#startrekbooks

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reviewed Star Trek: Sarek by A. C. Crispin (Star Trek)

Spock's mother, Amanda Grayson, is dying, and Spock returns to the planet Vulcan where he …

My eyemuscles weren't powerful enough to keep a straight and beautiful pokerface.

1 star

The amount of eyerolling, sighing, facepalming, and "Oh god, what!? No!" and similar commenting I did was too high to count. I thought about giving this 2 stars, but the longer it went on the more frustrated I became. So 1 star is all I can give.

A lot of this book is a regurgitation of scenes and quotes from TOS episodes and films. It sometimes feels like a badly re-enacted clip show. It's just too much. By a lot. The part about Amanda dying (no spoiler, it literally says on the blurb) left me cold, and her diary entries are beyond juvenile. (I am an avid journaler myself. A journal should never ever be censored or edited. Be as juvenile as you want in yours. I know that I am, and it is very cathartic. But I don't think it makes for good literature.) The part about Peter's stay …

reviewed Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)

The omnibus edition of an epic crossover trilogy uniting characters from every corner of the …

Epic, intense, satisfying -- one of the best Trek books.

5 stars

Content warning Star Trek: Destiny - The Complete Saga -- Spoilers

commented on Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)

The omnibus edition of an epic crossover trilogy uniting characters from every corner of the …

Star Trek: Destiny -- Book 3: Lost Souls ⭐⭐⭐⭐

It was another intense book, I am exhausted! Especially the stuff that happened on that "frozen ass" planet was hard for me to read. But also the invasion and battle scenes were emotional. I had tears in my eyes more than once. Everything comes together now, all threads find a satisfying conclusion. In a story that big, that is not necessarily a given. Mack nails it. I like Captain Hernandez. When I went into this trilogy I was not happy with how her original mission went. I thought she deserved better. But her story took quite a turn and I like it. Will we ever see her and the Caeliar again? I hope so! As for the big bad I will write more in another post, which will then be behind a CW for spoilers. I don't know how to write …

commented on Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)

The omnibus edition of an epic crossover trilogy uniting characters from every corner of the …

Star Trek: Destiny -- Book 2: Mere Mortals ⭐⭐⭐⭐

It took me a while to finish this for reasons that have nothing to do with the book. It's another fantastic action packed novel with quite some heartbreak too. I cried several times.

Again we follow the Enterprise E and the Aventine as they try to figure out how to stop the Borg from invading Federation space. There's a good space fight and also some face to face combat which was really good. We meet President Bacco a few times too, which I always love. I enjoy seeing all the different groups adding their part to solve this problem, as this is not something we get to see on screen a lot.

In the meantime the Titan is investigating the shelled planet they found while the away team down on the planet is facing some problems of their own, both within …

The USS Enterprise has been granted the simple but unavoidable honor of ferrying key guests …

Troi and Crusher need to be on that cover!

4 stars

Don't let the cover design trick you into thinking this is a Worf novel that includes a lot of Romulans. He's got things to do and I love seeing him do these things. But it should have been Troi and Crusher on that cover.

Listened to it a second time over the weekend. A great book with clear A and B stories, that are not interwoven. It's set right before "All Good Things...". I love that the two main women in the TNG crew get to be center stage here.

The story around Crusher, Riker, and Data is very cool. They face some unusual events on a new planet and it's fascinating to follow them figuring out what they are. Crusher has a very crucial role in that and that's so good to see. Love her scene with Data at the end.

The story around Troi, Worf, and Picard starts …

reviewed Star Trek: Picard: Firewall by David Mack (Star Trek: Picard, #6)

Two years after the USS Voyager’s return from the Delta Quadrant, Seven of Nine finds …

The start of how Seven became the woman we know today (as in ST: Picard)

5 stars

Content warning Possible spoilers for David Mack's "Star Trek: Picard: Firewall". I don't say anything too specific, and nothing that I would call plot relevant, but some people might still count that as spoilers. Hence this CW.

reviewed A Stitch in Time by Andrew Robinson (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

Andrew Robinson: A Stitch in Time (AudiobookFormat, 2023, Simon & Schuster Audio) 5 stars

A Stitch in Time (ISBN 0-671-03885-0), published June 5, 2000, is a Star Trek: Deep …

A must read for all Garak fans

5 stars

Content warning Andrew J. Robinson "A Stitch in Time" -- possible spoilers!

commented on Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)

The omnibus edition of an epic crossover trilogy uniting characters from every corner of the …

Star Trek: Destiny -- Book 1: Gods of Night ⭐⭐⭐⭐

What a book! Several ships and a story spanning centuries. I have not read any of the (relevant) post-Nemesis books before this one, so I'm probably being thrown in some cold water here. But I am just going with the flow. I may not understand all interpersonal relationships, but I always feel that the authors are good in describing what's been happening to new readers, or as a refresher for those who read the earlier books. I did struggle a bit to keep my storylines straight though, because there are several going on at once. But all in all a fantastic book. One of my favourite Trek books for sure.

