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Star Trek: The Next Generation: I,Q

Star Trek: The Next Generation: I,Q

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $18.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I.Q. A book worth it's title.
Review: I.Q. was is a book which is clouded in what I thought was a story behind a story. The main story people will find boring, the action isn't that exciting and the entire place picard has in the story seems more as an addon to Q. The 2nd story which involves Q and what type of person he is and what he will do for his family. This is set after the Q-Janeway story of having a child.

I would read it if you are a carefull reader and like a story inside a story.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Down the Multiversal Camode
Review: As a long time fan of Q, I was ecstatic to see a Q based story to listen too in the car for a few days. Unfortunately, this one missed the high marks set by the previous story lines.

Q seems too human in this story; he doesn't show the wisdom that you would expect from an entity who has spent eternity omniscient and omnipotent. The end of the multiverse is first compared to a toilet, and then to the stages of coping with loss. These images are rather base. While I admit that some of the concepts were interesting, the execution was off. Picard and Data are neat, but there are certainly plenty of other - more advanced - beings in the multiverse that Q would have wanted to have tagging along.

That being said, this book on tape was a decent abridgement - in a blip of post modernism, Q himself acknowledges that you are listening to the story, and should read the book for the whole picture. Perhaps I should interpret this story as a fabrication by Q to amuse himself by pulling the wool over the eyes of the reader. As an omniscient being, he certainly knows how gullible I am.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Q transcends a bad story.
Review: God becomes bored and decides that she will end the multiverse. Q sets out to rescue everything, and finds himself repeatedly bumping into Picard and Data. The storyline is confused and confusing, and the characters are pitiable caricatures of themselves.

After this outpouring of scorn let me say that somehow the authors succeeded in keeping me turning the pages. There is one thing (and only one) that makes this book worth reading and that is Q himself. Peter David and John De Lancie succeed in producing a Q at his quirky best. Therefore, if you want a good story don't stop here, but if you love Q then this book is one you should check out. [Q-Squared is much better.]

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterful compilation.
Review: The Star Trek fan will love this book. Especially those who enjoy the character of Q. John de Lancie was the perfect man to bring out the true character and humour of Q. Some parts have you giggling to yourself, some have you laughing out loud. The book is packed with bitter ironies and an amazing plot. Q's son and wife are falling victim to a strange phenomenon, as are many speices all over the multiverse. Q enlists Picard and Data to help him find out what the heck is going on before its too late. Some examples of the irony I mentioned earlier:

1. At one moment Q, who is the narrator of the story, tells the audience about a discussion he has with he child. He tells him that his father is NEVER afraid. A few pages later he's scared out of his wits

2. He tells the audience that he trusts his first instincts, and a page later, goes against that!

3. He tells us he is omniscient, but then doesn't know something!

This book is a real must have for any Star Trek fan, and a laugh riot for those Q lovers.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great book
Review: I'm glad John De Lancie has finally done a book on Q. This book was really good. Especially how the character in the book was so much like the one on the tv show. I recommend this book to any Q fan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very fun book
Review: Although definitely a different style, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was fast paced and offbeat. The first person story works in this case because it gives the reader a window into Q's soul(?). I laughed out loud during some of the little stories Q was retelling (especially the parachutist, God, and the haystack.) As I said, the writing style is very different, but the collaboration between Peter David and John DeLancie works for me.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: I,Quit
Review: John De Lancie should quit writing and stay with his acting. Even with the help of long-time Star Trek author Peter David, this book left a great deal to be desired. Most books in the series either fill in background on one or more of the characters (this one didn't) or provide us with a captivating story (again, this one didn't). The story line was written as if whatever came to the author's mind became a part of the story with no concept of flow or story development. It was, at best, a jumble of concepts, vulgarities and colloquialisms which was nearly impossible to follow. Even given the somewhat unexpected ending (the only thing interesting in the entire book), the time required to read the book would have been better spent watching paint dry or grass grow.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful book for lovers of witty science fiction.
Review: I have enjoyed every page. It is the kind science fiction I have come to expect from Peter David, the best. The insights into Q are thought provoking and with a kind a self humor that must be the influence of John De Lancie.

I had the pleasure of talking with Mr. De Lancie at the Macworld Expo in San Francisco. He expressed that one of the goals he and Peter had for the novel was to expand the readership to more than the just Star Trek fans, but to provide a novel that would appeal to the greater Science Fiction audience. I believe that they have achieved this goal with a wonderful style and wit.

The book is filled with witty banter between Picard and Q, accompanied by a view into Q's mind which shows self-doubt, fear, strong family bonds and some delightful humorous insights into Q's existence.

Data, the constant innocent, still wants to be human. When Data is given a look into that the true nature of the Q Continuum, promptly does the human thing and faints robot style.

I have often thought that Peter should write a movie script for Star Trek featuring Q. Like in his books, "Q In Law" when Lwaxana teaches Q a thing or two and in "Q Squared" when Peter brought back delightful characters like Tasha and Jack Crusher. . .but I digress.

The book is a wonderful read and I am looking forward the next collaboration between Peter David and John De Lancie.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Cute book but wait for paperback
Review: This was a cute enough book but not David's best. One part with the Grand Nagus is great. But Picard and Data often seemed out of character. Q's self-love and ego overwhelmed even me (a big fan of the character) at times. There were excessive and misplaced cliches, colloquialisms, and profanity, inconsistent with most good Trek. Too many speeches, too, even for a Q story. So, don't buy the hardcover; get it in paperback or from the library. In the mean time, read 'The Q Continuum' trilogy; it's a lot better.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: oh. wow. that was the most incredible book i've ever read.
Review: That was simply amazing. I read a lot, and few things truly impress me, but that was simply outstanding. The fact that this book is set in the Star Trek universe becomes inconsequential because the fact is, its really one great, mind bending cosmic odyssey.

Here's briefly what the story is like: it's Dante's Inferno, thrown in with What Dreams May Come, added to a dash of Contact, all in a rather Star Trek-esque setting. Sound odd? It is, in a way. However, this book can literally change the way one thinks about things in general. It's quite an experience. Now, this isn't a book for those who think everything is a certain way, and don't like to have to question their thoughts and beliefs, but if you're up for it, this is the most amazingly, thrilling book I have ever had the pleasure of reading.


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