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Star Trek: Federation
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Manufacturer:
Pinnacle
Average Customer Rating:
Binding:
Audio CD
EAN:
9780671856762
Format:
Enhanced
ISBN:
0671856766
Label:
Pinnacle
Manufacturer:
Pinnacle
Number Of Discs:
3
Publisher:
Pinnacle
Release Date:
2004-02-02
Studio:
Pinnacle
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Greater Than the Sum ("Star Trek the Next Generation")
Spotlight customer reviews:
Customer Rating:
Summary:
Boldly Going Where No One Has Gone Before...
Comment:
I'm not the biggest fan of William Shatners Kirk, but this is a good a story that I enjoyed reading. It centres around Kirk and his Crew, Picard and his and Zefram Cochrane. For the most part it was well thought out, good sci-fi, with a good story. However, there were parts I didn't like.
Firstly there are a few more grammatical errors in the text than you would normally find in a trek book, and then there is the plot to the story, now I havn't seen every episode of TOS, but I didn't 'get'the storyline featuring Cochrane and the Companion, the sideline love story. I also thought the parts of the book featutring the Companion, were a bit plodding.
However, I particularly enjoyed the Borg-Ferengi-Romulan-Preserver plotline at the core of the book, and thought the plot involving the two Enterprise crews was a damn good read, and yeah, maybe it would have made a better film than generations, but personally I enjoyed watching Kirk die, as it should have been a significant turning point in the shows lineage. Thus an Epic moment, anyway....
This IS a good book, that maybe could have been amazing.
Customer Rating:
Summary:
Boldly going
Comment:
Written before First Contact, it's interesting how many commonalities this story has with that. There's Borg technology, there's Zefram Cochrane, the guy who started the Star Trek. However this book is a lot more loyal to pre-established Star Trek lore and is a much different, some might say more mature story.
It takes place in three timelines. In the first we follow the life of Cochrane from just after his invention of the warp drive technology, and his first encounter with the Optimal Movement, a Fascist group that has overtaken Great Britain in the future and seeks to find military uses for Cochrane's technology. The second finds us aboard the Enterprise during Kirk's five year mission, with Kirk (who had encountered Cochrane in one of the TV shows) discovering that someone has attacked Cochrane, even though no one should know where he is. The third is Next Generation era, with Picard encountering Ferengi who want to sell him Borg technology.
The three timelines come together by the end of the story, showing how Cochrane's technology improves mankind's future, how Cochrane's very involvement helps to advance mankind, despite attempts by fascists to keep human spirit restrained. In many ways, it is a true expression of the philosophy Gene Rodenberry put behind Trek.
What else? Oh, you can imagine the characters speaking the lines. The authors capture Kirk and Picard and their respective crews perfectly. There are some wonderful science fiction ideas behind the story, what with binary singularities and nanotech at play.
It's only spin-off fiction, but it's top notch spin-off fiction.
Customer Rating:
Summary:
The Story that Should have been used for ST:Generations
Comment:
A great and complex Story that i can read time and time again!
the Story that should have been used as the bases for the Generations script and not that drivel were Kirk died.
Customer Rating:
Summary:
Excellent science fiction at it's best
Comment:
This is the best Star Trek book I've ever read. It covers both Classic and the Next Generation, but also the past too. It's very intelligently writtian from a scientific basis, many parts of trek science are explained along the way, but it's never too complicated or boring. It even explains where the federation logo comes from (it's a graph of warp travel energy and speed). It was published before First Contact came out so there's a few conflicts with the life of Z Cochran, to now established Trek lore. I'd rather believe this book to be honest.
The book is very well written, the discriptions are very good and you often feel as if you are there watching the action. It also conveys the authors obvious love of science fiction, space and the characters. A Classic book I'd even recommend to non Star Trek fans. The common faults of Star Trek are largely absent from this book.
Customer Rating:
Summary:
Epic
Comment:
In a way it's a pity that this is a Star Trek book, because it means a lot of people that might have read it in fact won't. Which is a shame, because this is a great piece of work which manages to cover many different science fiction bases whilst keeping the characterisation fluent. The shear scale of the thing scares me, as it hops back and forth through the pre-established ST framework, and in the process manages to extend it considerably. Throw in some fairly useful philosophy and physics and you have a classic science fiction.
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