Cyclonus said:
The Laertian Gamble -- Seems to me like the author intended it as an absurdist parody of Star Trek.
Maybe he did. Robert Sheckley was well-known as an author of humorous, absurdist science fiction.
Cyclonus said:
The Laertian Gamble -- Seems to me like the author intended it as an absurdist parody of Star Trek.
Elemental said:
I find this kind of funny because this is actually the first Star Trek book I ever owned! I was only about 8 or 9 years old and was madly in love with TNG on TV. I couldn't decide which book I should get and I can remember skimming through a bunch of them until I could find one that had all the characters in it (including Wesley but I'm assuming I missed Tasha). Anyway, I don't think I ever got more than a chapter or two into it. Perhaps I just wasn't ready for this kind of literature.Xploda said:
I haven't read a Trek novel in a long time, during TNG's run I bought all the books I could get my hands on. Some of these were good, others were bad. This book, Grounded , has to be the worst Trek novel I have read. Sheesh, I don't know where to begin with this crapfest.
Has anyone read it or has other stinkers they want to share?
Picard.Endymion said:
"How can we stop this murderous entity?" Who talks like that?
Christopher said:
Cyclonus said:
The Laertian Gamble -- Seems to me like the author intended it as an absurdist parody of Star Trek.
Maybe he did. Robert Sheckley was well-known as an author of humorous, absurdist science fiction.
Cyclonus said:
Christopher said:
Cyclonus said:
The Laertian Gamble -- Seems to me like the author intended it as an absurdist parody of Star Trek.
Maybe he did. Robert Sheckley was well-known as an author of humorous, absurdist science fiction.
That may be the case, and not having read any of his other stuff, I'm willing to admit that maybe this approach works better in his stand alone novels. But as a DS9 book, it was an embarassment.
LightningStorm said:
Hirogen Alpha said:
Brikar99 said:
I didn't like the second "Genesis Wave" book.
It was book three of that series that killed it for me. I liked how the second one wrapped things up... the third one got characterizations wrong across the board and didn't tell nearly as interesting a story.
I going to guess you didn't get to Genesis Force then? Cause that book was pretty ridiculous. (although the ones I listed earlier obviously fall further down the list that this one for me).
ssosmcin said:
Peter David's Strike Zone was kinda crappy. Too funny for its own good (he really thinks he the funniest guy ever, but I find him irritating), he renamed Ten Forward the "Ten-Four Room" (WTF)...
So, where's David Arnold these days?
Christopher said:
So, where's David Arnold these days?
Err, probably writing the music for the movie Amazing Grace or Casino Royale. Did you mean Richard Arnold?
Cyclonus said:
The Laertian Gamble -- Seems to me like the author intended it as an absurdist parody of Star Trek.
ssosmcin said:
Otherwise, I have to go way back to find really, truly bad Trek novels. Peter David's Strike Zone was kinda crappy. Too funny for its own good (he really thinks he the funniest guy ever, but I find him irritating), he renamed Ten Forward the "Ten-Four Room" (WTF) and decided that everyone referred to Wesley as the Brain Trust.
I dunno, I stopped reading Trek novels years ago and just started back up at the behest of fans who say they've improved. I agree.
bryan said:
Strike Zone is one of my favorite Trek novels. I thought it was very funny. It was my understanding (I recall this being mentioned on one of the Trek newsgroups, so it may not be true) that it was one of the first TNG novels written, actually before the show premiered and the name of 10-Forward hadn't been nailed down yet.
You know, I just did some checking and I can't find a single reference to Ten Forward being Ten-Four, either online or in my library, so all I've got to go on is a half-remembered blurb from one of the rec.arts.television.startrek groups ten years ago.
Christopher said:
the first one to be set during the second season (remember, Ten Forward and Guinan weren't introduced until the second season). The show had been on for about a year when it was written, but Ten Forward itself was new.
In fact yes, Peter was told that the "Ten-Four Room" was an alternate name for it. It falls into the same black hole as the EMH being named Doctor Zimmerman, Riker being nicknamed "Bill," and Data being created by unknown aliens as Things They Intended That Didn't Come To Pass.RE: The Peter David stuff, I never heard of those alternate names being used even in the behind the scenes materials, but it's sure possible. It just struck me as rediculous to name something Ten-Forward, which is already a nickname for "deck ten, forward station one" and then nickname again as something with the same number of syllables as Ten Forward.
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