Tales of the Dominion War
by Keith R. A. DeCandido (Editor)
Star Trek: The Dominion War (Tie-ins — ), Star Trek (novels) (2004.08), Star Trek (2004.08)
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For two seasons, Star Trek: Deep Space NineĀ® chronicled the intense struggle of the Federation, fighting alongside the Klingons and the Romulans against the overwhelming forces of the Dominion in some of the most exciting hours of television ever produced. Now, for the first time, see how the Dominion War affected the entirety of the Star Trek universe. From the heart of the Federation to the bridge of the Starship Enterprise(tm). From the front lines of Klingon(tm) space to the darkest show more recesses of the Romulan Empire. From the heroic members of the Starfleet Corps of Engineers to the former crew of the U.S.S. Stargazer. From the edge of the New Frontier to the corridors of station Deep Space 9(tm). Some of the finest Star Trek novelists have been gathered to provide a dozen new tales from this seminal period in galactic history. Heroes from three generations -- Sisko, Picard, Spock, Kira, Calhoun, Klag, McCoy, Gold, and so many more -- brought together in these... Tales Of The Dominion War Greg Cox * Peter David * Keith R.A. DeCandido * Michael Jan Friedman * Dave Galanter * Robert Greenberger Heather Jarman & Jeffrey Lang * David Mack * Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels * Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz * Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore * Howard Weinstein show lessTags
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Star Trek: Tales of the Dominion War
Edited by Keith R. A. Decandido
Publisher: Pocket Books
Published In: New York City, NY, USA
Date: 2004
Pgs: 370
Summary:
The Dominion War. Here are the untold tales beyond and within Deep Space Nine: from Klingon space to the Romulan Star Empire, from Betazed falling under occupation to a time space rift, from the Original Series to Deep Space Nine.
What Dreams May Come - Michael Jan Friedman
Night of the Vulture - Greg Cox
The Ceremony of Innocence is Drowned - Keith R. A. DeCandido
Blood Sacrifice - Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz
Mirror Eyes - Heather Jarman & Jeffrey Lang
Twilightās Wrath - David Mack
Eleven Hours Out - Dave Galanter
Safe Harbors - Howard Weinstein
Field Expediency - Dayton Ward & Kevin show more Dilmore
A Song Well Sung - Robert Greenberger
Stone Cold Truths - Peter David
Requital - Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
Genre:
fiction, science fiction, militaria, cross media, television, short stories
Why this book:
This is a Star Trek book. And a war book. I am hoping that its flavor, since it is a war chronicle, is more Deep Space Nine than The Next Generation or Original Series.
This Story is About:
How the Star Trek universe in the DS9-TNG era survives a general and widespread war with the Dominion.
Favorite Character:
Field was filled with interesting characters. I havenāt read any of the CoE Star Trek stuff, but this was a bit of excellent. Loved the characters of Kieran Duffy and Fabian Stevens. Wish we had gotten a better look at the Breen either in this one or in Eleven. Klag from Song is a great character, very Klingon in all the best ways.
Least Favorite Character:
In the story Vulture, the Vorta Methras , they are always presented as such sycophants and ass kissers. At least thatās consistent.
Character I Most Identified With:
Surprisingly, Lwaxana Troi as she confronted the unthinkable and was buffeted before rising to the occasion in Ceremony. The stoicism of Lt. Commander Rondon in Field resonates with me.
The Feel:
Through the early stories, the feeling that I most feel is the rush. Not the rush, but as if the authors were hurrying their stories to fit the number of words/pages instead of writing the story to fit or writing the story as it needed to be written. Though that feeling was broken with the Fall of Betazed story, Ceremony. The Picard on Earth during the Breen sneak attack, Eleven, feels very similar to the episode of TNG where he and the children were trapped in a largely disabled Enterprise. Even with the similarity, the story is well done.
Favorite Scene:
In Vulture, on the bridge of the Solanco, when the Cardassian spy turns on his Founder conspirator. It was brutal, ultimately pyrrhic, but brutal..
When Lwaxana Troi discovers her will to go on during Ceremony.
Loved the McCoy callback to Phlox in Mirror Eyes.
Field plays out like one long scene, the only break being the short bridge scene and communicator interruption sequences when the da Vinci is communication with the away team.
Settings:
This one covers a lot of space.
