
1. Music The concluding passage of a movement or composition.
2. A conclusion or closing part of a statement.
It has nothing to do with being "an afterthought."
Maybe just destroying the transwarp network hub and leaving them in the Delta Quadrant as a looming threat would have been better.
So, basically, the entire Star Trek: Destiny trilogy, one of the best-selling sets of Star Trek novels of the last 20 years. You're officially off my holiday greeting-card list.The Borg being the result of the merger of the crew of the NX-Columbia and Caeliar after being time-displaced and thrown back both in time and space to the Delta Quadrant.
There's something about that that just feels too 'small-universe' for me. I'd much rather their origin have been left unexplained.
For that matter, the whole 'We have to get rid of the Borg, so we're going to merge them with their ancestors and send them off to a higher plane of existence'.
Maybe just destroying the transwarp network hub and leaving them in the Delta Quadrant as a looming threat would have been better.
I get the small universe aspect of it, but I loved the story and the caeliar so much that it didn't matter to me. I was so engaged in that trilogy that I read a good chunk of both books two and three before leaving Barnes and Noble.The Borg being the result of the merger of the crew of the NX-Columbia and Caeliar after being time-displaced and thrown back both in time and space to the Delta Quadrant.
There's something about that that just feels too 'small-universe' for me. I'd much rather their origin have been left unexplained.
For that matter, the whole 'We have to get rid of the Borg, so we're going to merge them with their ancestors and send them off to a higher plane of existence'.
Maybe just destroying the transwarp network hub and leaving them in the Delta Quadrant as a looming threat would have been better.
I get the small universe aspect of it, but I loved the story and the caeliar so much that it didn't matter to me. I was so engaged in that trilogy that I read a good chunk of both books two and three before leaving Barnes and Noble.
For me as long as the story is very well done small universe syndrome doesn't bother me too much, and, not to diminish any of the other wonderful books and authors, that was, for me, the most engaging and interesting story in Star Trek for the last 20 years or more. And the caeliar have been my favorite aliens. I would love to see more of them. I can only imagine how they and their catoms would look with Discovery's budget.
I can only imagine how they and their catoms would look with Discovery's budget.
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