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A Time to Heal

A Time to Heal

List Price: $6.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Haunting, Powerful, Emotional Journey
Review: "Heal," the eighth novel in the "A Time to..." series, continues the journey from The Next Generation's Star Trek: Inssurection adventure to the striking and noticable differences seen in the last feature film, Star Trek: Nemesis. The previous book, "Kill," was also written by David Mack and features the troubled worlf of Tezwa and the chaotic war-frenzy that seems to engulf it's people and the Federation. Caught in the middle is the Enterprise and Starfleet, left to clean up a political mess and save an entire world from tearing itself apart.

Reading "A Time to Kill," I was taken in by the Klingon side of things. Basically, without spoiling too much, the Klingons have a bone to pick with the world of Tezwa and it leads to a September 11 situation. What I felt wasn't dealt with, from the get-go, was the result of Worf's actions and how the Klingons were recovering from such a defeat (you have to see the loss of thousands as a major defeat, even for the warrior-driven Klingons). "Heal" though is a story all within itself. Sure, there are early mentionings of a few consequences that came with Worf's decisions in the previous book but the Klingons, for the most part, are not involved in "Heal." It leaves this particular duology with a sense that it's incomplete. The Worf and the Klingons do seem to play a role in the last book of the series, but as a reader, I wanted to know how the Klingons dealt with the big events in "Kill."

As for the rest of the book, it is, in my opinion, one of the top Next Generation tales. It is all about being challenged and accepting change, a theme that seems to run rampant in the "A Time to..." series. Each character is given their time in the spotlight. I was relieved to see that La Forge, Troi, Crusher and Riker, who are sometimes shoved to the margins as Picard and Data run the show, are given a lot to do. In Nemesis there seemed to be a more subued and mature La Forge; a tired character that seemed to "see" more than he was letting on. Finishing this book, I feel like Mack definately fleshed him out more and made him a character to really be respected and looked up towards. Crusher has been given a lot of attention in this series and "Kill" left her out of all the fun for the most part. In this tale, she has a budding romance and it looks as if it's exactly what is needed to get her to understand what she wants in a career and life. Riker and Troi are tested in this book as well. Riker is a prisoner of the bad guys, nothing new in novels. Yet, here he is truly pushed to the limits. There were moments when I found myself biting my lower lip or squinching at the description of what he was going through. Troi truly was given the role of a lifetime, finding her counseling and peaceful side broken, letting loose a darker Deanna Troi who finds herself on the counseling couch.

This book, unlike "Kill," flowed together better and the pace was good. I found it hard to keep up in "Kill" because of the staccato feel to each chapter and the ten million things going on at one time. "Heal" has longer chapters that fully explores each scene and situation before moving on to another section, aiding with the full understanding of what's going on. I enjoyed the scenes cutting from the Tezwa front where the Enterprise found itself in a war situation, then being able to travel back to Earth and see how the political situation was unraveling. As a reader, you can't help but to think that Mack is trying to get you to view the war on terrorism and American politics through this allegorical tale. This isn't the 1990s Next Generation where all can be solved within an hour. Time wise, the crew has been dealing with this one situation for a month. Riker is held captive for weeks, Troi finds herself giving up hope, Picard seems worn out, La Forge even appears to have come to an end of his tolerance of the Federation's involvement at Tezwa.

What I liked about this book also is that it was realistic. Each seen is detailed and written with descriptions that will leave you gasping. I had more emotional reactions to this novel than any other in the TNG genre I believe. Mack handles the Tezwa situation like a pro, taking you into the minds of some of the main adversary's helpers, giving you a haunting depiction of some of these demented and troubled characters, leaving you wondering what is going to happen, despite knowing there is a movie called "Nemesis" where everyone seems to be all cheers and having the ability to crack jokes. It does get graphic in some parts but I felt to understand how these characters came to accept these major changes in their lives, they needed these wounds to "heal" and move on. Each character is tested in this novel and each comes out a changed person. Except Data. He is there, but he comes out as rather flat and boring in this novel. Riker has a speech at the end though that wraps up Data and his "change," satisfying that character's involvement in the plot for me.

