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Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Fallen Heroes

Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Fallen Heroes

List Price: $16.00
Your Price: $9.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: DS9 #5 Fallen Heroes - An excellent novel!
Review: "Fallen Heroes" is quite often praised as the best "pre relaunch" Star Trek Deep Space Nine novel, and it quite well deserves that reputation. This particular novel even rated a video game being designed and named after it.

As with the departure from the norm that Star Trek Deep Space Nine is, so is this novel that is so much more different than any other novel written in any of the series. In one of the darkest and bloodiest "hours" of Star Trek, the author explores the idea of almost every main character in the series, being brutally murdered and how heroically they "met their maker," yet the author, Dafydd ab Hugh, deftly handles closing up this novel in which there is no change whatsoever to the series.

"Fallen Heroes" is author Dafydd ab Hugh's first Star Trek novel and I found his writing style to be quite fluidic and the pacing of the novel to be non stop, which in the light of other Star Trek novels, is a great skill to possess. The cover art for this novel is standard fare for the time and doesn't lend much to the story.

The premise:

Set sometime early during the second season of the series, "Fallen Heroes" tells the tale of alien warriors coming to the station and demanding the return of an imprisoned comrade, someone of which nobody on the station knows anything about. Being set so early in the series, prior to the fourth season in which Deep Space Nine's defense were seriously "beefed" up, the aliens easily invade the station and Commander Sisko and crew have a losing battle to fight. Meanwhile, an odd device from the Gamma Quadrant has shifted Odo and Quark to three days in the future on the station. They arrive there and nobody is left alive, leaving them the task of finding a way back to the time they left and saving the station.

What follows from there, as stated above, is one of the most intriguing and fast paced early Star Trek Deep Space Nine novels set prior to the relaunch series. I highly recommend this novel to any and all fans of the series as you will most certainly not be disappointed! {ssintrepid}

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: DS9 #5 Fallen Heroes - An excellent novel!
Review: "Fallen Heroes" is quite often praised as the best "pre relaunch" Star Trek Deep Space Nine novel, and it quite well deserves that reputation. This particular novel even rated a video game being designed and named after it.

As with the departure from the norm that Star Trek Deep Space Nine is, so is this novel that is so much more different than any other novel written in any of the series. In one of the darkest and bloodiest "hours" of Star Trek, the author explores the idea of almost every main character in the series, being brutally murdered and how heroically they "met their maker," yet the author, Dafydd ab Hugh, deftly handles closing up this novel in which there is no change whatsoever to the series.

"Fallen Heroes" is author Dafydd ab Hugh's first Star Trek novel and I found his writing style to be quite fluidic and the pacing of the novel to be non stop, which in the light of other Star Trek novels, is a great skill to possess. The cover art for this novel is standard fare for the time and doesn't lend much to the story.

The premise:

Set sometime early during the second season of the series, "Fallen Heroes" tells the tale of alien warriors coming to the station and demanding the return of an imprisoned comrade, someone of which nobody on the station knows anything about. Being set so early in the series, prior to the fourth season in which Deep Space Nine's defense were seriously "beefed" up, the aliens easily invade the station and Commander Sisko and crew have a losing battle to fight. Meanwhile, an odd device from the Gamma Quadrant has shifted Odo and Quark to three days in the future on the station. They arrive there and nobody is left alive, leaving them the task of finding a way back to the time they left and saving the station.

What follows from there, as stated above, is one of the most intriguing and fast paced early Star Trek Deep Space Nine novels set prior to the relaunch series. I highly recommend this novel to any and all fans of the series as you will most certainly not be disappointed! {ssintrepid}

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An unnintelligent, but entertaining read
Review: "Fallen Heroes" is set at the beginning of the second season of DS9. Shortly after the episode 'Cardassians', if you can count on the stardates.

It's writer Dafydd ab Hugh, is one of the most contraversial star trek writers I have read. He writes good characterization and interesting situations, but his books are filled with commercial, brainless, unjustified and ridiculously violent action.

I have nothing against a little action, but it must be justified and portrayed realistically. This novel is totally based on violence. The unjustified and unrealistic kind at that.

Fortunately the characters are portrayed well, and this is one of the what-if stories, that are fitted into the established canon by time travel. It's, in a way, a DS9 version of the exellent Voyager episode 'Year of Hell', so it's a story that normaly wouldn't be told, unless it would have been told as non-canon.

And I hate trek stories that don't fit to the established canon.

