Karen Haber
Author of Meditations on Middle Earth
About the Author
Series
Works by Karen Haber
Kong Unbound: The Cultural Impact, Pop Mythos, and Scientific Plausibility of a Cinematic Legend (2005) — Editor — 22 copies
Masters of Science Fiction and Fantasy Art: A Collection of the Most Inspiring Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Gaming… (2011) 21 copies
The Soul of Truth {short work} 2 copies
3 RMS, Good View {short story} 2 copies
A Bone Dry Place 2 copies
Up the Side of the Air {short story} 2 copies
Batman in Nighttown 2 copies
A Web for Christmas [Short Story] 2 copies
The Joker's Christmas 1 copy
Dateline: Metropolis 1 copy
Home Security [Short Story] 1 copy
The Shores of Morning 1 copy
First Nighter 1 copy
Dog Is My Copilot 1 copy
Doing The Angry Centipede 1 copy
Associated Works
The Unauthorized X-Men: SF and Comic Writers on Mutants, Prejudice, and Adamantium (Smart Pop series) (2006) — Contributor — 33 copies
Realms of Fantasy, April 2010 (Vol. 16 No. 4) — Contributor — 3 copies
Locus Nr.492 2002.01 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Silverberg, Karen Lee Haber
- Other names
- Haber, Karen
- Birthdate
- 1955-01-07
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Bronxville, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, USA
- Education
- Cedar Crest College (B.A.)
- Occupations
- novelist
editor
art critic
non-fiction writer - Relationships
- Silverberg, Robert (spouse)
Members
Reviews
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 41
- Also by
- 55
- Members
- 2,419
- Popularity
- #10,599
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 19
- ISBNs
- 77
- Languages
- 5
- Touchstones
- 5
The author's use of the Prime Directive as an excuse to slow down the story progression is lazy writing and shows she doesn't seem to understand what the Prime Directive is. So this is a pre-warp civilization. Okay. Prime Directive applies. Then they call the ship and say they've been visited before and know about other species out there. Okay. Does Prime Directive still apply? A little bit, maybe. I mean, that doesn't mean just give them warp tech, phasers, etc. But when they ask for medical help with a disease that is threatening their entire planet, Janeway's only concern seems to be acquiring materials to repair the ship.
That's right. We can send down shore leave parties. We can take materials and supplies from them. But we can't give them medical technology or even help them save their people. Janeway is content to let these Pre-warp aliens help her and the ship, but not help them in return.
I realize the Prime Directive is an odd thing that even in the various TV series seemed to be used and paid attention to only when convenient, but that's no excuse to continue the trend.
Also, Voyager's sensors, which are super advanced, are good enough to detect scarred tissue on Tom Paris, from orbit, but not pick out two human biosigns on a boat on the ocean? Wha?
On a ship strapped for energy, B'Elanna is going to waste transporter power beaming around the ship instead of walking? In a non-emergency. Wha?
As the planet turns towards Civil War, Janeway's like "Not our problem. Once we have fixed the ship, lets leave." That's not very Starfleet. In more than one case, the spirit of the law, with regards to the Prime Directive, was more important than the letter of the law - on the show. That was ignored here. Quoting Riker from TNG: Justice, "When has justice ever been as simple as a rule book?". No one in the book says "Hey, I understand the Prime Directive, but this isn't a scenario they foresaw and leaving an entire planet of people to die after they helped us isn't consistent with Starfleet or the Federation's ideals."
It's a shame really, because the planet, the aliens and the darra seemed like interesting ideas. It was just terribly executed. I don't think I've given a book 1 out of 5 stars before. I almost feel bad, but I really think it's a bad book. There's better out there, skip this one.… (more)