Na endlich, es hat eine Weile gedauert, bis ich das Buch gefunden hatte. Keine Ahnung, warum es so selten zu sein scheint. Was besonderes ist es jedenfalls nicht. Aber hey, es ist da und ich bin froh. Wieder eins weniger auf meiner Liste 😁
#startrekbooks
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Ein Nachzügler, toll wenn Freunde an einen kleinen bekloppten Trekkie wie mich denken ☺️ weiß der Geier wo sie das wieder gesehen haben. Kleine Geschenke erhalten die Freundschaft, so heißt es. Ich freue mich jedenfalls sehr.
Elena. reviewed The Buried Age by Christopher L. Bennett (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
How Picard got to be Captain of the Enterprise
3 stars
I went from "Picard being an archeologist - just the novel I wanted!", to "He's so irrational, WTF?!", to "Now it's getting interesting", to "Oh my, what roller coaster". This book took a long time until I could like it. Before that I was confused and annoyed by Picard's behaviour after meeting Ariel. But it all made sense in the end. I loved the little cameos and first looks at a whole row of characters that we know from screen.
I gave it three stars because the time frame is so long that a compact story is probably impossible to tell. And I prefer compact stories instead of ones that are stretched out over the span of years and years with several big time jumps in between.
#StarTrek #TrekLit #StarTrekNovels #StarTrekBooks #TrekNovels #TrekBooks
Elena. reviewed Asylum by Una McCormack
Becoming Number One
4 stars
I loved seeing how Chris Pike and Una Chin-Riley meet and become friends. The problems she's facing during her time at the academy, the guilt she carries, and how that catches up on her during the Enterprise's current mission is all wonderfully woven together. I loved seeing some of the SNW crew as well, especially one member was fun as always. More of them please! The new species we meet and its history and situation are very interesting and I liked everything about it. Very current, very important. Una McCormack does, once again, not disappoint. Could she ever?! As always, I recommend her interview about this book on the Literary Treks podcast. Edit: And here‘s her interview with Positively Trek.
#StarTrek #TrekLit #TrekBooks #TrekNovels #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels #StarTrekSNW
Elena. reviewed Star Trek Prodigy Collection by Robb Pearlman (Star Trek: Prodigy, #1-3)
Group Hug!
4 stars
This is a delightful collection of stories. They have as much heart, humour, and excitement as the tv show and I want more. Much much more! I enjoyed all three books. They are quick to read, each of them 150 pages long with larger than usual print. I think this is a great format for Prodigy stories outside of the show. But I doubt there will ever be more since P+ has kicked the show out.
Two of the books were written by Cassandra Rose Clarke, who also wrote the TNG novel "Shadows Have Offended". I want more of her writing in Star Trek.
All three books introduce us to a new world and new species, which were all fun and interesting to explore. I am particularly fond of the garbage pile and its inhabitants in Clarke's "Escape Route" though. I thought that was a great idea to have a …
This is a delightful collection of stories. They have as much heart, humour, and excitement as the tv show and I want more. Much much more! I enjoyed all three books. They are quick to read, each of them 150 pages long with larger than usual print. I think this is a great format for Prodigy stories outside of the show. But I doubt there will ever be more since P+ has kicked the show out.
Two of the books were written by Cassandra Rose Clarke, who also wrote the TNG novel "Shadows Have Offended". I want more of her writing in Star Trek.
All three books introduce us to a new world and new species, which were all fun and interesting to explore. I am particularly fond of the garbage pile and its inhabitants in Clarke's "Escape Route" though. I thought that was a great idea to have a world like that in the Trek universe.
#StarTrek #TrekLit #TrekBooks #TrekNovels #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels #StarTrekProdigy
Elena. reviewed Star Trek: Lower Decks: Warp Your Own Way by Chris Fenoglio (Star Trek: Lower Decks)
Why isn't the Spock Clock a thing?
