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Ladataan... Prometheus: In the Heart of ChaosTekijä: Bernd Perplies, Christian Humberg (Tekijä)
- Ladataan...
Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. This book was one of the ones I picked up at a library book sale. I've not read any other Star Trek Prometheus titles and was concerned I would be lost or that I wouldn't care about these ST characters. I was surprised to find quite a few references to ST characters I did know--Ambassador Spock plays a key role as does Alexander Rozshenko, Kosinski and Wesley Crusher have minor but important roles, Picard is mentioned. The book plays off of an Original Series episode where an entity creates hatred and encourages the humans and Klingons to fight each other. As best I can tell this is a different entity but has similar traits. The book mentions that Picard faced a similar entity, but I haven't been able to identify if that was from a Next Generation episode or in a book or just written into this storyline as a way to discuss a known character from the ST universe. The plot is a bit plodding at times as they (Federation and Klingons) try to unravel the mystery. I wish Raspin had been put into the escape pod too. I was glad the vessel of the white guardian survived--though I suspected he would before it was revealed. All-in-all, I was pleasantly surprised. Fun, satisfying conclusion to a nice trilogy. Rage, faith manipulated to fuel terrorism, prejudice exploited... where do SF writers get these crazy ideas? (Well, maybe ... the news?) A nice ending with some nice twists and turns. I enjoyed this trilogy - the first Trek books translated *from* German for English readers. I like the crew of the Prometheus (and the ship, too) - I hope they get a chance to continue their adventures! näyttää 3/3 ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
The Federation races to discover the culprits of several terrorist attacks, sending their flagship, the USS Prometheus, to stop war breaking out in the galaxy. The situation in the Lembatta Cluster is deteriorating rapidly. Fleets from the Federation and Klingon Empire are heading for the borders. The crews of the U.S.S. Prometheus and I.K.S. Bortas are racing against time to break the cycle of violence that is spreading through the Alpha Quadrant. Adams and Kromm are on the trail of a secret weapons facility, but instead discover an enemy from their pasts who seems utterly unstoppable. Together, they search for the answers to their questions, before the galaxy goes down in flames. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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Google Books — Ladataan... LajityypitMelvil Decimal System (DDC)833.92Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Modern period (1900-) 1990-Kongressin kirjaston luokitusArvio (tähdet)Keskiarvo:
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Unfortunately, the book is still fully capable of frittering away its narrative energy because then we're back into, buckle up, a meeting scene! A whole chapter is devoted to a meeting where the main takeaway is that Spock thinks they should look something up in Memory Alpha. This should have been two lines of dialogue, tops! No one wants to read a debate about whether or not someone should send an e-mail!
So then we pop over to Memory Alpha of course, and here's your final big cameo for Star Trek's fiftieth anniversary... freaking Kosinski from "Where No One Has Gone Before." Wow, how did they get him back? No, the question is why? Why in the middle of this novel do we have to squander a chapter on this guy updating us on his life story, watching the news, and looking at maps in a library!? (Okay, he's not really the last big cameo, that's Wesley Crusher... a moment that is totally gratuitous... but hey so is everything else in this book.)
The problem is (and here I disagree with my 2019 self when he reviewed the audiobook) that then the Prometheus and Bortas split up, and now all the Prometheus is doing is flying to the origin of the Ancient Reds, picking up one of them, and flying back to Lembatta. You might think, That's not enough content to fill up a 350-page novel, and well, you'd be right. It feels like the Prometheus crew is barely in this one... but maybe that's a blessing in disguise. It certainly feels like they barely do anything in it, basically just being a ferry service. At a time when things should be escalating, there's actually less going on.
So how can they fill up the book's pages? By suddenly giving us the adventures of a new set of boring characters, some Rigellian chelon admiral and the ship he's on. One whole chapter is about trying to figure out a guy's password. None of it is ever really relevant to anything.
Overall, this book reads like someone took all the least interesting aspects of Destiny-era fiction—mediocre original characters, tedious political plots, gratuitous continuity references—and amped them up as far as they would go. So I guess it fits in with its era... mission accomplished? But there's a base level of enjoyment in even this era's worst book that I just could not find in the Prometheus trilogy, with its stilted dialogue and tedious prose.
Continuity Notes: