Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Book Club: Star Trek Books

I've just finished reading the recent crop of Trek books, so I'll just
comment in a bit of a general sense. I read the TNG era "Destiny" trilogy
when they came out, without having read any of the books leading up to them,
and I was pretty impressed. Oh, I knew that Riker was captain of the Titan,
but that was pretty much it. I'd heard that Janeway had been killed off, but
I wasn't really thinking about that. So I was surprised to find Chakotay
commanding Voyager. I like Chakotay, even as Captain, but why did someone
feel the need to kill off Janeway? Though I suppose if Lucas can sanction
Chewbacca getting killed...

Anyway, I was pretty happy with Destiny. David Mack did a decent job of
rendering the characters. I just have a few complaints. I didn't read the
book where Ezri Dax got command of the Aventine, but I don't think I've ever
known a character less deserving of commanding the most advanced ship in the
fleet. I always thought that Ezri Dax was a stunningly weak character to
follow in Jadzia's footsteps, and while I think that David Mack wrote her
well, I truly dislike her as A) a starship captain, and B) captain of such a
ship. Battlefield promotions I get, but not keeping that ship. And I don't
have a problem with women captains. The female Romulan Commander from TOS
"The Enterprise Incident", Kathryn Janeway, Erika Hernandez... no, I just
don't believe in Captain Ezri Dax of the USS Aventine.

Speaking of Captain Erika Hernandez, I know that everyone seems to take an
image from the "Ships of the Line" calendar as definitive proof that NX-02
crashed, but I like the ship and the captain, and I think it's kind of
rotten what they did to them. I won't go into lots of detail, but her ship
gets mutinied (if that's a word) out from under her, and the character is
relegated to what is essentially imprisonment for the bulk of the series.
Granted, she plays a major role in saving the day at the end, but at that
point she really isn't Erika Hernandez. She's more like someone who used to
be Erika Hernandez. A big let down. But the rest of the series was pretty
good. I will also say that the Borg seem to be gone, finally. Good thing or
bad thing I don't know. (And an intentional return to the Delta Quad to
confirm that the Borg are gone seems to be upcoming in a planned book). But
that sort of leads to Post-Destiny books. I've read "Full Circle", "Losing
the Peace", and "A Singular Destiny", and I have to say that while "Full
Circle" was a fascinating and personal story of Chakotay dealing with the
loss of Janeway, the other two books, while interesting, were also less
interesting for their content than they are for the foreshadowing of a
future threat to be encountered in a miniseries about "The Typhon Pact".
While "A Singular Destiny" moved very quickly, was interesting, and advances
the story in a unique fashion, I simply found it quite light, and not
entirely satisfying. And "Losing the Peace" had essentially the same
problem. I like the picture that was shown of the unprecedented refugee
problem, and the characters were well drawn, but I found it, in the end,
unsatisfying. Good story, interesting and fast moving, but light weight.
Unsatisfying. I'm looking forward to the Typhon Pact books. Unless, of
course, it's just going to be another war/soap opera series that is
eventually unsatisfying. Next time, I'll talk about the recent "Enterprise"
Relaunch series, which just gave us the most detailed look we've ever had at
the Earth/Romulan War. And of course all comments are welcome.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Notes From Behind the Counter

I'm planning to open the doors for discussion of books, movies, or any other
subject of interest to visitors. In the next several days, I'll talk about
some books that I've read lately, and encourage any interested visitors to
share their opinions.

Kapact