Review Index

Invasion Book 2: The Soldiers of Fear
Invasion Book 3: Time's Enemy
Invasion Book 4: The Final Fury
Voices (Babylon #1)
The Way of the Warrior
Mosaic
The Sparrow
I Jedi

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Invasion Book 2: The Soldiers of Fear, by Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch. (STTNG) Pocket Books, July 1996

Brundage Station, "the armpit of the galaxy." The Furies return after a century of peace. The Federation sends Picard and crew out to the front line to contain the invasion and to prevent an armada from coming through the breech known as Furies Point. This time around the Furies use their greatest weapon, fear, and the old adage applies, "There is nothing to fear but fear itself." The details are much gorier than in Book 1, but this book seems to rest on the fear and horror it creates. The characterizations were not accurate, hitting wide of the mark. why was this book even written? Obviously, to make more money. However, a Ferengi source on our ship suggests there is one tidbit of information in this book that is vital to the rest of the Invasion Saga. Our source also relays that Invasion Book 3, Time's Enemy, by L.A. Graf, is fantastic. Stay tuned...

(Warp Factor 3)

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Invasion Book 3: Time's Enemy, by L.A. Graf. (STDS9) Pocket Books c1996 L.A. Graf (pseudonym of Julie Karen Rose and Ecklar Cercone)

L.A. Graf's novels are roller coaster rides of adventure that keep going and going... Wow! This is one of the best time travel stories I've read so far. The author(s) know these characters inside out. Characterizations, adventure, story, all were excellent. We get a slight reprieve from the awfulness of the Furies, only to be hit by viroids. The depth of the story was what attracted me. I won't say more, because giving away any of the story would be a dirty, nasty old Romulan ploy and after all, I'm a clean, nice old Romulan. Get cozy and devour Time's Enemy from cover to cover. Then time warp and read it again... and again... and again. A piece of Kira Nerys' wit - Bashir's idea of rough childhood was hhaving to pay for his own tennis lessons. Ouch! Enjoy!

(Warp Factor 9)

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Invasion Book 4: The Final Fury, by Dafydd ab Hugh. (ST:VOY) Pocket Books, c1996.

The fourth and final novel in the fury invasion saga was not a disappointment and was certainly an exciting read for an October vacation. I only wish the weekly t.v. series was this good! Janeway's castaways encounter a Starfleet shuttle craft distress signal in the Delta Quadrant. On their way to check out the signal, the crew is puzzled by a sun that appears to be rigged to produce high tech energy waves. (Please excuse this 20th century Terran. Technobabble R'nt Us!) Next there is an armored moon orbiting a planet filled with strangely frightening beings. Janeway, Tuvok and Neelix form an away team to visit Hell. In other novels, the Enterprise crew and DS9 teams are very educated and know immediately that they're in BIG Trouble. Initially, Janeway and Tuvok are clueless as to what they have beamed into. Duh? Did Janeway and Tuvok forget to take Starfleet: Furies 101? Oh, well, nit-picking aside, the action was great. Voyager fights like a wildcat and brilliant maneuvers abound. Neelix becomes the character who, as the outsider, can immediately tune into what should be obvious flaws in Starfleet procedure; i.e., why doesn't Starfleet outfit it's member with backup communicators in case of theft or loss on missions. Janeway notes and logs that one with good grace. toward the end, Janeway does go low tech nuts and bolts by having her crew actually stand by the portholes to use their own eyes as sensors when the ship's computer sensors are kaflooie. I heard a work colleague criticize Janeway as not being a "real" starship captain. Let me tell you, I think Janeway is fantastic and can be even better when talented writes are allowed to really explore her character. Perhaps this has been accomplished with the recently published hardcover novel, Mosaic, by Jeri Taylor. A bonus is an addendum of short essays by the authors of each of the invasion novels.

(Warp Factor 7)

Of the four invasion novels, I rate: #1-First Strike (TOS), #2-Time's Enemy (DS9), #3-The Final Fury (Voy.) & #4-The Soldiers of Fear (TNG).

