Star Trek: The Next Generation: Cold Equations, Book I: The Persistence of Memory - David Mack

Star Trek: The Next Generation: Cold Equations, Book I: The Persistence of Memory

By David Mack

  • Release Date: 2012-10-30
  • Genre: Fiction & Literature
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 107 Ratings

Description

A BRAZEN HEIST Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the Enterprise crew race to find out who has stolen Data’s android brother B-4—and for what sinister purpose.
A BROKEN PROMISE One desperate father risks all for the son he abandoned forty years ago—but is he ready to pay the price for redemption?

A DARING MISSION Against overwhelming odds, and with time running out, Commander Worf has only one chance to avert a disaster. But how high a price will he pay for victory?

Reviews

  • This is an amazing book

    5
    By TheHalf-BloodPrincess
    I am absolutely in love with this book. It was purely amazing. It made me both laugh and cry. I love how I got to see through the eyes of Doctor Soong. I am definitely going to reread this time and time again in the future.
  • Love It

    1
    By ind317
    I think this is a fantastic book!
  • Love this book!

    5
    By Reyga
    I really love this book and can't wait to read the 2nd book.
  • Suspense, surprise, and satisfaction.

    5
    By JamminDownJD
    Without giving away the ending, TNG fans will appreciate this book that is filled with suspense, hope, and grave sacrifice. Like many ST novels, it attempts and succeeds to link past events in both the TV shows, movies, and novels with the urgency of personal quests and the threat of the Typhon Pact. Highly recommended to readers who are familiar with the post-Nemesis novels.
  • He has done it again!

    5
    By gilbyscott
    Mr. Mack has once again entered the STNG universe and formed a captivating story. I am looking forward to the next in the series!
  • You made me cry

    5
    By RedDwarfian
    Much like the Destiny epic, this was an incredible story. The character development was superb, examining the consequences of the Typhon Pact, Destiny, and even Dominion War tales to show how far the Federation and the Enterprise crew has come, for the good and for the bad. I also loved the post-humanist questions posed by the tale, but the mark of SciFi is that you have an outlet for these strange, new questions, set in the strange, new worlds. That and the climax of the novel made me cry.

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