5 stars
I have only ever read one "choose your own adventure" book, but that was prose and worked with rolling dice. So I guess that's more a solo RPG than a "choose your own adventure". Anyway, with "Warp Your Own Way" you do not roll dice, but choose where to go yourselves; usually out of two, sometimes three options. The story gets pretty dark, like Star Trek does sometimes, but it is also hilarious like the tv show. It is a clever, well thought out adventure that I hope we'll see more of. And I'm sure this style of book would work for all Trek series. If it weren't a spoiler, I'd show you my journal where I have built a flow chart of all the paths there are and where they lead. After a while I needed it to remember where I had already gone and which options I hadn't …
I have only ever read one "choose your own adventure" book, but that was prose and worked with rolling dice. So I guess that's more a solo RPG than a "choose your own adventure". Anyway, with "Warp Your Own Way" you do not roll dice, but choose where to go yourselves; usually out of two, sometimes three options. The story gets pretty dark, like Star Trek does sometimes, but it is also hilarious like the tv show. It is a clever, well thought out adventure that I hope we'll see more of. And I'm sure this style of book would work for all Trek series. If it weren't a spoiler, I'd show you my journal where I have built a flow chart of all the paths there are and where they lead. After a while I needed it to remember where I had already gone and which options I hadn't chosen yet. And even then I got confused a few times. 😅
#StarTrek #TrekLit #StarTrekComics #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekLowerDecks #StarTrekLDS #WarpYourOwnWay
It was a joy to join my co-editor Emily Strand to talk about our anthology #StarTrek: Essays Exploring the Final Frontier with the #NewBooksNetwork! (Link below.) 🖖
https://newbooksnetwork.com/star-trek
#StarTrekBooks #podcast #books #bookstodon #ScienceFiction
Elena. reviewed Lost to Eternity by Greg Cox (Star Trek)
Scully should be a verb, or: The Search for Gillian Taylor*
4 stars
Content warning Star Trek: Lost to Eternity -- no real spoilers, but a few hints
I have been looking forward to listening to this book for such a long time, and it did not disappoint. It is such a fun book, instantly one of my favourites. There are three timelines: 2024, 2268 (5 year mission era), and 2292 (movie era). They are easily distinguishable from one another, also because the style of story and characterisations fit right into each one. At first I couldn't imagine how they could be connected, and I enjoyed trying to figure it out as the story went on. When it finally became clear what the connection is I thought it was very well done. I loved the 2024 story line a lot, at least up to a certain point at the very end. It was a lot of fun to have Melinda and Dennis follow Gillian's trail and investigating her disappearance. Both Melinda and Dennis are good characters, they make a good team. I have to say, I enjoy these sort of aftermath stories, where we get to see what happens after our heroes are gone and how their actions impact the people who just happen to be there at the same time. I loved seeing Saavik again. She's so cool and does not get nearly enough screen time in the movies. There are great connections to other series through little references here and there, especially in 2024. (E.g. pay attention to the conspiracy theories Dennis mentions.) I loved the ending! It's very beautiful and I may have a had a tear or two in my eyes.
I can't end this little review without mentioning Robert Petkoff, who narrates the audio book. He's as fantastic as ever, or even better. This time there are a few audio effects as well, which work really well.
And now, if you are looking for me, I'm re-watching "The Voyage Home".
*listen to Positively Trek, ep 281, where Dan Gunther and guest interview Greg Cox.
#StarTrek #TrekLit #TrekBooks #TrekNovels #StarTrekTOS #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels
Elena. reviewed The IDIC Epidemic by Jean Lorrah (Star trek -- #38)
Love in times of an epidemic
2 stars
I guess these early novels that spend a lot of time exploring Vulcan bonding and mating and mind melding are just not my thing. I respect them a lot however. These early writes, many of them women, were pioneers and absolutely essential for shaping our fandom.
The actual epidemic this book is about reminded me of our own Covid-19 epidemic and it was interesting to see how it has the potential to sow dispute and distrust, though I would have liked that part to be a bigger focus. Unfortunately that was not the case. A lot of the story was about people falling in love in the midst of it all. There was also a natural disaster and some berserk Vulcans (holdovers from the earlier book "The Vulcan Academy Murders"), that have no problem whatsoever to circumvent the Enterprise's security. Nothing was really explored in the detail I wished it …
I guess these early novels that spend a lot of time exploring Vulcan bonding and mating and mind melding are just not my thing. I respect them a lot however. These early writes, many of them women, were pioneers and absolutely essential for shaping our fandom.
The actual epidemic this book is about reminded me of our own Covid-19 epidemic and it was interesting to see how it has the potential to sow dispute and distrust, though I would have liked that part to be a bigger focus. Unfortunately that was not the case. A lot of the story was about people falling in love in the midst of it all. There was also a natural disaster and some berserk Vulcans (holdovers from the earlier book "The Vulcan Academy Murders"), that have no problem whatsoever to circumvent the Enterprise's security. Nothing was really explored in the detail I wished it were, and a lot did not quite click for me.
However, there is a scene between Spock and Sarek about Spock's mixed heritage that I found really good. The Klingon forhead ridge thing is also mentioned, pretty much in passing, and I wonder if the Enterprise writers had read this book before they wrote their story.