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Voices (Babylon #1), by John Vornholt . Dell, March 1995.

It is the dawn of the third age of mankind. The year is 1996. the place is the Paperback Book Exchange. I've finally found some used B5 books at my favorite haunt on Eastway and Central in Charlotte, and it was worth the wait. John Vornholt is a name you may recognize from Pocket books Trek noveldom. He does a great job with B5. The characterizations are excellent. The mood and action suit the B5 universe. Someone doesnĖt want Mars to hold a Telepath convention and informs Mr. Bester of this via a big "BOOM." (You have to envision The Ivanova saying the "BOOM." She does have a way with words!) So B5 becomes the host of the Telecon via Talia WintersĖ assistance. Telepaths arenĖt well liked in the third age of mankind, but Captain Sheridan decides to accommodate Bester in the interests of rescuing B5 from frontier backwater to a legitimate commercial center. The plus is that if B5 could become more economically self-sustaining, it would require less funding and control from Earth. Ivanova and Garibaldi arenĖt happy with all the headaches the convention will cause, but follow orders. In addition, the formerly very irregular Mr. Garibaldi is trying to keep this job as chief of security for more than his usual year in one place. All of the ambassadors and aliens are present and add to the color and drama of home sweet B5. Add about 400 Psi Corp and Psi Cops and you have a recipe for disaster. Talia Winters is branded a rogue telepath and flees for her life. Bester is at his dastardly best. There is plenty of action, including a trip to 23rd century Earth and Mars. Can Vornholt write sci-fi other than Trek? You bet! Sorry, no Warp Factors in the B5 universe...

(Ka-Boom Level: 9)

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The Way of the Warrior, by Diane Carey, Pocket Books, October 1995
(based on The Way of the Warrior written by Ira Steven Behr and Robert Hewitt Wolfe)

Although this book dates from October 1995, I am just now catching up with some of the DS9 and Classic Trek books by the way of the Paperback Book Exchange in Charlotte. Truthfully, I hesitated to read this one since itšs a Klingon story and itšs based on a DS9 episode I have already seen. I prefer something fresh and new. Fortunately, as the Prophets would have it, I followed a still small voice, actually a demanding Klingon voice that sounded a bit like Mr. Worf. ... "READ This! Immediately!!"

This book is a jewel. Absolutely! The story as a t.v. episode was exciting anyway, but add Star Trek veteran writer Diane Carey and you get an irresistible, riveting story. Carey can reach into the heart of Star Trek. Sh combines exciting adventure with in-depth character portrayals and great technical writing (bridge scenes, battles, ships). I propose that Carey rewrite the Voyager t.v. episodes and start ASAP!

In The Way of the Warrior, Lt. Cmdr. Worf is assigned to DS9 at a critical juncture: the Klingons are in fear of the Dominionšs insidious, silent permeation of the Alpha Quadrant. They strike out at Cardassia and eventually the Federation. Carey adds meat tot he bones of the original t.v. script. An unforgettable scene is that of Capatin Cassidy Yeates fighting off a Klingon attache with her freighter crew. It's pure Kirkian strategy. WOW!!

Don't miss this one. Better yet, reread it. Also look out for an upcoming Carey hardback Classic Trek novel to be published this fall called "Ship of the Line!"

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Mosaic,(ST:Voyager-hardcover) by Jeri Taylor, Pocket Books, October 1996

Jeri Taylor, the co-creator and executive producer of Star Trek: Voyager, gives us some important pieces in Captain Janeway's life that have made her into the individual and Starfleet captain that she is. Voyager's captain is caught in a classic command situation. Lt. Tuvok and the away team are caught on a planet while a Kazon sect splits it's attack between the "Federations" on the ground and in the sky. Captain Janeway must fend off the assaults on Voyager, while working out a strategy for rescuing her crew below. Not for once does she consider abandoning them although she has lost communication with them and has no idea whether they are dead or alive. Enter another factor. The dead planet attacks Kazon and Starfleet alike in its own peculiar and fascinating way. Jeri Taylor weaves throughout these story lines a repetitive dream that pesters Janeway. There is a house with an unopened door to a room that she must get into to clean out but she just can't seem to open it. Taylor skillfully allows Janeway to reflect on key memories from childhood through her first captaincy with Ensign Tuvok, that "imperious and condescending" Vulcan, as her tactical officer. It becomes clear that there is some element in Janeway's past that she is hiding from. At the peak of danger, Janeway is forced to confront that closed door and take charge of her fear in order to rescue her crew and away team.

