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27 Reviews
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is my favorite book. Of all time.,
By Aislinn09 "Cathi" (Omaha, Ne United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I recently bought a brand new copy of this book because the original copy I had is falling apart. Pages are falling out, it is water-damaged, it's been with me through two back surgeries and one baby being born. This book has seen much action since I bought it in the fall of 1996. Why? Oh, because it's my favorite book of all time. Here's why:This is the best-written DS9 book I have ever read as of this writing. It has time-travel elements--I love time travel. And, the writers have avoided a time-travel paradox. It is very detailed and portrays the characters accurately. I can even understand the technobabble, because, as this book was co-written by an actual scientist, it is a combination of ST and real-world science. The alien horde is appropriately scary, gross, and apparently unstoppable (like the Borg *used* to be). This is the book that made Jadzia Dax my favorite ST character. A small summary-- A 5,000 year old version of a crippled Defiant is found embedded in a comet and towed to Starbase One, still embedded in the cometary ice, and allowed to sit while the ice melts from around the ship. The remains of Dr. Bashir and Captain Sisko are aboard, as well as the Dax symbiont in stasis. Captain Sisko, Dr. Bashir and Jadzia Dax are summoned to Starbase One and ordered NOT to bring the Defiant. Admiral Judith Hayman, an old friend of Curzon Dax, asks Bashir and Sisko to review data records. Sisko realizes that the data records are from the Defiant, and Dr Bashir is the one who figures out that it's a future Defiant. They both conclude that the Defiant was caught in a future battle where the only survivors were Dr Bashir and the Dax symbiont. Jadzia was brought along because the Dax symbiont is the only living survivor of the battle that took place 5,000 years in the past, and she is the only one who can communicate with the symbiont and find out what happened. Turns out, Dax has spent too long in stasis and is almost incoherent. The message they get is rather chilling: Don't go through the wormhole. Capture one of the invading aliens and talk to what they've eaten. Starfleet authorizes a study of the wormhole to determine what is going to happen/has already happened that sends the Defiant back in time and destroys the wormhole. A science ship, crewed by Vulcan time specialists, wormhole physicists, one Starfleet cadet (another time-travel specialist), and captained by a very frosty Vulcan female, T'Kreng, a wormhole ("quantum singularity") specialist, heads out of Starbase One with Captain Sisko, Dr Bashir and Jadzia Dax onboard. The wormhole begins acting really wierd and Captain Sisko revokes all travel permits, prompting T'Kreng to transport Sisko, Dax, Bashir and the "kidnapped" Dax symbiont to DS9 and enter the wormhole illegally. When they get to the Gamma quadrant side of the wormhole, their ship is attacked and all the crew are killed, except for the Starfleet cadet, who was put into a medical stasis chamber soon after T'Kreng entered the wormhole, which apparently saved her life. When they take the Defiant through the wormhole, the "wormhole aliens"/Prophets suck Captain Sisko into a vision where they tell him that they are dampening the upstream echoes of the event that destroyed the wormhole/will destroy the wormhole so that the Defiant can get to the other side and, hopefully, prevent the destruction of the wormhole. Once there, they find the remains of the Vulcan science ship, with the Starfleet cadet in the stasis chamber, and no warp core. This is where the fun begins and my summary ends. If this sounds interesting, buy the book and enjoy! It's one terrific book, and here's the story to turn into a DS9 movie. This book doesn't have much to say about the Furies...but who cares? The alien enemy in this book is way more complicated and interesting than the Furies are. This is the standout of the Invasion series, and way better than all the books in the Invasion series. Comparing those books to this one is like comparing Green Eggs & Ham to Gone With the Wind. This book is really that good. This is a must-have for any DS9 fan.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You might not read a better Star Trek novel than this one,
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (COMMUNITY FORUM 04) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
It took me 8 pages into Chapter 1 of "Time's Enemy" to know that Book Three in the Invasion series was better than its immediate predecessor. By the time I finished the book I was stunned to realize that "L. A. Graf" (sci-fi author Julia Ecklar and university scientist Karen Rose Cercone) have written as fine a Star Trek novel as I have ever read. The hook on "Time's Enemy" is itself an absolute stunner. Captain Sisko, Jadzia Dax and Dr. Bashir are clandestinely called to Starbase One by a Starfleet Admiral to look at log records. Sisko recognize them as the final moments of his ship, the Defiant, under his command. The trio are then shown the Defiant, buried in ice for over 5,000 years in Earth's Oort Cloud. Aboard are the remains of Sisko and Bashir, as well as the Dax Trill, still alive after all that time in a stasis chamber. On its last mission the Defiant was blasted into the past. Whatever happened, this time line must be avoided at all costs. There are two major plot lines in "Time's Enemy" with two trios of Deep Space Nine characters involved in each. Sisko, Bashir and Jadzia try to figure out what happened when the Defiant went through the worm hole and take steps to change its tragic future history. Meanwhile, Major Kira, Odo and Chief O'Brien are dealing with the threat of sabotage on Deep Space Nine. I appreciate that Graf did not feel obligated to work in all the other DS9 characters (Quark is only seen briefly, Jake and others not at all). I also thought the use of science in this novel was well grounded and theoretically viable, which is amazing because the only physics book I ever read was "The Physics of Star Trek" and that stuff was all way over my head. However, the most impressive part of the book for me was the characterization, not only of each individual character but more importantly of their relationships with each other (except for the usually unflappable Sisko being so short with the Vulcan scientist T'Kreng, but then she is new). In terms of the Invasion series Book Three finally gets around to answering the question of who (or what) cast out the Furies millennia ago. At first I found specific way of saving the known universe that Sisko and crew come up with to be a bit of a stretch, but there was a very memorable little payoff that makes it all worthwhile. "Time's Enemy" is a well written novel that can stand on its own, so if you are interested in just DS9 and not the entire Invasion series will present no problems to you whatsoever. All I know is that I do not read all of the Star Trek novels, but that I going to check out anything else written under the Graf name. I highly recommend this book.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The L.A. Graf crew make it happen.,