Filling in some blanks
4 stars
Set shortly before "The Emissary", DS9's pilot episode, this novel is a great opportunity to meet a lot of the station's crew for the very first time - kind of 😉. Being written now, 30 years after DS9 started and with a lot more onscreen Trek story to work with, I love that there are connections to the new stuff. It's always been there, even though it was never shown. Another part I loved a lot was everything with the O'Briens. Geordi acknowledges Miles' dutiful transporter room work, and we get great scenes between Keiko and Miles where they talk about their future and possible change of scenery. This book is really good at filling in some character backgrounds. Speaking of Keiko: She gets something meaningful to do with Beverly on Bajor, which I loved seeing. There are so many little things that I loved: a meta-comment on the same …
Set shortly before "The Emissary", DS9's pilot episode, this novel is a great opportunity to meet a lot of the station's crew for the very first time - kind of 😉. Being written now, 30 years after DS9 started and with a lot more onscreen Trek story to work with, I love that there are connections to the new stuff. It's always been there, even though it was never shown. Another part I loved a lot was everything with the O'Briens. Geordi acknowledges Miles' dutiful transporter room work, and we get great scenes between Keiko and Miles where they talk about their future and possible change of scenery. This book is really good at filling in some character backgrounds. Speaking of Keiko: She gets something meaningful to do with Beverly on Bajor, which I loved seeing. There are so many little things that I loved: a meta-comment on the same actors playing two different characters; a fun scene between Garak, Geordi, Data, and Dukat; Sonya Gomez; a fun scene with Beverly and a Warp Core Breach; probably most notably a scene between Garak and Odo; and more.
One part of the story is set in a Cardassian labour camp. There are some descriptions of violence against Bajoran prisoners. They are not easy to listen to/ read, but I am also glad the author did not shy away from being specific. This is what's been happening in such camps all throughout history and it needs to stay in our consciousness.
There is a good deal of focus on the fact that the Federation never came to help Bajor during its occupation by the Cardassians. This is especially topical now where we are talking about how much we should and shouldn't help countries like the Ukraine. It also adds to the long going discussion about the Prime Directive. I like how several characters acknowledge this and don't try to explain and excuse their way out of this decision, but rather accept the criticism and offer their help now.
After the main story ended there was a lot of transitioning towards even closer before "The Emissary". I found that part a bit slow and I caught myself drifting off a couple of times. But that is strictly personal taste, and did not hamper my enjoyment of the book overall.
As always I'm going to repeat my praise for the narrator, Robert Petkoff. He hits the characters' voices even more perfectly this time around. I think this might be his best work yet (of those I listened to at least).
Elena. reviewed Lust's Latinum Lost (and Found) by Paula M. Block
Fun little adventure
3 stars
A fun, funny, and sexy adventure around Quark and some new and recurring characters. Very low stakes, quick to read. Perfect for a lazy afternoon or two.
#StarTrek #StarTrekDS9 #TrekLit #StarTrekNovels #StarTrekBooks
Elena. reviewed Star Trek: Discovery: The Way to the Stars by Una McCormack (Star Trek: Discovery, #4)
Tilly's way to the stars
4 stars
When I was asking my fedi friends for cozy Trek novel recommendations, this was one of the books recommended to me. I was a bit skeptical about the book because of Tilly's not so good relationship with her mother. Something that I have struggled with all my life as well, I did not want to read a story about it. I feared it would be really uncomfortable and upsetting. I was reassured that that was not a big focus of the book (and it really isn't), so I got the audio book of it and... was a sobbing mess for the first part of it. LOL
So it did not start out very cozy and happy for me at all. LOL Part of that was due to how Tilly's mother behaves towards her, but a big part of it was due to how Tilly struggles at her school. I saw …
When I was asking my fedi friends for cozy Trek novel recommendations, this was one of the books recommended to me. I was a bit skeptical about the book because of Tilly's not so good relationship with her mother. Something that I have struggled with all my life as well, I did not want to read a story about it. I feared it would be really uncomfortable and upsetting. I was reassured that that was not a big focus of the book (and it really isn't), so I got the audio book of it and... was a sobbing mess for the first part of it. LOL
So it did not start out very cozy and happy for me at all. LOL Part of that was due to how Tilly's mother behaves towards her, but a big part of it was due to how Tilly struggles at her school. I saw myself in her so much. I cried for Tilly as much as I cried for myself. (Reading Trek novels has been very revelatory, cathartic, and therapeutic for me recently. 😅)
The rest of the book, which is the majority, was a lot of fun. I really enjoyed watching Tilly find her confidence, which she puts to the test in the end when she confronts her mother about her plans for the future. I loved her grandparents a lot. Salla, the engineer she meets, was a great character as well. I also liked Ms Keith, the teacher. I just realise, Tilly meets a number of women to mentor her or help her out, where her mother can't.
This is a pretty low stakes, fun book. And if you aren't quite so easily upset about all the things that went wrong in your childhood and youth as I am, you shouldn't be sobbing so much either. Tilly has been one of my top favourite Trek characters and this book only confirmed that. I am very glad I finally read/ listened to it. Thank you, friends, for recommending it to me! 🙂
That I consider January LaVoy to be the queen of audiobook narration is no secret. This book is just another reason in a long list to support that.
Una McCormack talked to Literary Treks about the book. Worth a listen, as always.
