Therin of Andor said:
JWolf said:
I happened to really enjoy the Q Continum Trilogy.
I thought the premise, of uniting all those TOS villains against Q and q, was cool. And 0 was great, too. But...
The middle volume really annoyed me and it felt like padding for a tighter duology. (The promotional cover of the third volume, still shown on Amazon today, but replaced by new artwork when released, seemed to confirm it to me at the time: originally it was a combination of the artwork for the first two books.)
But it wasn't among the worst.
I'm just waiting for a moderator to give you warning for the unneeded use of your profanity. It's ok to not like something, but to have to resort to prfanity is wrong. it wasn't a bad trilogy at all. It was in fact very good. Did you actually read it and realize how spot on the characters were?OmahaStar said:
Therin of Andor said:
JWolf said:
I happened to really enjoy the Q Continum Trilogy.
I thought the premise, of uniting all those TOS villains against Q and q, was cool. And 0 was great, too. But...
The middle volume really annoyed me and it felt like padding for a tighter duology. (The promotional cover of the third volume, still shown on Amazon today, but replaced by new artwork when released, seemed to confirm it to me at the time: originally it was a combination of the artwork for the first two books.)
But it wasn't among the worst.
Yes, it was. It was the worst ever. I'm still waiting for a formal apology from Greg Cox and Pocket for unleashing this wave of shit on us. In fact, when I think of that "trilogy", I cannot help but think about the Shit Monster in the movie Dogma.
Man, are you wrong about this one. I'd tell you more, but I'm only now drafting the outline for V3. But I can guarantee you're way off on this one...Captain Keel said:
Aha! I'm gonna suprise you all with my decision:
Star Trek Vanguard.
It was just so.... bad. By the end of it, I worked out the ending to the third book: Vanguard and the three ships in the book are destroyed by a join Klingon-Tholian fleet. The Enterprise, come for some shoreleave, is able to take out some of the fleet, then warps out of there. The Klingons and the Tholians then turn on each other, and annihilate one another.
THE END
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.
I, on the other hand, have very fond memories of Battle Lines and rate it highly--Dave Galanter's novel got me through what was perhaps the single worst month of my life and helped to set me on the path my life has taken these past seven years. Battle Lines is important to me in ways that no other Trek novel is, and for that, Dave (if you're reading), I will always be thankful.Wentworth-Roth said:
Voy-Chrysalis&Battle Lines
After Battle Lines I stopped buying Trek novels at all, and I've never come to regret my decision.
Whereas I liked this so much that I wrote a paper in college contrasting the Ko N'ya legend as presented in the novel with the Holy Grail cycle of Arthurian tales, and even wrote a "chapter" that showed that the Ko N'ya was, in fact, the Grail.Trent Roman said:
The books at the bottom of my 'Avoid like an Outbreak of the Bubonic Plague combined with Syphilis and N*SYNC' list are, in no particular order, Devil's Heart (pointless),
I've defended this book so much in the past I'd feel like I'm repeating myself if I tried now. Suffice to say, I think Warped is horribly underrated.Warped (terminally muddled),
Plotless? Not really. But the plot is secondary to the character study in the novel.Well of Souls (plotless),
I can't address these as, though I own them, I have never read them.Homecoming/Farther Shore (schlock) and Spirit Walk (schlock squared).
Xploda said:
I thought of another book that wasn't the greatest. It's a DS9 novel and someone is attacking the station so they use the phasers like a baseball bat to deflect the missiles. Or something like that. That's all I can remember.
Thanks, Brodsky. V3 is scheduled to be published next June.Ens. Brodsky said:
^ How long do we have to wait for the book? And just so you know, David, Harbinger is one of my all-time favorite books. Period. I thought it was absolutely amazing.
David Mack said:
Thanks, Brodsky. V3 is scheduled to be published next June.Ens. Brodsky said:
^ How long do we have to wait for the book? And just so you know, David, Harbinger is one of my all-time favorite books. Period. I thought it was absolutely amazing.
Allyn Gibson said:
Whereas I liked this so much that I wrote a paper in college contrasting the Ko N'ya legend as presented in the novel with the Holy Grail cycle of Arthurian tales, and even wrote a "chapter" that showed that the Ko N'ya was, in fact, the Grail.
Plotless? Not really. But the plot is secondary to the character study in the novel.
Fallen Heroes as I recall was very good. It just grabbed my attention and kept it throughout the entire book. I will get around to reading it again. I am planning on reading the first 5 numbered books of each series and then go round and round till I finish all the numbered books of every series.Lt.Cmdr. Gary Mitchell said:
Xploda said:
I thought of another book that wasn't the greatest. It's a DS9 novel and someone is attacking the station so they use the phasers like a baseball bat to deflect the missiles. Or something like that. That's all I can remember.
Wow. That's from one of my favorite Star Trek books "Fallen Heroes".
It was a 100-level Freshman comp class. My professor allowed me some latitude in the way I approached papers.Really? What class let you submit a paper dealing with a Star Trek novel? I get dirty looks from some professors for daring to mention classic speculative fiction like Frankenstein or Lord of the Rings, let alone a media tie-in product!
Frankenstein? Really? I first read Frankenstein -- which quickly became, and still is, my favorite work of literature -- in a Romantic Literature class in college, and that was at a Jesuit university (Fordham) twenty years ago.....I get dirty looks from some professors for daring to mention classic speculative fiction like Frankenstein or Lord of the Rings, let alone a media tie-in product!
Trent Roman said:
An impolite way to describe it would be to say that Well of Souls's plot was like a low-budget porno with character development substituted for the meaningless sex scenes... and considering how repetitive the character development got after a hundred pages, I would have preferred the meaningless sex. Then at least there would have been some stimulation.
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