Just looking to see what everyone has. Maybe we can all learn of some new ones to add to the collection!

I don’t have a whole lot.

  • yzh@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I’ve got:

    • I, Q by John de Lancie and Peter David. The universe is being swallowed up by a huge whirlpool dubbed “The Maelstrom” and de Lancie’s Q actually tries to save everyone.
    • Planet X by Michael Jan Friedman. I’m a huge X-Men fan as well as a Star Trek fan and this book is a crossover. I actually really enjoyed it and if I remember correctly it actually references another cross over that happened in the comics. There’s even a bit where they poke fun at the resemblance between Picard and Professor X; the book came out before the X-Men movies were cast.

    I think these books weren’t well reviewed, but I loved them.

  • Value Subtracted@startrek.websiteM
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    1 year ago

    The TNG Technical Manual is practically a necessity.

    I have most of the Discovery and Picard tie-ins. They’re generally pretty good - the one I wouldn’t necessarily recommend is “The Way to the Stars”, which is about Tilly when she was sixteen. I wouldn’t say it’s bad, but it reads like a book for teenage girls, and I am…not that. My favourite of the bunch is probably the Picard prequel “The Last Best Hope”, which I really enjoyed.

    In terms of older stuff, I have a good chunk of the New Frontier series, but fell away from it over time. The four-part Dominion War series from the 90s is interesting, but I would only recommend the TNG instalments, as the DS9 ones are just novelizations of a few episodes.

    I also remember owning and reading "Best Destiny, but I really don’t remember it.

    • Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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      1 year ago

      My one goal in life is to get my TNG tech manual signed by anyone from TNG. Ideally Frakes, Burton or Spiner.

      The other books i’ve not heard much about. I was only really aware of one Discovery tie-in that had to do with my main man Stamets but I completely forgot to get it.

      Thanks for the new ideas. I’ll definitely steer clear of the Tilly book. As a gay dude I might have a little bit extra enjoyment I could squeeze out of it, because I’m a walking stereotype, but even then the concept just seems odd. Not the time in Tillys life I’d have expected a book to go after.

      • Value Subtracted@startrek.websiteM
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        1 year ago

        The cover of “Dead Endless” is a little deceiving - it’s really a Culber story, as it covers what happened to him while he was trapped in the mycelial plane after being murdered by Voq. Obviously, that also means Stamets is featured pretty heavily, but…well, it’s not what you would expect. In a good way, I think.

        • Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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          1 year ago

          A very good way. Was wondering what Hugh got up to while in there. He hasn’t talked about it in couples therapy. Just keeps screaming you weren’t there. Apparently it’s a reference to an old Earth film?

  • Taleya@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Uh, lots.

    lots.

    Got given my mum’s TOS collection which started in the 70’s, and added my own ground floor DS9 collection (with some TNG classics in there like imzadi/Q-squared/Vendetta)

  • zoostation@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a bunch, I started reading them when I was a kid in the early 90s. But the greatest ones of all are the Destiny trilogy by David Mack.

    The Cold Equations trilogy was definitely interesting too, but the Destiny trilogy is Trek’s Thrawn trilogy.

  • Orionza@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have so many. Would you like some? 😀 Most of them I’ll never read again and I’d love to see them go to a good appreciative home. I’ve collected them since I was a child, since Star Trek books started coming out. I may have some of the late 60’s books but I definitely have a bunch from the 70’s. I don’t have all the collections, just random ones I was interested in getting. I stopped buying when I went to college. Then when DS9 came out, I started reading them again after the series finished. I need to see if there are more of the story continuation I don’t have. I would love to read those.

    One I think about from time to time wasn’t a novel. It was memoirs about the conventions. I wanted to go to one desperately but I was just a kid. I never told my folks - they’d never take me to something like that. I always dreamed of one coming to my hometown. Then I went to school, and career, got married and had kids. My daughter liked Voyager. We lived in a major city locale and I took her to some conventions.

    Then the unbelievable happened. A ST convention came to my hick hometown. My childhood dream come true - even though I no longer lived there. We went home, and met James Doohan, Michelle Nichols, and George Takei, and another actress (the one on the episode where they age rapidly, and she died). I never knew until I got older, she was on several Westerns and I wish I could have talked with her about those! She’s passed now.

    Anyway that’s the only convention I ever think about, even though we attended a good many. That one in my boonies hometown was very special.

  • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    I’m a huge Relaunch novelverse fan. These books really kept me going in the absence of new Trek television. I’m still grieving the end of that era of publishing.

    (I had never found many of the earlier tie-in books that interesting - the constraints on authors to finish the books with no lasting impact on characters or events made the books feel unimportant.)

    The Relaunch Novelverse was something that authors had wanted for a long time. A real way to play in the Trek sandbox and move characters and events forward. Some of the authors seized the most from it, others seem to get stuck in documenting what they saw as history. In either case though, one can seen the influence of the Relaunch writers room thought experiments running through the new shows, to their benefit.

    Recommendations? The crossover Destiny, Typhon Pact, and The Fall sequences are all solid overall. Destiny is stands out as great science fiction regardless of its tie-in fiction foundation.

    The Bashir-S31/Control, Titan, Voyager Full Circle, and later TNG books are all reliably good to great reads. The DS9 books seemed to start off well and got me into the Relunch books but seemed to bog down. McCormack’s Cardassian books were all excellent. Bennett’s Temporal Investigations are fun reads for knowledgeable fans.

    The Relaunch novelverse is not however upbeat and trippy. Its starting point at the end of the Dominion War shapes the backdrop. Even many of the TOS-era books that have a Relaunch basis can be fairly dark, including the much loved Vanguard Series by Mack, Ward and Dilmore.

    I definitely have my favourite authors. Most of those became regulars contracted for the new books being released as tie-ins for the Secret Hideout era shows. Simon & Schuster has been managing their room of writers well.

    There are however couple of Relaunch authors that I avoid even if it means skipping a key book in a series. There’s one who really knows his Trek stuff but writes exposition-heavy books that ready like background rather than stories. Fortunately, the other authors always fill in what I missed, and Memory Beta is there as a resource too.

    In terms of books about the franchise, I have an original copy of the TNG Technical Manual and a few others. I recently got the TAS official guide and it’s great. However, no matter who writes them, I always consider these beta-canon.

    • gnuplusmatt@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      I was similar, almost monthly releases over the years kept me engaged.

      I would add to those recommendations the Cold Equations Trilogy and if someone enjoys that, Mortal Coil (as a prequel to cold Equations) and The Light Fantastic as a sequel.

  • evdo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    I’ve read a couple, but I think the only one I have at the moment is “How Much For Just The Planet?”

    It was too goofy sounding NOT to read!

  • Prouvaire@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I own all (I think) of the TOS era Bantam novels and short story collections from way back (though some in their UK Corgi editions), and just about all of the early Pocket novels (the first 50 or so); as well as a fairly comprehensive selection of early non-fiction books, including some obscure ones like The Making of the Trek Conventions by Joan Winston, Letters to Star Trek by Susan Sackett and Star Trek Intragalactic Puzzles by James Razzi.

    https://youtu.be/tRsYJej2RtI