The start of a big Star Trek crossover series of novels always has a big lift. In this case, the author has to take a concept created by two other people, create an original Star Trek story, end on a big cliffhanger, and set the stage for six additional original…
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The Pandora Principle (Star Trek #49)
If you're familiar with Pandora's Box, then you know this Greek myth is about Pandora, the first woman created by the gods, who was given a box by Zeus, with strict instructions never to open it. Apparently all religions see women as complete morons, so of course out of sheer…
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Asylum (Star Trek: Strange New Worlds)
A new Star Trek novel by Una McCormack? Sweet! And the main character of the novel is [checks notes] Una?! I'm in! Now the question is, where does Garak fit into this story?
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Batman: Resurrection
Do you miss the days when the Batman movies were kinda campy but not overly campy. When they were dark but not overly dark? Do you wish you could dive back into the Michael Keaton days as Batman - between Batman and Batman Returns? Do you wish there was more…
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No Man’s Land (Star Trek: Picard)
Is it called "No Man's Land" because the two main characters are women? I mean, I guess there are parts that take place in Romulan territory. But still... I think the title should have been "When Seven Met Raffi" or "The Taming of the Seven" or something like that.
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The Nanotech War (Star Trek: Voyager)
In the world of Star Trek books, this is not one you hear talked about a lot. But I'm here to tell you that that is a mistake. People should be reading this book and talking about it.
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Catalyst of Sorrows (Star Trek: The Lost Era, 2360)
A low-key sequel to Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country and told in a series of flashback starring Admiral Uhura, Lieutenant Benjamin Sisko, Lieutenant Tuvok, and Dr. Selar. You had me at "a low-key sequel to Star Trek VI."
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Deny Thy Father (Star Trek: The Lost Era, 2355-2357)
Cadet Babyface, reporting for duty!
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Lost to Eternity (Star Trek: The Original Series)
This book has everything you want from a Star Trek story - true-crime podcasting, terms like "ghosting" and "Googling," and of course Skype. Wait a minute...
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Takedown (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
Picard and Riker have always worked well together. So what happened? Did the promotion to Admiral get to Riker's head? I mean, sort of, I guess... But how is Picard supposed to stop his old protege when he's always a step (or more) behind?