The conquered world of Illrath. The bridge of the freighter Solanco. The Betazed home of Lwaxana Troi. Romulus. The Firefalls of Galāgathong. Tal Shiar base on the planet Golgoroth in the Romulan Neutral Zone. Starfleet HQ in San Francisco. The Enterprise. Starbase 1. The Colombia. The Golden Gate Bridge. Deep Space 9. Bridge of the da Vinci. Lamenda III and the moons of Lamenda IV. Marcan V. The crashed interior of the Klingon IKV Pagh and the JemāHadar ship that crashed along with it. Brikar.
Pacing:
The pace seems good through the first few stories. By and large, they are very short, one act stories.
Plot Holes/Out of Character:
In Twilight, Shinzon referring to B-4 as brother doesnāt ring well based on his interactions with the android in Nemesis.
Last Page Sound:
Glad I read it.
Author Assessment:
There are some good stories here. And some, not bad, but mediocre stories. By and large, Iād say that I wouldnāt use this anthology as my needing to seek out more stuff by these authors.
Editorial Assessment:
Some of the stories could have went back through the polisher a time or three. And a few have an almost fanfic feel to them and I know that the authors involved in this had better work in them. But, all in all, Iāve enjoyed the book, but I see the potential where it could have been better.
Disposition of Book:
Half Price Book stack
Why isnāt there a screenplay?
Dreams could have been an episode of ST:TNG.
Blood Sacrifice could have been an ep as well.
Field would have made an excellent ep of whichever series was lucky enough to have it.
Casting call:
As many of the characters have appeared on television or in movies, I will refrain from making alternate casting suggestions for roles that have already been filled well by current actors. I would take this moment to suggest that Karl Urban as Dr. Leonard McCoy was genius. Just wish we had more samples and long form action with him in the role.
Would recommend to:
Star Trek fans show less
Edited by Keith R. A. Decandido
Publisher: Pocket Books
Published In: New York City, NY, USA
Date: 2004
Pgs: 370
Summary:
The Dominion War. Here are the untold tales beyond and within Deep Space Nine: from Klingon space to the Romulan Star Empire, from Betazed falling under occupation to a time space rift, from the Original Series to Deep Space Nine.
What Dreams May Come - Michael Jan Friedman
Night of the Vulture - Greg Cox
The Ceremony of Innocence is Drowned - Keith R. A. DeCandido
Blood Sacrifice - Josepha Sherman & Susan Shwartz
Mirror Eyes - Heather Jarman & Jeffrey Lang
Twilightās Wrath - David Mack
Eleven Hours Out - Dave Galanter
Safe Harbors - Howard Weinstein
Field Expediency - Dayton Ward & Kevin show more Dilmore
A Song Well Sung - Robert Greenberger
Stone Cold Truths - Peter David
Requital - Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
Genre:
fiction, science fiction, militaria, cross media, television, short stories
Why this book:
This is a Star Trek book. And a war book. I am hoping that its flavor, since it is a war chronicle, is more Deep Space Nine than The Next Generation or Original Series.
This Story is About:
How the Star Trek universe in the DS9-TNG era survives a general and widespread war with the Dominion.
Favorite Character:
Field was filled with interesting characters. I havenāt read any of the CoE Star Trek stuff, but this was a bit of excellent. Loved the characters of Kieran Duffy and Fabian Stevens. Wish we had gotten a better look at the Breen either in this one or in Eleven. Klag from Song is a great character, very Klingon in all the best ways.
Least Favorite Character:
In the story Vulture, the Vorta Methras , they are always presented as such sycophants and ass kissers. At least thatās consistent.
Character I Most Identified With:
Surprisingly, Lwaxana Troi as she confronted the unthinkable and was buffeted before rising to the occasion in Ceremony. The stoicism of Lt. Commander Rondon in Field resonates with me.
The Feel:
Through the early stories, the feeling that I most feel is the rush. Not the rush, but as if the authors were hurrying their stories to fit the number of words/pages instead of writing the story to fit or writing the story as it needed to be written. Though that feeling was broken with the Fall of Betazed story, Ceremony. The Picard on Earth during the Breen sneak attack, Eleven, feels very similar to the episode of TNG where he and the children were trapped in a largely disabled Enterprise. Even with the similarity, the story is well done.
Favorite Scene:
In Vulture, on the bridge of the Solanco, when the Cardassian spy turns on his Founder conspirator. It was brutal, ultimately pyrrhic, but brutal..
When Lwaxana Troi discovers her will to go on during Ceremony.
Loved the McCoy callback to Phlox in Mirror Eyes.
Field plays out like one long scene, the only break being the short bridge scene and communicator interruption sequences when the da Vinci is communication with the away team.
Settings:
This one covers a lot of space.