I liked the continuity that sort of came into the novel and appreciated some things being left out. Unlike "Kill," there is acknowledgement of the Rashanar incident of "A Time to be Born/Die." Still, I would think someone such as President Zife, Azernal, Nachayev, Ross, Nakamura... all of these people who have been there since the opening novel would make some mentioning of it. What led to Starfleet Command sort of trusting Picard with Tezwa? When did the Federation seem to get over and not care about the so called "career ending" events this series opened on? I shook my head, somewhat disapointed, that the premise still seems flawed and left undone. Nakamura, portrayed as a crazed man obsessed with Data, actually seems like a respectable man here. Picard doesn't show any resentment to the people, like Ross and Nakamura, who nearly took his command away! That seemed... off. Also, Ross is still being hinted as being involved with the "bad admirals" club but gone is that unlikeable figure from the first two novels. He's back to his Deep Space Nine portrayal, which is good, but still... I feel like there's a missing chapter that explains all of these things. Also, there is an appearance by another group that's been quite controversial in Star Trek in the past few years. Even though their involvement in Tezwa was cool, I was left wondering why and how they were involved. Also, have they always been there, since the Enterprise's decline in the polls?

Other than those complaints, I felt that "Heal" was explosive. It was fun and definately had me wondering how they were going to get themselves out of this one. The character of Vale, the new security chief, deserved to be on the cover of this novel I felt. This is more her character's novel than it is Picard's installment. I enjoyed Admiral Janeway's appearances but wondered why she seemed to be left out of the action at the end. She always seemed suspiscious of things going on, espescially in the "A Time to Love/Hate" duology. I also enjoyed seeing Admiral Edward Jellico, perhaps more famous in his New Frontier appearances than his "Chains of Command" appearance, play a part at the end of the novel.

This book has many great scenes, including one that has Troi on the verge of completely breaking out of character, one that nearly costs Crusher her life, and one that has Picard realizing some of his past mistakes and missed chances. It's a rather sad and depressing tale but "Heal" definately explains many of the changes and why some of these characters chose to move on from the Enterprise. I rarely feel a novel is worth five stars but for this journey David Mack takes the reader on, any less wouldn't do the tale any justice. This book adds substance and emotion that the early novels of the series lacked. It adds to the great arc that "A Time to Love/Hate" began, making you invest your emotions into these characters as for once, they aren't all perfect and living in a peace-driven world. Sure, this isn't the "Original Series" Trek with a perfect Earth and society. I don't think Mack was trying to say this was the future but rather if we choose to ignore the past, we're bound to make mistakes. This is the post Dominion War, and things have changed. It was this one war that led to the events of "A Time to Kill/Heal." For any Trek fan, this should be a must read for you. For those wary of the "A Time to..." series, if you aren't impressed by this book, you don't know good literature when it's offered to you.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: This was hijacked for the US election
Review: As a cynical observer of US politics, this seems to me to be a commentary on that more than it ever does a Star Trek book. For starters, all the politicians are corrupted by power. They will order the deaths of as many people as necessary to preserve their secrets, or sometimes even each other's secrets. On the Enterprise side, the action consists of escalating rounds of terrorist strikes and retaliation by Starfleet. It is really depressing and tedious to read. It is also quite wearing since it is quite deliberately just like the weekly news from Iraq. On the personal side, Deanna Troi is put in charge of interrogating a high-ranking prisoner. For a while it is a battle of wits, but Troi quickly snaps and spends most of her time fantasising about what she would do to the prisoner if not bound by Federation morality. Not only is it depressing and wearing to read, but I could see how Troi could have manipulated him psychologically if she hadn't finally succumbed to Counselor's disease and gone crazy. About three quarters or so into the book, the action moves into all out war. The descriptions throughout this book are the most graphic I can ever recall in a Trek book. The violence is stomach-churning, for me quite literally.

