Friday, October 17, 2008

Myriad Universes: Places of Exile and Seeds of Dissent

Places of Exile by Christopher L Bennett is the middle novella in Infinity's Prism. There are a lot of great things about alternate universe stories, as I have mentioned before. Of course there is a down side ( there is always a downside). Working in an alternate reality give the mad shippers room to let loose, and outside of fanfiction.net or livejournal. This can be wonderful or infuriating depending on you feelings on the matter- if you're a Janeway/Chakotay or Harry/7 shipper, you'll love this story.
Places of Exile starts during the episode "Scorpion"- but diverges. Species 8472 disables Voyager, forcing Janeway to make compromises and alliances. Alomg the way, she and the other surviving crew members change from the goal of getting home to one of making home. Sometimes I had to raise an eyebrow at how some of the characters act- especially the "alternate" Annika/7. No woman would have written her that way.

Seeds of Dissent by James Swallow follows the classic "What if Hitler had won" with Hitler being Khan-premise. This is a fairly well written look at how the world might have looked if the Augments had won. Swallow does try to jam too many characters from too many series into the story, and it seems a bit contrived.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Myriad Universes: A Less Perfect Union

William Leisner's tale of an alternate TOS era timelime is the first novella in "Infinity's Prism". IN case I haven't said it before- I love " alternate timeline" stories. It has been said ( and I am thinking of Ursula K LeGuin when I say this, although she may have been quoting another) the the basic premise of any sci-fi story is, "What if?" Alternate time lines in an established sci-fi universe are like "What if- what if?" Sci-fi, supersized.
This story takes place in a timeline where Earth never joined the Federation, meaning Christopher Pike never went to Talos IV, and Kirk never rose above XO. T'Pol remained on Earth, but in hiding , as anti- alien sentiment runs rampant. Perhaps the best part, for me, is the way the story "explains" the fact that the Romulan commander from "Balance of Terror" just happens to look like Sarek- and what could happen if they meet.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Book: SCE: Aftermath

This time I will look at the first three novellas in the Corps of Engineers anthology, "Aftermath", which collects stories previously published as e-books.

First is the title story, written by Christopher L. Bennett. The da Vinci is just out of dry dock after a disaster nearly destroyed her and took the lives of many of the crew. Captain David Gold , Commander Sonya Gomez, and a mix of old and new crew members must investigate a seeming explosion in a San Fransisco just recovering from the previous year's Breen attack. What the crew finds is a first contact situation, and a dispute between two cultures and within a culture.

In the second story, "Ishtar Rising", the crew has yet to get out of the Sol system for any amount of time. The da Vinci is called to help an old friend of Captain Gold's with his terraforming project on Venus. Several types of project brew, with the project ( it wouldn't be an SCE book if they didn't have to stave off imminent disaster) and when the ship's Bynar crewmember, Soloman, has to deal with bigotry from project Ishtar's resident Bynars. Authors- the ever popular Michael A Martin and Andy Mangels.

Robert Greenburger's "Buying Time", is, naturally, a time travel story. The da Vinci is dispatched to investigate an area of space disrupted by chroniton waves. They find a tie machine on the verge of collapse and a Ferengi with the lobes to know time travel is the best way to play the market. I do have some problems with this story- otherwise self respecting female crew members rubbing the lobes of and Ferengi that will help them achieve their goal- but otherwise enjoyable.