LightningStorm said:
CaptJimboJones said:
The first Mission: Gamma book. It was so plodding and boring that I gave up midway, and it basically stopped me cold from reading the rest of the DS9 relaunch.![]()
I thought I was the only one on the net who didn't like that book. Although it didn't stop me from continuing the DS9R. Every book after that one (except the Trill story in Worlds) was better than it.
Hirogen Alpha said:
Dyson Sphere and Garth of Izar are two of the worst written and edited pieces of print I've ever laid my eyes on. Terrible, terrible work.
Dayton Ward said:
Articles of the Federation.
Oh, wait. Wrong joke.
DAMN!
Sci said:
CaptJimboJones said:
The first Mission: Gamma book. It was so plodding and boring that I gave up midway, and it basically stopped me cold from reading the rest of the DS9 relaunch.![]()
That's too bad. I thought it a brilliant novel. You should just skip ahead past it, though; all the books are designed to be ones you can jump into as a general rule
23skidoo said:
I still haven't found anything as bad as the DS9 book Laetian Gamble by Robert Sheckley... I was very surprised to learn later that the late Mr. Sheckley was a noted SF author
In terms of "event" Trek novels, the worst had to be Enterprise: The First Adventure. Aside from some rather glaring and basic canonical errors, Vonda McIntire made some rather ... unwise choices
DaveR said:
Wow. I don't often agree with your ratings of Trek books...
but you hit every point on the head with this post.
I really didn't like Deny Thy Father.
Sxottlan said:
DaveR said:
but you hit every point on the head with this post.
I really didn't like Deny Thy Father.
Yes! Let the hate for this book flow forth! :thumbsup:
I've had this since it was first published and I've never managed to read more than 50 pages in the 5 times I've tried reading it. It's the cure for insomnia.23skidoo said:In terms of "event" Trek novels, the worst had to be Enterprise: The First Adventure. Aside from some rather glaring and basic canonical errors, Vonda McIntire made some rather ... unwise choices when it came to some of the characters. Like making Rand a teenager, for instance. Also, considering how significant Kirk's first mission as the Enterprise's captain you'd think the plot would have actually been interesting. This is actually the very first Star Trek novel that I was unable to finish. I gave up at the 3/4 mark in disgust (I even managed to finish Laertian Gamble). I like McIntire's work in general ... once again it must have been a bad day.
I happened to really enjoy the Q Continum Trilogy[/i]. I thought Q was spot on and so was Picard being all annoyed, huffy, and mightier then though that he gets when Q is around. t was a fun read for sure.OmahaStar said:
That goddess-damned "Q Continuum" trilogy by Greg Cox.
Gods, that so-called "trilogy" blew chunks. And if you take out the recaps, where he apparently thinks he's doing a novelization of all the various Q episodes, you'd have about 100 pages left. Out of 3 books. And those 100 pages are just horrible.
Amateurish, poorly-written fanfic not-so-cleverly disguised as TrekLit.
Just thinking I actually paid money for that crap is still enough to piss me off, all these years later. Which is why I refuse to spend a cent on anything written by that author.
JWolf said:
I happened to really enjoy the Q Continum Trilogy.
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