Star Trek: Double Helix 03 Red Sector by Michael Jan Friedman, John J. Ordover, Diane Carey
3.5 Stars
challenging dark emotional mysterious reflective sad tense
Medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
When I started this book, I was not into it. Almost to the point of DNFing it (which I rarely do...since I'm a completionist), It felt out of touch with what was going on. What I mean...is the way the main characters in the story were treated/handled in the opening act of the story...felt out of touch with Starfleet. Little did I know, that that was the point. It shouldn't have happened that way, but it did.
In a way, it didn't feel like a Star Trek novel (or at least on that I'd read before). Then something happened, and it made sense.
At this point, I got what the author was doing, and felt it was bringing Starfleet values and Star Trek mores back into the story. The main character was trained by Starfleet, and he would act a certain way...and do certain things...in this situation.
I was locked in, and I was able to overlook the frustrations of the beginning of the book (which looking back at my experience...had been done on purpose to expose the story, in a new way.
Then, sadly...it just kept going on...and the main character's impulse or desire to make right a wrong that happened while he was inprisoned on that planet. He just couldn't not try to fix it. Which then, in my view...ruined the pluses that it had gained (up to that point).
This is when I started pushing back (against the main character), and feeling that the "bit" had gone too far, and the MC was now acting too off-center, and the things he'd gone through had shifted him from how he should've been acting, to now over-acting (in a mental way), to "right the wrong" that happened on the prison planet.
I admired his shared struggles (with the prisoner), but then...felt it just became too contrived (though, I could also see this happening...too, and it frustrated me.
I don't know. I felt to manipulated (by the story, the way it was written, but in a "ham fisted way". It didn't feel real. It felt clumsy (in a story way).
When I finished the book, I was just let down. The conclusions and the meaning of the story didn't fit the expectations. It may be a "me" thing. I'm okay with that.
I hope others, who've read this story...fell in love with it.
Sadly, that wasn't me. Ugh.
Next up...Star Trek: Double Helix 04 Quarantine by John Vornholdt.