Destiny

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Just released: the cover art for publisher Cross Cult’s new German-language edition of Star Trek Destiny, Book I: Gods of Night

I hope my editors at Simon & Schuster will forgive me, but I like this cover better than the one used for the original version, and I sincerely hope the nice folks at Cross Cult might consider sending me a few of these…

(Thanks to Defcons Treklit, from whose LiveJournal I did snurch this, and to TrekWeb for the heads-up.)

ETA: As noted in the comments on my LJ mirror of this post, this illustration by German comic-book artist Martin Frei is not the final cover image, just the first draft. I hope they don’t change it too much, because they are definitely on the right track here. See the comments for links to more information about Martin Frei.

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Which of these things is not like the others…

Thanks to a Google news alert, I was made aware of a recent blog post on Martian Utopia Cafe by a poster who goes by the nickname Areophany. The title of his post is “Dream of stars: Star Trek novels, tragic optimism, and personal myth,” and it’s a very well-written, insightful piece about grand themes related to human suffering and our deep need to find meaning in an arbitrary universe.

The poster chooses to cite a number of classic Star Trek novels that he feels contributed most poignantly to his own sense of personal myth. See if you can spot which entry looks out of place:

Prime Directive by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens, 1991.

Federation by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens, 1994.

My Enemy, My Ally by Diane Duane, 1984.

The Final Reflection by John M. Ford, 1984.

Final Frontier by Diane Carey, 1987.

Star Trek Destiny trilogy by David Mack, 2008.

All I have to say is that it’s both a great honor and somewhat intimidating to be included on a list comprising works and authors of such lofty caliber. So, to Areophany I give my heartfelt thanks. The rest of you, give his blog post a look — it’s quite thought-provoking, and many of his accounts of how his worldview took shape during his childhood echo my own.

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Monday My Way

Going to Ireland seems to have had an unexpected side benefit: the shifting of time zones seems to have reset my biological clock so that I am now on a more normal schedule. I got up this morning at 6:30am to see my wife off to work, then I had my coffee and started on my day.

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