All in all, the book is good. It gives us an entertaining story, but some even a bit intellectually talented fans might not like the war-movie storytelling. Definitely recommendet, but a story that might as well have been left untold.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best DS9 book there is!
Review: A warship takes over DS9 using phaser reflective armor and projectile weapons. They destroyed the stations's power source and picked off each officer one by one. This book tells of the struggle to survive in the face of adversity. A great book for all Star Trek fans!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Before the Domminion there was........ Read it and find out
Review: An excellent read just to find out what happened to DS9 in the future. And how and why it happened. Odo and Quark make up a good duo in this book as they do in the tv program, and Cmdr Sisko uses his love of baseball to defend the station. If you want to find out how read the book, I recommed it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "This issue, everybody dies!!!"
Review: As in the comic books that I used to read, that periodically used those words as a teaser on the cover, this story does not, in fact, mean exactly what it says. But like in those stories, it comes close enough that one can't really accuse the teaser of lying, either.

As with the character in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" who claims to have been turned into a newt, "It got better."

It was obvious early on where this story was going, and basically, what was going to happen. Clearly, we had an author with an interesting thought: how heroically would our heroes face death? And he found a way to explore that question without making any irrevocable changes; not an easy thing to do. I've never been a fan of stories in which nothing that happens matters, because it's all undone eventually. But in this case, the plot device was handled well enough that I have to accept it; a book this well-written has to be rated at five stars, regardless of whether I approve of the concept. The plot device was actually well enough thought out to be made plausible, the characterizations were spot-on, and the action was intense.

Not for the faint of heart, but a superb story for those who read Star Trek for the action.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Star Trek Couldn't get any better than "Fallen Heroes"
Review: Excellent, gripping, Once you pick it up you'll find it hard to put it down. This was a sad story it has done what Star Trek has failed to do so many times to detail the tragedy of death. If the producers of DS9 are smart they will make a movie out of this. It would be the most popular ST movie yet.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Centers on Quark and Odo, fast-paced and compelling.
Review: Fallen Heroes is a fast-paced and very well written action-packed story of the battle to save Deep Space Nine from an invasion. It features all of the usual characters , but centers on Odo and Quark, admirably describing the idiosyncrasies of their relationship. It has humor, but is also filled with death. Its only fault may be the way that Odo and Quark discover each body, and then we have to read through how it happened. But since it is interesting and often compelling, this task is never really tedious. In Fallen Heroes, as in The Siege by Peter David, Odo is late for his sleep period but the action won't allow him a moment's rest. Therefore, we find Odo constantly waxing heroic while trying desperately not to melt. It seems that if Odo is your main character, make him late for bed and you've got instant suspense. His final act of heroism will have you grinning at Hugh's originality and imagination. Definitely a good read

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best
Review: Fallen Heroes is easily the best DS9 book up through #16 in the series, quite possibly the best out of all of them.

Mr. ab Hugh has a pretty good grasp of the characters, a good sense of humor, and some great action. This is a time-travel story, but it is carried of with skill. The Odo/Quark interactions are frequently excellent, and we get to see how the characters act when pushed past the limit. We see our heroes killed off, one by one, and it doesn't once seem stupid or corny.

The action is awesome, the bad guys menacing, the emotions convincing, the humor fun, and a tip of the hat to the author for acknowledging other DS9 novels as well as episodes.

If you are going to choose one DS9 book to read, make it this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dafydd, Death, and DS9
Review: For those of you out there who are familiar with Trek novels, you have probably realized (if you are honest with yourself, that is) that most of them are sub-standard even for licensed genre literature and only enjoyable because they feature characters we have fallen in love with on television.

However, even naysayers should stop to give "Fallen Heroes" a second glance. Sure, it's one of the novels, and so has no true bearing on the mythology of the shows. Sure, no matter what happens to the main characters everything will turn out all right in the end. But the adventure Dafydd takes us through in the course of the novel really packs a wallop.

Fans of Quark and Odo will really get their money's worth, as these are the main protagonists of the novel. Their relationship is beautifully captured on the page. Also, although I'll attempt not to spoil anything, there is a wonderful scene in which Dafydd explores the nature of the Dax symbiont/host relationship from a very original perspective sadly never explored on the series.

This book has everything that makes Trek great: great action, a great plot, and great characterization. Here's the real shocker, though: it's well written! Top that off with the fact that it revolves around the DS9 crew (the best of them all in my book) and you have a surprisingly good read. Thanks, Dafydd. Trekkers, if you haven't read this one, you owe it to yourselves.


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