Rating: Summary: Too Much for too little. Review: Sometimes the best plots are the most simply to concieve. This trilogy takes great advantage of the "everything comes in three's" idea when the entire thing could have been done in two or less. Creg Cox is an excellent science fiction writer but I believe he limited his ability for imagination by chooses Star Trek as a medium. For crying out loud, he wasted nearly six chapters of the readers time with the in depth extinction of an ancient race. It was a well thought out section, but it just inturrupted the more important things going on. Also, Q stories are so difficult to write due to the fact that Q is supposed to know everything, but rarely does. If Q can do things as simple as read the minds of the crew, how was he unaware of Faal's actions in engineering?
Rating: Summary: Too Much for too little. Review: Sometimes the best plots are the most simply to concieve. This trilogy takes great advantage of the "everything comes in three's" idea when the entire thing could have been done in two or less. Creg Cox is an excellent science fiction writer but I believe he limited his ability for imagination by chooses Star Trek as a medium. For crying out loud, he wasted nearly six chapters of the readers time with the in depth extinction of an ancient race. It was a well thought out section, but it just inturrupted the more important things going on. Also, Q stories are so difficult to write due to the fact that Q is supposed to know everything, but rarely does. If Q can do things as simple as read the minds of the crew, how was he unaware of Faal's actions in engineering?
Rating: Summary: ST: TNG - The Continuum: Q-Zone Review: Star Trek: The Next Generation - The Continuum: Q-Zone written by Greg Cox is a book that unfolds more of puckish omnipotent troublemaker Q's past. This is the second book in a trilogy that began with "Q-Space" and will conclude with the third installment "Q-Strike." This book slows down a little from the fast pace of the first book, but all that means is this book is more reflective and we get to know Q's past or part of it. As Q is chased throughout the galaxy... as a callow youth... we see Q's rather enigmatic past and encounter Q's enemies. Along for the ride, Jean-Luc Picard must find out what secrets are hiding within all of this. As we are taken on an odyssey of time, space and travel on transcedenatal planes only reserved for the omnipotent. We get a closer look at Q, his "wife" Q, and their child q all being an omnipotent pain-in-the-rump as the Enterprise continues to battle one of Q's enemies. We see more of the omnipotent world as unrest and untrustworthyness seem to bring this astounding journey to a finalaty that would spell the end of time. As we journey from our universe's center to the galaxtic barrier, we meet some strange beings indeed, all in preperation for the first Q war. This trilogy is interdependent upon what was said in each of the preceeding books, so you must read them in order to make any sense out them, as they are NOT stand alone books. So far, though, I can't see why it took three books to tell this tale, as one longer novel would have done the trick. That is the only drawback, so far, other than that, this is a good book for the endangerment of the known universe Q style.
Rating: Summary: This book is actually the best of three Review: Strangely enough this middle book is the best of all in the "Q-Continuum" miniseries. It does not have "humans outwit superbeings" ideocy and the tie-ins with the original "Star Trek" are pretty good, even though I probably did not know enough to get all the references. I also wish I knew more about Tkon empire. BTW, does anyone know whose ghostly figures are seen at the background of the book's cover?
Rating: Summary: Part 2 of 3 drags on! Review: The first book was good and had much more action and humor than this second installment did. Here the story, while still partly in the present, actually takes us to the past to an event that changes Q's life forever. Though the premis is good, it is drawn out ever so long, and I found myself wanting to skip ahead to where the action is. There are a few interesting events, but Q is not as well written as he was in the last book. Other major characters take a back seat to the overall plot in this chapter. The one thing that really bothered me is that Jean Luc, for reasons unkown, cannot figure out why Q is allowing him to witness events in the past. It is sooooo obvious to the reader, but Jean Luc only figures it out on the last page. I honestly think the author could have condensed book two into books 1 and 3 respectfully. Make each one of the slightly longer and cut out some of the inaction and drawn out sequences.
