New Trek Novel Out - Zero Sum Game
Posted: 2010-11-10 02:01am
So the new Typhon Pact mini-series has begun its release with a Bashir-centric novel. I don't want to give any plot details away for those interested, but I've been semi-regularly following all the novels set post-Nemesis with a fair degree of interest. Cheesy or not, the Star Trek novels of the late-80s and early-90s were among the first 'adult' books I read, so I've got an irrational soft spot for them.
The depth and layers the books they've been releasing have really impressed me. You really begin to get a better appreciation for the universe reading them, and this novel is no different. It expounds quite a bit on the fact that a number of the aliens in the series were very one-dimensional, paper cutouts with little depth to them-the novel, without really spoiling anything, focuses quite a bit on the Breen and gives them a lot of depth.
I didn't really see anything on the forum talking about the books, and something tells me that I'm not the only one reading them. What's everyone's opinions on the setting the writers have developed for Star Trek post-Nemesis? I know Big Steve agrees with me, they do a lot to paint Federation society as a much more functional and realistic entity than we've seen in the television shows.
The depth and layers the books they've been releasing have really impressed me. You really begin to get a better appreciation for the universe reading them, and this novel is no different. It expounds quite a bit on the fact that a number of the aliens in the series were very one-dimensional, paper cutouts with little depth to them-the novel, without really spoiling anything, focuses quite a bit on the Breen and gives them a lot of depth.
I didn't really see anything on the forum talking about the books, and something tells me that I'm not the only one reading them. What's everyone's opinions on the setting the writers have developed for Star Trek post-Nemesis? I know Big Steve agrees with me, they do a lot to paint Federation society as a much more functional and realistic entity than we've seen in the television shows.