Taylor's book holds some surprises and the action and characterizations are superb. Initially, I was surprised that I didn't immediately warm to Janeway's story. But then, Janeway can be distant at first. Once you get to know her, she may open up and allow you access to her full personality. That's very much the way this book seemed. Once past the initial phase, the book pulls you into the mosaic. I suspect Taylor is writing about her alter-ego. I know she is writing about each of us. In the final paragraphs she writes about the "constantly unfolding design which has been growing, square by square since she was a baby, and which was becoming more intricate with each passing year... her mosaic was multi-hued, many-textured, and infinitely complex..."

Warp Factor: 8

The Sparrow, By Mary Doria Russell Villiard, c. 1996.

In 2019 a SETI observer in Arecebo discovers a contact message from the Alpha Centauri System. Surprisingly this is not a mathematically coded message, rather it is a sung message. Before any government can even begin to agree to a mission to Alpha Centauri, much less raise the money necessary, the Jesuits put together a team of eight members of various disciplines and skills and set out on a first contact voyage. When the scientific mission ends tragically, the crew's linguist, Father Emilio Sandoz, is the only survivor. Shattered mentally and physically, Father Sandoz is put through a grueling investigation and is accused of horrible crimes.

The novel is quite well written and the prose is beautiful. Each of the characters become real and the first contact with the extraterrestrial civilization is exciting. There is tremendous depth to the story. The author moves backwards and forwards through time with great effect so that the explosive ending puts you through an emotional wringer. There is humor and pain. The tale is magnificent and heartbreaking. Although we are told at the beginning that there is a tragic ending, the adventure is in unraveling the full story. Facts are facts, yet they can be interpreted in many ways.

Technically, this is fiction minus the "sci." After reading this novel, you can better understand Starfleet's logic and its bullheaded enforcement of the Prime Directive.

Enjoy this unusual novel and look for the sequel "The Children of God."

Warp Factor: 10

Star Wars: I Jedi, By Michael A. Stackpole Bantam (1998).

Can there be a successful Star Wars book without Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia, or Han Solo? Be sure to check this hardback Star Wars novel out before reaching a hasty decision.

Corran Horn, a former Corellian security officer and Rogue Squadron pilot is motivated to join Luke Skywalker's new Jedi Academy as a result of his wife's possible kidnapping by pirates who are plaguing the New Republic. Horn eventually becomes impatient with the long painstaking Jedi Period and ventures out to continue the search for his wife. He goes undercover in an attempt to infiltrate the pirates, insinuating himself into an association with a former and exotically powerful Empire Moff.

Horn combines the charm and dry wit of his compatriot Corellian Han Solo with a cavalier bravado. Could this be a prerequisite for surviving life on Corellia? In the process of blending his "mundane" self with his Jedi inheritance, an ancient heritage extending back tens of thousands of years, Horn matures into a deeper acceptance of self and others. He learns the true meaning of being a Jedi of honor, and of good/evil and the light side/dark side of the Force. There are two watershed insights for Horn in Chapter 41 (good & evil) and Chapter 42 (the essence of being a Jedi).

Horn's story at times is written in a style similar to the two "invisible" techs on a Babylon 5 episode giving us the everyman's view of the Rebellion and its heroes. Yet, Horn is a hero in is own right. The author packs the book with Forceful adventure and action as well as deep insights into philosophical issues and character.

Warp Factor: 8 Top of page

Back to the USS Hornet!

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