The conquered world of Illrath. The bridge of the freighter Solanco. The Betazed home of Lwaxana Troi. Romulus. The Firefalls of Galāgathong. Tal Shiar base on the planet Golgoroth in the Romulan Neutral Zone. Starfleet HQ in San Francisco. The Enterprise. Starbase 1. The Colombia. The Golden Gate Bridge. Deep Space 9. Bridge of the da Vinci. Lamenda III and the moons of Lamenda IV. Marcan V. The crashed interior of the Klingon IKV Pagh and the JemāHadar ship that crashed along with it. Brikar.
Pacing:
The pace seems good through the first few stories. By and large, they are very short, one act stories.
Plot Holes/Out of Character:
In Twilight, Shinzon referring to B-4 as brother doesnāt ring well based on his interactions with the android in Nemesis.
Last Page Sound:
Glad I read it.
Author Assessment:
There are some good stories here. And some, not bad, but mediocre stories. By and large, Iād say that I wouldnāt use this anthology as my needing to seek out more stuff by these authors.
Editorial Assessment:
Some of the stories could have went back through the polisher a time or three. And a few have an almost fanfic feel to them and I know that the authors involved in this had better work in them. But, all in all, Iāve enjoyed the book, but I see the potential where it could have been better.
Disposition of Book:
Half Price Book stack
Why isnāt there a screenplay?
Dreams could have been an episode of ST:TNG.
Blood Sacrifice could have been an ep as well.
Field would have made an excellent ep of whichever series was lucky enough to have it.
Casting call:
As many of the characters have appeared on television or in movies, I will refrain from making alternate casting suggestions for roles that have already been filled well by current actors. I would take this moment to suggest that Karl Urban as Dr. Leonard McCoy was genius. Just wish we had more samples and long form action with him in the role.
Would recommend to:
Star Trek fans show less
This collection of short stories details events that occurred behind the scenes of the Dominion War as it was chronicled during the last two seasons of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Characters from every Star Tek series except Voyager make an appearance, as do original characters from various Star Trek novels. Overall, itās a welcome addition to the Star Trek universe. Stories that stand out are Blood Sacrifice, Mirror Eyes, and Twilightās Wrath. Also included is a timeline by editor Keith R. A. DeCandido.
Published in trade paperback by Pocket Books.
Published in trade paperback by Pocket Books.
Tales from across the alpha quadrant concerning soem characters not generally covered in DS9 or the other series actions during the Dominion war. An interesting read.
Some good stories, some just OK. Nothing special.
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- Canonical title
- Tales of the Dominion War
- Original publication date
- 2004-08
- People/Characters
- Lwaxana Troi; Zak Kebron; Cal Kebron; Homn (Mister); David Gold (Captain); Montgomery Scott (Captain) (show all 55); Leonard McCoy (Admiral); Spock (Ambassador); Klag; Gilaad Ben Zoma; Jean-Luc Picard (Captain); Sejeel; (*); Vraath ch'Evram; Jeremy Gleason; Zonek Karle; Evelyn McDougal; Methras; Virak'iklan; Cort Enaren; Nathan Gold; Barin Troi; Thriss; Kimara Cretak; Neral; Shiarkiek; Julian Bashir (Doctor); Beverly Crusher (Doctor); Data (Commander); EMH; Seret; Stok; B-4; Shinzon; Vkruk; Tal'Aura; William T. Riker (Commander); Deanna Troi (Counselor); Amarante Lebel (Ensign); Geordi La Forge; Tobias Donovan; Kieran Duffy; Fabian Stevens; Hrevet; Rondon; Ganok; Reese; Nog; Benjamin Sisko; Worf; William Ross; Ezri Dax; Female Changeling; Kira Nerys; Ekoor
- First words
- Sejeel sat up in his luxuriously overstuffed bed, stretched out his arms in his soft, silky bedclothes, and reflected-not for the first time, by any means-that it was good to be a Vorta on a backward but strategically located... (show all) world on the edge of Federation territory.
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- Genres
- Science Fiction, Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 813.0876208 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English By type Genre fiction Adventure fiction Speculative fiction Science fiction Collections and anthologies Anthologies
- LCC
- PS648 .S3 .T346 — Language and Literature American literature American literature Collections of American literature Prose (General)
- BISAC
Statistics
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- 242
- Popularity
- 133,859
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.61)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 4
- ASINs
- 4





























