So the descriptions are very vivid and very clear, but I for one did not want to read them because of their content. The characterisations, it must be said, are excellent. The people you are supposed to hate are truly loathsome. The Enterprise crew are very well done as well. However, there is essentially no humour or relief from the depictions of conflict and brutality. It also starts moralising about how war has changed the Federation into something a lot tougher, or rather more violent and much less moral. Finally, in the conclusion comes the real kicker: the Enterprise crew has lost faith in the Federation itself, questioning whether this incident of treason and mass murder was a once-off. Or does it mean that, regardless of the idealism of the people and the high moral codes they choose to obey, in politics the scum always rise to the top?

I read Star Trek for entertainment and for escapism. This book fails on both counts. On the entertainment level, I do not expect or accept graphic violence in a Trek book. I also want content that may be moving, even saddening, but is not relentlessly depressing. For escapism, I do not want the Iraq occupation shoved in my face in my fiction reading. Also, the Federation has been a bright mirror, reflecting what America could be like if its people truly lived up to its founding ideals. This book has hijacked that, sacrificing the vision of a better future to try and force us to confront the present. If we cannot escape from reality now and then, we will lose our ability to change it. I have to recommend against reading this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantasic books. Page turner to be sure.
Review: I can't blieve these were David Mack's first Star Trek novelizations. They were absolutely electrifing. I couln't put these two books down. Befor A Time to Kill and a Time to Heal I didn't think there was going to be any books that I would enjoy as much as Imzadi. I really hope that David Mack decides to write some novels based around William Riker and Deanna Troi's adventures on the Titan. I thought he did a fantastic job of telling this story. He had me in tears is some parts of the book. I thought he was very true to character and how each of these characters would react if put in the situations he laid out for them in these books. Great job David Mack. I hope to read more of your books soon.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A little unbelievable
Review: I have enjoyed the A Time to books, some more so than others. A time to kill was great because it showed some cool commando and more hands on stuff which is sometimes a rarity in the star trek universe,except for DS9, which was as close to realistic as Star Trek got.

However, while i enjoyed the story the whole ending of getting rid of the President of the Federation and his aids by Section 31 was a little unbelievable. If Bill Clinton or George Bush (Senior and W.) disappeard tomarrow and were never heard from again I think people would start asking questions. I just can`t believe that the President of the Federation resigns and is never heard from again and no one is the wiser. Also, while Deep Space Nine did put a darker edge on the Star Trek series everyone for the most part stuck to their morals. These last two books have basically made the Federation just as bad (Schemers, liars and muderers) as the Romulans. It sort of takes away that cool innocence that Star Trek has. Star Trek seemed to try and show the good side of humanity and that the future holds promise and the Federation is above stuff like what happened in the books. So, its was a little out of character.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a bit bloody but essentially a good book
Review: now this book takes up where the last one left off. the federation is trying to help out a devastated planet but the prior government is making sure that more people are killed through sabotage and guerilla actions. the plot gets a little confusing in spots, but the carnage scenes are well written, and you can almost image yourself in the thick of it. i don't know where the title came from though, because that is about the last thing that is going on in this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting, but what would Roddenberry think?
Review: Somewhere, Gene Roddenberry is spinning in his grave. The Federation president and his chief military adviser betray all the Federation stands for. Deanna Troi enjoying torturing an alien captive. And the body count in the book reminded me of Total Recall, not Star Trek. That being said, Mr Mack crafted an enjoyable two book series, with a wealth of action. Perhaps it doesn't matter what Gene Roddenberrys vision for the Star Trek universe was anymore, and it is easy to say that Mr. Mack's universe resembles modern life. But I have always felt that the best Star Trek books, episodes, etc. gave us the desire to become better than we are and strive for the kind of future that had erased prejudice, bigotry, and hate. In Mr. Macks version, all of these emotions are front and center. Perhaps this is what the future will look like, but I do not feel like striving for it.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not a masterpiece
Review: Well, all I want to say is, this one's a good one-time read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the most daring TREK books in years
Review: When I say a book is "daring," I don't mean it's perfect. This one isn't. Its biggest shortcoming is the utter implausibility of Starfleet's final answer the crimes of the Federation president. And you really have to have a strong stomach or an appreciation for descriptions of graphic injury and violence to get through this book's more brutal passages. David Mack's writing is sometimes shockingly vivid, enough to make one wince at times. There's also no escaping what this book and the one before it, A TIME TO KILL, are really about: the 2003 U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq. The analogy seems plain -- but thinner and not as well-disguised with SF ideas as such episodes of the 1960s STAR TREK series as "A Private Little War" or "A Taste of Armageddon."

