|
|
Brandon Routh no longer under contarct to play SUPERMAN
Megan Fox v. Michael Bay on the quality of Transformers
Universal scores movie rights to Asteroids, development
Commentary on TRANSFORMERS 2...MINOR SPOILERS
Asylun's 10 hottest sci-fi babes

Jul 03 | Leading sci-fi website, Totalscifionline.com has teamed up with Star Trek Magazine to find out who is the best villain in Star Trek. Together, they want to know the diabolical masterminds who have sent a shiver down your spine and set your heart pounding and the evil geniuses who make it seem good to e bad. The top Star Trek villain will appear on a special commemorative Star Trek
Magazine cover, to be revealed later this year. Your vote could also win you year's subscription to Star Trek Magazine.For information on how to cast your vote, go here
Jul 02 | Doug Drexler's Drex Files blog psoted a couple of making-of for two images in Pocket Books 2010 Ships of the Line calendar. You can see Greg Stewart's "Operation Return", and "We Come In Peace For All Mankind" by Robert Wilde.
Jul 02 | Company of Angels (CoA), which was co-founded in 1959 by actor Leonard Nimoy, is celebrating its 50th Anniversary as Los Angeles' oldest non profit professional theater now headquartered at the historic Alexandria Hotel in downtown LA. CoA is readying to celebrate this milestone in the history of Los Angeles Theater - with a prestigious Charity Awards Gala slated for October 17, 2009 which will honor actor Leonard Nimoy for his role as a founding member as well as veteran actor Robert Ellenstein. "I'm looking forward to celebrating Company of Angels' 50th Anniversary Award Ceremony and Gala." Nimoy says of this special event in which he is proud to be a part of Check out the official website to learn more about The Company of Angels
Jul 01 | There may be no new Boston Legal episodes, but William Shatner is keeping very busy these days. In addition to his new talk show, Raw Nerve, he took time out to film a new TV spot for Priceline, titled Lighten Up. The clip is viewable on the Priceline Travel Blog
Jun 28 | Eight weeks in, Star Trek still drew audiences in eighth ($3.6 million this weekend, $246.2 million overall).

:



By BWilliams / 06:12, 31 March 2005 / Reviews - Books

Synopsis: One world, driven by obtaining profits at any cost, is rocked with scandal. Across the galaxy, another world, once the home of an aggressive race of beings driven to conquer all living species, struggles with questions. For both worlds, the DEEP SPACE NINE saga continues, and there may be no turning back.
Review: If anything, the saga of STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE is one of great mixtures and contradictions. At one point it can be extremely funny and satirical, while at the opposite end of the spectrum it can reveal the deepest horrors of war, conflict, and the dark side of humanity, yet both adhering to the tenets originally outlined by Gene Roddenberry in the 1960's and not breaking them completely. And nowhere are these contradictions more evident than in the love-hate relationship between Quark of the Ferengi and Odo of the Dominion. Throughout the seven-year run of DS9 on television, their views on life constantly clashed, as they did, with Quark seeing life as one big chance to profit, and with Odo viewing life as one of complete and perfect order. Yet in this newest volume in the WORLDS OF DEEP SPACE NINE series, both they, and their respective homeworlds, face new challenges, new threats, and new beginnings from which there is no turning back.
The first tale in this latest volume, "Satisfaction is Not Guaranteed" by Keith R.A. DeCandido, is one of comic proportions from start to finish, yet one that faces significant change in the Ferengi way of life. In the past year Rom, the new Grand Nagus of Ferenginar, has overseen many political and socioeconomic reforms, among them the increased role of women in Ferengi business. On the homefront, Rom's life is about to turn upside down, as his Bajoran wife Leeta is about to give birth to their child - and the whole planet is in the baby betting pool. But an old nemesis of Quark's steps up to the forefront with scandalous allegations that threaten to have Rom removed from power, and for the dimwitted former bartender-turned-engineer-turned-Nagus, that's the last thing he wants. It's up to Quark, Nog, and Lieutenant Ro Laren to lead the investigation and uncover the truth behind the scandal.
DeCandido shines once again in this comic tale of political scandals and business dealings gone wrong. He clearly proves himself just as knowledgeable and capable of immersing himself in the entire Ferengi culture as he has done over the years with the Klingons. DeCandido has his finger on the pulse of Ferengi society as a race of beings whose goals are simple - to screw each other over, no matter what the cost, and to financially profit as a result. He also brings out a rare streak of goodness and nobility in Quark in seeking to come to Rom's aid, but that's something that Quark himself would rarely own up to admitting.
DeCandido also addresses our own problems in society and history, complete with the historical portrayal of women in society over the millennia, as well as the many political and financial scandals that have rocked society in recent years, painting us a portrait of what our world has been through. He even sneaks in an inside joke or two for all of you Coca-Cola lovers out there (like me, you gotta love those 20-ounce bottles of Coke!). In the hands of Keith DeCandido, "Satisfaction is Not Guaranteed" makes for fun reading through and through.
On the other side of the spectrum is "Olympus Descending" from David R. George III, which takes readers to the Gamma Quadrant to one of the darkest races in the entire STAR TREK saga: the Dominion. If things with the Ferengi were in a continual state of goofiness, the Dominion's got it pretty hard. Odo, one of the many Founder-based shapeshifters, is now given a task worthy of a Founder: determine why 100 such Founders were sent to the Alpha Quadrant over the many years of the galaxy's evolution. Meanwhile, in the Alpha Quadrant, Taran'atar, the Jem'Hadar soldier stationed as the Dominion liaison to Deep Space Nine, questions his loyalty to Odo and considers a change in his career plans.
David George has an ambitious task on his hands, in the same way past writers have done in the previous volumes in this series: how to explore this most enigmatic race in a new way that adds new layers and dimensions to their personality. And George does just that. Since 1993 we've seen the Founders consider themselves as the gods of the Dominion, but now George poses the question of whether or not the Founders themselves believe in a higher power. The discovery Odo makes not only startles him but also brings about a major change, one that has far-reaching effects back in the Alpha Quadrant and sets up a new chapter to come in the DEEP SPACE NINE saga.
While the WORLDS OF DEEP SPACE NINE series has come to an end, this latest volume has followed in its previous companions' footsteps by giving us interesting glimpses that move the saga forward as it only can. No wonder this series is the richest of them all in the STAR TREK universe.
| TrekWeb's Rating Scale | |
| A Must Read | |
| Recommended | |
| Average | |
| Mediocre | |
| Don't Bother | |

![]() Reply |
![]() Quote |
![]() Reply |
![]() Quote |
![]() Reply |
![]() Quote |
![]() Reply |
![]() Quote |
| 