Let me head off this thread with one of my favorite quotes ever...
(Though there would've been a problem doing that with PoP considering Betrayal...after all, the question would arise as to why Jake didn't learn that hiding Cardassian stowaways, no matter how nice they are, is a quick way to get your dad's space station fired upon by an angry gul...
)
Did anybody else here read these books, and are there any fond memories? Obviously we've all grown up quite a bit, but like the quote at the top of the thread says...I have absolutely zero shame about mixing kids' books and movies in my reading diet every once in awhile, or of being "caught" in the kids' section of the bookstore. A good book is a good book and I am willing to see it for what it is no matter what the main target demographic.
And to think they're the birthplace of the New Frontier series!
(Remember where Soleta, McHenry, and Zak Kebron came from?
I think my hatred of New Frontier may well stem from the fact that beyond Peter David's Pythonesque sense of humor, what he did with those characters later was tantamount to stepping on my childhood. Even finding out what happened to poor Tak from Prisoners of Peace wasn't that sad!)
"When I became a man, I put away childish things, including the fear of being childish, and the desire to be very grown up." --C.S. Lewis
The truth is they weren't "young adult" books at all...they were kids' stories. But there are certain of the Starfleet Academy books and DS9 kids' books that to this day I still haven't forgotten. Of these I would say that Capture the Flag (a Starfleet Academy book) and Prisoners of Peace (a DS9 book) stick out the most to me. It's hard to say what it was about them that really grabbed me, but both books really made me with that the plots could've been expanded further.
(Though there would've been a problem doing that with PoP considering Betrayal...after all, the question would arise as to why Jake didn't learn that hiding Cardassian stowaways, no matter how nice they are, is a quick way to get your dad's space station fired upon by an angry gul...

Did anybody else here read these books, and are there any fond memories? Obviously we've all grown up quite a bit, but like the quote at the top of the thread says...I have absolutely zero shame about mixing kids' books and movies in my reading diet every once in awhile, or of being "caught" in the kids' section of the bookstore. A good book is a good book and I am willing to see it for what it is no matter what the main target demographic.
And to think they're the birthplace of the New Frontier series!
(Remember where Soleta, McHenry, and Zak Kebron came from?
