What are the hours?
What are the hours?
This always struck me as a weird argument: "I don't like what you wrote about so you've lost a customer forever". I mean I get the sentiment behind making that argument, but like five seconds of thought put into it would throw the whole point into question. What response is this dude hoping to elicit? Like, is the…
If this were some author-created universe and not Star Trek I think a conversation could be had about the ubiquity of re-normed values in fiction and whether or not there is a place for values diversity in sci-fi particularly. However, Star Trek has always been about portraying an idealized future wherein most every…
Very interested in how the author forced you to read something. You must have been terrified for a moment that your mind might be opened.
I will never be made to feel shame for doing this.
I'm going to show my geek card: The story in question is in the Vanguard books— set on a station at the same time as TOS. The Vulcan (T'Prynn) is the Intelligence Officer on the station. The Klingon is a spy who is surgically altered to look human. She's supposed to be gathering intelligence on the station for the…
"If the back cover blurb or cover art (sorry, still thinking traditional bookstore) or e-book description indicated a homosexual relationship then the complainer wouldn't have bought it and he could go on living in his blissful ignorance but he was caught off guard and became upset that he was "tricked" into…
I get to decided [sic] what I read and I choose not to read any more of your work.
Does anyone else find it ironic that a series so committed to progressive thinking and open-mindedness should have so many dogmatic and conservative fans? What a powerful and well-reasoned response to them; bravo Mr. Mack!
When a reader wrote in to say that a recent plotline in David Mack's Star Trek books — one where a Vulcan had an…
So this movies only uses 10% of it's potential?
My first working headline: Brett Ratner's Hercules Is A Stack Of Shit Pancakes
THE POOL TABLE IS NOT A PLACE FOR DRINKS.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
When I was a teenager, I became convinced (because I knew everything) that the 'utopian' future that Star Trek was premised upon was flawed. Humans, fundamentally, can't change, and we'd be stuck with things like greed, poverty, famine, cruelty, etc...
In a college biology class, I learned about the tame foxes in Russia
Star Trek - Shore Leave 35: August 2-4, 2013. Hunt Valley, Maryland.
It's Steve Jobs, not Hand Jobs.