By
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
Commander Sisko, Jadzia-Dax, and Doctor Julian Bashir are summoned by Star Fleet to examine material recovered from an intercepted block of space-debris. This turns out to be the remains of the Defiant and her crew. But from thousands of years in the past. With time against them, Sisko and his colleagues, with assistance from the surviving old, old Dax, have to figure out what happened to the Defiant, and stop the event from happening. I was very impressed with this book's quality of writing; something I don't really expect much of from TV-tie-in titles. ( Okay, K. W. Jeter does good ones, too ). The only letdown was the use, yet again, of the 'Alien' theme, which has by now, I would have thought, been more than flogged to death.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Definitely one of the better books,
By
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I think what makes thsi book very good is that it crosses over with the other series books, in a wide spanning tale. Though of course it might've neeeded much more room for everyone to truly shine, it does show a great side of Sisko and Dax and the conundrum of time travel as well as Earthly mythology and wher ethat may've come from. An interesting plot and good read.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Absolutely intriguing story,
By Cassandra "cassiebrite" (Knoxville, TN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
Goodness, this is still my favorite book ever since I bought it in '96. DS9 was not my favorite series until I read this book. LA Graf has truly written a masterpiece when it comes to character inteactions, plot twists (there's a KILLER one at the end... I'll let you read to find out what it is!), and grasp of 24th century thinking in the way of time travel and how everything works on a starship. I have reread this book over 10 times since I purchased it, and I find something new everytime I read it that sparks my imagination.I know that this is the largest book in the Invasion! series, but I hope that more people will buy this series, Invasion!, and see what all the hype is about for this DS9 book! It's excellent, and you won't want to put it down! Happy reading!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very good.,
By
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I read this book before reading either book one or book two of the "Invasion" series; as such, I was quite pleasantly surprised by how well this book was able to stand on its own merits. Granted, there was an assumption of previous knowledge of the Furies which I didn't have, but the lack of it didn't seem to particularly hinder my understanding or my enjoyment of this book. The characters were well handled, the plot was bizzare and convoluted, but very clever and enjoyable, and the writing was as good as I generally expect from L.A. Graf. Very close to five stars.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Quite a Ride!!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
This was a good book, coming of the heels of the other two books of the series. I found it to be fast paced, but not as tight at The Soldier of Fear (#2). The characterizations, the suspense and the twists of the plot were all done well. The stage was well set by the other two and Graf has carried it off well. Well worth the read, if you like the DS9 crew. They are at their best in this one
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE best Invasion! book,
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
After the extremely disappointing "Soldiers of Fear" which was a TNG book-go figure it would be disappointing. Since Deep Space Nine is THE best Star Trek series(look at Voyager), any book involving Deep Space Nine would automatically be worth a read. Well, except "The Laertian Gamble" and "Vengeance." Anyway, the single most innovative plot twist(and that's saying alot, since the whole book is a giant plot twist), was probably the Dax symbiont. All the characters are believable, and I can see as well as hear them and their actions. This book explains how the Furies' were driven away, which in my opinion was a need-to-know. Anyway, this is a breath of fresh air after the horrible "Soldiers..." BUY THIS BOOK!
1.0 out of 5 stars
Worst trek book ever!,
By
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
Page 107 a few lines down it reads "Pak Dorren resistance cell raided an ancient plutonium mine"
You don't mine. Weapons grade plutonium! It is man made. This is a really big mistake in this book! High school physics here. I don't think I am going to finish this book. You just can't sit down and write Trek and not understand basic high school science. Trace amounts of plutonium can be found in nature. But that stuff is too scarce and too weak to be used for anything. You have to have a dedicated reactor to create WG plutonium. Why does Graf not know these simple facts? You need more than just plutonium to make a WMD. And it would not surprise me that Gaf would be one of those people. Freaking. Out over the news about a guy who had a tiny chunk of hello cake uranium ore back in 05`I think, in his. Basement. Uranium ore has to be brought in by the truckload and. Put through the mill'so to speak. It takes tons of the stuff to get enough to make anything. Want something interesting to read? Ref americonium and smoke detectors...that may help put into perspective what I mean. You can't make a wmd from naturally occurring plutonium. This book is awful. Don't buy it. BAD READ. I'm not trying to be rude but this mistake is epic! Oh and btw L.A. Graf means. Lets all get rich and famous and represents several writers.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Worthy of all 5 stars,
By nkl (Sweden) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I agree with the majority of the other reviewers - The plot and writing is very good! I had high expectations because of the high ratings, and I weren't let down at all. It was an exciting read with some very interesting creative twists and turns, especially concerning the aliens. It grew more thrilling as the story progressed and, even though I knew the characters couldn't be killed off, I surely was not convinced some of them would survive at times. That's good storytelling!
I was a little worried I would have a hard time to catch up with the Invasion! intrigue without having bougth the first two books in the four part saga, but it was no trouble at all. It was pretty much a standalone piece. Buy this one, if you are set on buying a book worthy all 5 stars. |
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Time's Enemy (Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Invasion, Book 3) by L. A. Graf (Mass Market Paperback - July 1, 1996)
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