Rating: Summary: Great Sequal Review: The first book was utterly amazing and perfect. It gives everything I ever wanted to know about Q. Star Trek The Next Generation: The Q Continuum, Book 1 of 3 Q-Space by Greg Cox is all I could have asked for and more. The second one topped. If you've seen the Next Generation episode The Last Outpost (The first Feringi Episode) you will be utterly insterested in the Tkon Empire. Also, (even though it took awhile)the author, Greg Cox, made the realism flow. Because to the charactors, Star Trek V is their history lecture. Mr. Cox added a joke near the end, and if you've seen the Original Series Episode And The Children Shall Lead, is humorous. Recall the quote 'I was thinking maybe a children's crusade," Gorgan suggested, "starting with the youngest of their race...'(Pg. 254 Line 21) That sums it up for me. If you've read Star Trek The Next Generation: The Q Continuum, Book 1 of 3 Q-Space by Greg Cox this is a must buy.
Rating: Summary: All potential left unused Review: The second book in the Q-Continuum trilogy is even worse than the first one. We get a novel with as much potential as any novel can have, and it's left completely unused. "Q-Zone" centeres around Q's past, showing us Q's and Picard's journey through space and time. Unfortunately we don't get to witness the ultimate, surreal, fantastic Q-adventure, like the later released "IQ" by Peter David and John DeLancie, but insted we get to see tons of boring, irrelevant scenes, that are structured badly. Meanwhile on the Enterpprise, things progress absolutely nowhere, giving us pages of nothing intellectually, or even emotionally appealing. Irrelevant.
Rating: Summary: All potential left unused Review: The second book in the Q-Continuum trilogy is even worse than the first one. We get a novel with as much potential as any novel can have, and it's left completely unused. "Q-Zone" centeres around Q's past, showing us Q's and Picard's journey through space and time. Unfortunately we don't get to witness the ultimate, surreal, fantastic Q-adventure, like the later released "IQ" by Peter David and John DeLancie, but insted we get to see tons of boring, irrelevant scenes, that are structured badly. Meanwhile on the Enterpprise, things progress absolutely nowhere, giving us pages of nothing intellectually, or even emotionally appealing. Irrelevant.
Rating: Summary: Unnecessary Review: This book suffers from the Star Trek "2nd Book" curse. Any time they put out a trilogy, almost inevitably the second book is just a lot of filler to justify calling it a trilogy ("Dark Victory" is another classic example). This whole trilogy would have made an excellent hardcover, and they could have disposed of almost all of this second book. Riker and the crew fight desperately and aimlessly against the Calamarain (a fight that would have been over in 3 chapters tops in other books). Q and Picard watch the fall of the Tkon empire (again, something that merits no more than a couple of chapters...but stretches through the entirety of this book). Nothing in this book merits a whole book. You'll have to skim through it to keep up with what happens in the third (go straight to the last few chapters - it's where the important stuff comes in), but you'll have to fight to let it keep your interest. Fortunately, the next book is the best of them and really keeps things going like a great ST book should. Hey, I'm a huge Q fan, and that's all that kept me reading this one to the end.
Rating: Summary: Unnecessary Review: This book suffers from the Star Trek "2nd Book" curse. Any time they put out a trilogy, almost inevitably the second book is just a lot of filler to justify calling it a trilogy ("Dark Victory" is another classic example). This whole trilogy would have made an excellent hardcover, and they could have disposed of almost all of this second book. Riker and the crew fight desperately and aimlessly against the Calamarain (a fight that would have been over in 3 chapters tops in other books). Q and Picard watch the fall of the Tkon empire (again, something that merits no more than a couple of chapters...but stretches through the entirety of this book). Nothing in this book merits a whole book. You'll have to skim through it to keep up with what happens in the third (go straight to the last few chapters - it's where the important stuff comes in), but you'll have to fight to let it keep your interest. Fortunately, the next book is the best of them and really keeps things going like a great ST book should. Hey, I'm a huge Q fan, and that's all that kept me reading this one to the end.
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