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Washed up on a faraway galactic shore, Captain Kathryn Janeway of the U.S.S. Voyager(tm) faced a choice: accept exile or set a course for home, a seventy-thousand-light-year journey fraught with unknown perils. She chose the latter. Janeway's decision launched her crew on a seven-year trek pursuing an often lonely path that embodied the purest form of the Starfleet adage "to boldly go..."(tm) Committed to that difficult road, Voyager's crew was rewarded with unimaginable experiences on strange and fantastic worlds, encountering exotic alien species and astonishing phenomena...and challenged along the way by conflicts from within as well as from without. Yet none of their adventures tempered their shared determination to find a way back to friends and family.… (plus d'informations)
I thought that overall the short stories in this collection were on the scale from good to excellent.
I really, really liked the two parts of Da Capo al Fine. It was also cool how it was set up. One part at the beginning, one at the end. Because with what the story was about the stories in the middle in some ways seemed like part of Da Capo al Fine. It tied together the rest of the book so well.
I also really liked 18 minutes and that surprised me a bit because the Doctor, who had the central role in the story, isn't my favorite character in the TV series.
There were also a couple of stories that were okay. Talent Night was weird but good. And Bottomless was seriously freaky and the descriptions were jarringly scary. (I'm definitely not gonna go swimming for awhile).
On the not so great side of the book I thought that in the story Command Codes, Chakotay seemed really, really written out of character.
I also don't remember the Equinox characters being so present in the show, but in this collection they seemed to be all over the place.
Overall it was a great book of stories and they were well written. There's always another corner or crack that a bit of story can be written about in the Star Trek Universe. ( )
Washed up on a faraway galactic shore, Captain Kathryn Janeway of the U.S.S. Voyager(tm) faced a choice: accept exile or set a course for home, a seventy-thousand-light-year journey fraught with unknown perils. She chose the latter. Janeway's decision launched her crew on a seven-year trek pursuing an often lonely path that embodied the purest form of the Starfleet adage "to boldly go..."(tm) Committed to that difficult road, Voyager's crew was rewarded with unimaginable experiences on strange and fantastic worlds, encountering exotic alien species and astonishing phenomena...and challenged along the way by conflicts from within as well as from without. Yet none of their adventures tempered their shared determination to find a way back to friends and family.
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I really, really liked the two parts of Da Capo al Fine. It was also cool how it was set up. One part at the beginning, one at the end. Because with what the story was about the stories in the middle in some ways seemed like part of Da Capo al Fine. It tied together the rest of the book so well.
I also really liked 18 minutes and that surprised me a bit because the Doctor, who had the central role in the story, isn't my favorite character in the TV series.
There were also a couple of stories that were okay. Talent Night was weird but good. And Bottomless was seriously freaky and the descriptions were jarringly scary. (I'm definitely not gonna go swimming for awhile).
On the not so great side of the book I thought that in the story Command Codes, Chakotay seemed really, really written out of character.
I also don't remember the Equinox characters being so present in the show, but in this collection they seemed to be all over the place.
Overall it was a great book of stories and they were well written. There's always another corner or crack that a bit of story can be written about in the Star Trek Universe. ( )