#StarTrek #StarTrekDiscovery #StarTrekNovels #StarTrekBooks #TrekLit
Elena. reviewed Star Trek: Sarek by A. C. Crispin (Star Trek)
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 …
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 with the Klingons was the most eyeroll inducing of it all. Good grief!
I think the basic story about KEHL and a possible conspiracy behind it, sounds interesting. The execution however did not satisfy me one bit.
I acknowledge, respect, and appreciate the narrator's skill for producing accents and speech patterns. His Sarek was excellent, I also enjoyed his McCoy. However, most of the rest I found a bit too much. Speaking of the narrator: It is not Mark Lenard (as even stated on Simon & Schuster's website), but Nick Sullivan.
Elena. reviewed Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)
Epic, intense, satisfying -- one of the best Trek books.
5 stars
Content warning Star Trek: Destiny - The Complete Saga -- Spoilers
This is epic. No doubt one of the best Trek stories I've ever read or watched. But it is also intense. Very intense. I am exhausted.
Especially book 2 had me in pieces. I cried, with tears running down my face, about the heartbreaking events around Hernandez and her crew, especially in their later years. I cannot imagine how Hernandez lived through this massive guilt she must have felt, and with the disappointment her crewmates felt towards her all those decades. Or how the other women endured their lives in Axion, some of them coping better than others.
In book 3 we then learn about Mantilis and the rest of the Columbia away team. I had a hard time reading those chapters. How did the Columbia deserve this fate? Reading their story I remembered that I had read about that book before, and that the origin of the Borg were survivors of the Columbia on a planed they crashed down on. I never liked that. I didn't want our heroes to be the origin of a people like the Borg. But Mack found the right words to tell that story. I was heartbroken and felt compassion for them all the way.
And that's why I loved the solution at the end to liberate the Borg drones and to bring them back to the Caeliar. To offer them a new kind of collective, one where they are still connected, but also free. It reminded me very much of the Borgati collective of season 2 of Picard. I was not happy with that when I watched it. Especially because I wanted something else for Jurati, who's a character I can identify a lot with. But seeing Hernandez choosing a similar place for herself made me appreciate the Borgati solution so much more. It's all in the way you tell a story. Or rather: in how you perceive or experience a story. (I am very well aware of the restrictions of a tv show compared to a novel.) To see Picard and Seven be finally liberated is beautiful. I'm curious to find out how that affects later stories. (I also like that on tv we can see a different path. It's always fun and interesting to think through some "what if" scenarios.)
As a big fan of both Jadzia and Ezri Dax, I loved seeing Ezri becoming and being a captain of her own ship here. I had this (small but not insignificant) revelation while reading the scene with her and Worf in the transporter room, that is a bit too personal to share here. But I want to say that it brought me a step forward on this path I'm walking. I absolutely need to read all the books she's in from here on out (maybe minus Coda 🫣).
I enjoyed all the stories around the crew outside of the main plot. Getting to know them may not be important for the plot but it makes them feel more real and alive. And it's always nice to get a little breather between all the heavy stuff. I especially love when minor characters on screen make the jump to the page, as e.g. here with Melora Pezlar and Simon Tarses, and get bigger stories that way. The only big minus point for me here is that I didn't get enough Tuvok. Though I loved his scene on Deneva with his wife. To see the old fashioned way of the man as the cold and strong one and the woman as the emotional and weak one to be reversed here was good. It just shows that how a person copes with tragic events like loosing a child has nothing to do with gender. (It also doesn't mean that just because a person isn't showing emotions, they in turn don't have any.)
This book is, even if it is not hard canon, but who cares anyway, a very important one for the whole of Star Trek. I mean, it gives us the origin story of the Borg and ends them for good! And it was a woman who did it. Again. 💪
I'll continue with "A Singular Destiny" soon. But first I need some lighter reading. 😅
David Mack talked to Dan Gunther and Bruce Gibson on Literary Treks about this book and the trilogy as a whole. As always, this is absolutely worth a listen. Alone for Mack talking about the techniques of story telling. Thumbs up!
PS I know that I gave the individual books 4 stars each and that would not calculate to 5 stars for the whole trilogy. But I don't care. This story is so epic and fundamental it deserves nothing less than 5 stars.
#StarTrek #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels #TrekLit #StarTrekDestiny
Elena. commented on Star Trek: Destiny: The Complete Saga by David Mack (Star Trek: Destiny, #1-3)
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 …
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 about it without giving anything away. All I will say here is that I loved the solution.
David Mack talked to Dan Gunther and Bruce Gibson on Literary Treks about this book and the trilogy as a whole. As always, this is absolutely worth a listen. Alone for Mack talking about the techniques of story telling. Thumbs up!
#StarTrek #StarTrekBooks #StarTrekNovels #TrekLit #StarTrekDestiny