But if those are the things that A TIME TO HEAL did wrong, what did it do right? For one thing, even though it used current events as a template, it didn't take sides. Even the so-called villains have reasonable motives, if self-serving or misguided. Mack's portrayal of the tragedies of war, the horrors of combat, and the senselessness of violence is stirring and provocative. He challenges his readers' conceptions of the NEXT GENERATION characters as "pure" or "morally spotless" by putting them in situations where they must make really hard choices between doing the ethical thing and paying a terrible price, or bending their rules little by little in order to stave off disasters, only to find themselves suddenly knee-deep in compromise and complicity.

Another excellent element of this book is its use of supporting characters. The "little people" on the ship come to life in lots of well-dramatized incidents that give them personalities. We get to know them, in both their fragility and their heroism, making it truly poignant and upsetting when they meet gruesome fates.

The plotting of this book is superb; like A TIME TO KILL, action transpires in multiple places at once and encompasses dozens of characters, yet Mack keeps them all clearly drawn. The story has elements of humor and pathos, military tactics and political scheming, strangely bittersweet relationship arcs and an unrelenting sense of impending disaster. In addition, Mack's use of language is remarkably agile. By turns he can be stark, blunt and hard-hitting, then suddenly lyrical and lushly descriptive.

His characters also work on many levels. (Picard is the exception, as he seems to have faded into the background for most of this book. His few moments of pseudo-paternal concern from A TIME TO KILL have greater resonance than all his maudlin pining for Beverly Crusher in A TIME TO HEAL.) In particular, the one frequently underused character who finally got some real development was Deanna Troi. Finally, a STAR TREK main character is forced to confront a truly dark aspect of themselves and isn't able to brush it aside as something alien or "artificially induced" -- Troi must now grapple with the fact that she, like all people, carries the primitive seeds of cruelty in her nature. This is probably some of the best writing ever done for the Troi character.

It's easy to see why this book is so polarizing. It asks readers to realize that even an entity such as the Federation, which we have always been told stands for what is good and noble, can in times of terrible national stress forget the ideals it claims to defend. As the Federation president, his chief of staff, and a cabinet member work a criminal conspiracy to conceal the true reason for why Starfleet had to conquer and occupy the sovereign planet Tezwa, we see the Federation -- long considered STAR TREK's analog to the United States -- engaging in pre-emptive military action, telling one set of lies to its own troops, another to its allies, another to its accomplices on Tezwa... And when good people, like the crew of the Enterprise, are pressed into service based on lies and deception, their achievements, no matter how honorably they were engaged by our heroes, become tainted by the lies of the people who sent them into battle, into war, into conquest.

I don't think that Mack set out to tell a story of carnage and violence because he wanted glorify such evils --- I think this reads like the work of a writer who is appalled and horrified and very angry about what he has been seeing in the news. More than just another STAR TREK book, A TIME TO HEAL in my opinion, is a vicious polemic against a war and a point of view. It is dark, morally complex, violent, graphically brutal, tragic, and, frankly, brilliant.

Regardless of one's opinion of its story, or its conclusions, it is beautifully written. I would never expect everyone to love a book like this -- I don't think that's possible -- but I think it's definitely a book that is worthy of respect.


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