5/23/2023 0 Comments Triangle imzadi ii![]() David is a genuine and veteran master of the demanding art of the tie-in novel, and provides smart handling of Star Trek elements and a brisk story, enhanced by well-done action scenes and the ability to give the Star Trek universe a lived-in feel. It certainly stands intelligently, however. The novel suffers two basic problems: its reliance on the Star Trek: The Next Generation universe to provide readers with many of its referents, and its status as a sequel that doesn't stand completely intelligibly on its own. Complicating the situation are sundry wild variables: Troi and Riker are Imzadi (bonded at a psionic level) Worf has a son, Alexander, torn between human and Klingon ways Deanna's inimitable Betazoid mother, Lwaxana Troi, disapproves of Worf's engagement to Deanna and Riker's doppelganger, Tom Riker, shows up, apparently working with a formidable and ruthless Romulan spy. Seven years after David's Imzadi comes this sequel that continues the anything-but-romantic triangle among three of the Enterprise's officers: the human-raised Klingon Worf, the counselor and empath Deanna Troi and First Officer William Riker. Spot on Text block, slight toning, else appears as unopened, unread, unblemished copy in like wraps. ![]()
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