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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not too high on the list!, August 1, 2002
Starfleet has discovered an early model ship from earth's past. The Enterprise is dispatched to intercept the ship and meet with its crew. Once Captain Kirk meets with the ships captain, he has some initial doubts. Despite his doubts, he finds himself liking the captain and his crew. The inhabitants of the ship were originally on course to a distant planet to start a new colony. Once they meet up with Captain Kirk and the Enterprise, they discover the planet they were heading to no longer exists. Left without a place to go, Starfleet finds them a colony world to go to. When they arrive at the colony world though, they find that they may have gone to a planet that is on the verge of destroying the colony and all of it's inhabitants. At it's core, this story has an interesting premise, unfortunately, the author's do not in my opinion, bring it to fruition. "Across the Universe" is one of the few Star Trek books that I found to be hardly captivating. At only 217 pages, this is an extremely short trek book. Hopefully any future trek books I read by these authors will be a lot better than this one.
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Across the Universe, November 28, 1999
I have read virtually every Star Trek book written and this is the worst I can remember. The story is lame...Killer Mold...I don't think so. There is virtually no character development of the several new characters. And the treatment of the regular cast of characters (Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Uhura, Sulu, Chekov, Scotty) makes me wonder if the author has ever seen a Star Trek episode, movie, or read a book. To tell the truth, I have only made it 2/3 of the way through this book and don't think I can finish it. Felt like quiting 1/3 of the way through and wish I had.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
What an awful book!, April 5, 2000
I cannot recommend this book even to the hardcore fans of ST universe. The flat pompous prose is more then a little irritating. The plot is completely and totally awful. The "lost in time" colonists do not even need to be included. As it is their angle of the story is not developed at all. Similar recovery is much better covered in ST:NG episode. The idea of living planet intelligence is also nothing new. I have seen it presented in much more interesting and poignant ways, my recent favorite being the "PoTayBee" trilogy from (I believe) McAfrey. Loss of time and money and not worth the materials used for printing. Also, the "serial novel" idea in this format is not the brightest one I've ever seen. Not everyone is such a devoted fan of the ST books (especially considering the quality of this one.) And in conclusion I also had problems with the cover. Why, for instance, Captain Kirk is the only face on the cover (he did not play an overly important role)? The backside promotion is misleading. Do the people who write them actually bother to read the books? Maybe I should go down to one star?
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