The Columbia story is quite something. I'm really interested to learn more about the Caeliar. Ezri Dax as Captain is so amazing! I was not happy with how Troi's situation …

Not the medical drama I expected

3 stars

A mixed bag. Some books were good, especially "Vectors", some were average, though all of them had good parts and elements that I liked. I liked that we get to see well known on-screen characters before we meet them in their respective shows. I especially liked to have Dr. Pulaski as the main character in one book, "Vectors". That was great and as I said in my comment about that book, I'd love to have a series called "The 6 husbands of Katherine Pulaski".

When I started reading this series I expected medical drama, which I got in the first two books. But after that the virus was only there to make the story start and the hunt for the maker and the reason they made the virus was the main story.

#StarTrek #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels #TrekLit

A year in the life of the president of the United Federation of Planets

5 stars

Content warning largly spoiler free review with a small but not insignificant spoiler at the very end, specially marked, with space before and after, so you almost can't read it accidentally

Star Trek: TNG: Double Helix -- Book Five: Double or Nothing by Peter David ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Action packed, lots of violence, and full of wacky drama as only New Frontier books can be. A classic Peter David.

Here we finally find out who the creator of the virus is and why they did it. But that does not seem to be the main story actually. Which is a pity. Our heroes seem to stumble upon it almost by chance. And the bit that was actually planned... well, I wished we found out how that came about. I've been missing the actual virus for a couple of books now. Maybe I should stop expecting medical drama from this mini series, because it clearly isn't that at all. Still 4 stars because it's entertaining and never boring, even though it could be very well a book outside this mini series.

I wonder if …

commented on Double Helix Omnibus by Peter David

Star Trek: TNG: Double Helix -- Book Four: Quarantine by John Vornholt ⭐⭐⭐

As with the previous novel in the series, we do not learn anything new about the virus and nothing more than one tiny kind of new thing about its creator, which for me is a bit of a let-down in the middle of this series. We do however learn a bit about Tom Riker. The great thing about Trek novels is that we can re-visit characters that did not get much screen time before. Tom is one of them. Here we follow him from his assignment on the Gandhi to a mission that will change his life. We also meet a certain Maquis crew, which I enjoyed a lot. I'd like more of that.

The story wrapped up a bit too fast for me and I am not satisfied with the ending. I wished we had learned …

Star Trek: TNG: Double Helix -- Book Three: Red Sector by Diane Carey ⭐⭐⭐

There are too many words in this book, at least for my taste. We have to go through 10 chapters, and more than 100 pages until we finally arrive in the right time and at the right place for the main story. That does not mean that all of the first part is useless. It isn't. Not everything. We meet people important to the story, and some scenes are very good. But the main character is so annoying that it was not a fun read for me. Luckily, he grows over the years and I do like him for the rest of the book. I also enjoyed Spock and McCoy, I think Carey captured them very very well. I loved the scenes on the Saskatoon, a Combat Support Tender, and I would be interested in more …

Star Trek: TNG: Double Helix -- Book Two: Vectors by Dean Wesley Smith & Kristine Kathryn Rusch ⭐⭐⭐⭐

I like Katherine Pulaski a lot, so I loved seeing her as the main character here. I want more! It was nice to also meet one of her ex-husbands. I kinda want a "All the Ex-Husbands of Katherine Pulaski" mini series now. (Only slightly kidding.) We also get to meet quite a number of characters from DS9 in a time it was still very much Terok Nor, which I always like as well.

There's one thing that I wished they did more with. It was set up as a potential conflict, but it never really got any kind of "dangerous" ever. I thought that was a lost opportunity to explore one of the characters better. Overall however, this novel a big improvement from the first book in the series.

#StarTrek #TrekLit #StarTrekBooks …

Star Trek: TNG: Double Helix -- Book One: Infection by John Gregory Betancourt ⭐⭐

Beverly and Deanna must have been replaced by imposters, and very bad ones at that. I did not recognise any of them. The bit with Worf and his away team... huh? What? Why? The little exchange between Riker and Troi at the end was nice, though. If I remember correctly she does call him Bill in the first episodes, doesn't she? I really like the books for explaining little things like that.

#StarTrek #TrekLit #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels