Ratings8
Average rating3.5
After the wholesale assassination of the Romulan senate in the feature film Star Trek: Nemesis, the Romulan Empire is in disarray, with rival factions fighting to pick up the pieces and seize the reins of power. After several factions separately contact the Federation Council - each laying claim to legitimate political power - Starfleet Command sends Captain William Riker and the USS Titan to Romulus to set up a forum for power-sharing talks. But even as the factions take their first faltering steps towards building a new Romulus, civil war looms. Meanwhile the remnants of the Romulan intelligence service, the dreaded Tal Shiar, are regrouping behind the scenes, taking advantage of the political vacuum to mobilize ships and soldiers, threatening to touch off a conflict that would tear Romulus apart. With no other help available, Riker and the Titan crew are all that stands between the shattered Star Empire and a bloodbath.
Featured Series
8 primary booksStar Trek: Titan is a 8-book series with 8 primary works first released in 2005 with contributions by Michael A. Martin, Andy Mangels, and Christopher L. Bennett.
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Minor Spoilers if you care about that.
This is the first Star Trek book I've read since I was a kid. First I need to say that despite all of its many, many flaws, I still found this book rather enjoyable. That said, if this book didn't take place in an already established universe with characters I already know and like, I likely would have put this book down after only a few chapters.
As a literary work, this book is not great. The writing is a bit clunky. And the characters feel pretty shallow. And the poker analogies are far too numerous. We get it. Captain Riker players poker (which he never once does in the book btw, you're just presumed to know this from the show), you don't need to make a reference to his poker face every single time he's in a conversation.
The plot is similar to a standard TNG episode. Nothing particularly interesting there. They try to make it feel different by throwing some new characters and species into the mix, but none of those characters or species are developed at all. They have no depth, they are just talking cardboard cut outs that presumably look different from other talking cardboard cut outs.
The action sequences near the end of the novel are fast paced and fun. The events allow the author to have Tuvok join the crew which is exciting. Mostly because this character already has depth established by the Voyager TV series, and because he was one of the few characters in the novel who felt like a real character. They also bring aboard the Reman Mekrikuk who helped Tuvok escape. I am very interested to see what they do with him. He is definitely the only new character that struck my interest. I hope they use him well in future novels.
You will definitely need to already enjoy Star trek to have any hope of enjoying this book. But if you do, you will find a fast paced, fun, light read that leaves open the potential for some interesting character development (Tuvok and Mekrikuk).
I can count on Michael A. Martin and Andy Mangels to provide a fast-paced and enjoyable read. This novel is the first of a series featuring Captain William T. Riker and his first command. We get a wildly diverse crew, Klingons and Romulans in a bad mood, Spock, and numerous threads from the Star Trek tapestry of tales.
Published in mass-market paperback by Pocket Books.
This is a new series focusing on the USS Titan, commanded by Will Riker after the events of Star Trek: Nemesis. This was a really fun read - Riker and Troi were two of my favourite TNG characters, so it's good to see them moving on to bigger and better things. It tells a much more satisfying story than Nemesis did, as well, while dealing with the fallout of that movie. If you're not the type of person who's a Star Trek fan to begin with, though, there's really no point in you picking this up.