Schon zwei Mal wurde Aufseher Biron vom Volk der Androssi von der Besatzung der U.S.S. da Vinci aufs Kreuz gelegt. Damit ihm das nur ja nicht wieder passiert, beschafft sich Biron die Aufzeichnungen über die Abenteuer seiner Gegner während des brutalen Dominion-Krieges … Nach einem Sieg in schwerem Kampf ist die U.S.S. Sentinel hinter feindlichen Linien gefangen. Als auch noch ein Schiff der Breen angreift, ist es an Chefingenieurin Sonya Gomez, den Breen Sand in die Augen zu streuen, sodass sie entkommen können. Währenddessen muss Dr. Elizabeth Lense auf der U.S.S. Lexington mit den unzähligen Todesopfern fertigwerden, und der Kryptograf Bart Faulwell begegnet auf Sternenbasis 92 jemandem, der sein Leben von Grund auf verändern wird …
S.C.E. ebooks are already pretty short, so turning one into an anthology of even shorter stories does tend to leave the reader wanting a bit more meat on the bone. Still, bringing back the da Vinci's recurring enemy is always interesting (and the Androssi are DeCandido's creation, so he's the writer to do it), and in his trade for the logs, he comes off as extremely ruthless. The three stories he delves into are all at least fine. I feel like Dr. Lense is nobody's favorite character, but she's very competent in her war tale, and I enjoyed seeing her spark off other members of her old crew. Bart IS one of my favorite characters - as I'm naturally more interested in linguistics than engineering, and he's given the most relevant background (how he started dating Mark), even if his mission is relatively low on thrills. Sonya's mission is the most exciting, right in the middle of the action, but I somewhat resent it spending so much time on memories of the Enterprise. With a low page count, do we really need this kind of padding? The best thing about this third tale is that you really get a sustained engineering POC of a ship battle, and HER former crew on the Sentinel, while quickly drawn, hold some interest too. War Stories Book 1 is a brief affair, and I'm hoping Book 2 won't be just more of the same, but actually have Biron act on the information he's collected.
I enjoyed both the framing story (particularly the clever way of dispatching the "witness") and the vignettes featuring some of the SCE team. The only weakness I felt was the unnecessary name dropping or appearances of TV series characters. Otherwise, this was a nice way to get an "info dump" on Dr. Lense, Bart Faulwell, and Sonya Gomez.
This is more a novella, but it was still enjoyable. Having a book set during one of the more intense arcs of Deep Space 9, and being able to see the little things that other people have done to contribute to the war effort was excellent too. The chapters were a tad long, but when the book is this short, it doesn't really matter that much.
War Stories were okay. They are little glimpses of what the SCE crew were doing during the Dominion War. Overall a bit rushed and could have easily been developed into something bigger, escpecially the bits with the Da Vinci crew members that aren't around any more.
A collection of 3 stories that looks at what members of the Da Vinci crew did during the Dominion War. An interesting read with a nice framing premise. Still a novella, but gives more insight into the 3 characters. A good read.
Star Trek: S. C. E.: #21 War Stories, Book 1 by Keith R. A. DeCandido Now, this is more like it.
Overseer Biron of the Androssi gets ahold of the personal logs of the daVinci-crew during their assignments in the Dominion War and peruses them in order to get an idea of how they could consistently defeat him. He starts with Dr Lense, Bart Faulwell and Sonya Gomez.
So, this finally offers some insight into the crew. It starts of with Dr Lense who, after having been questioned for being an augment after having beaten Bashir at medschool, returns to her ship, only to find herself the only doctor alive during battle. Bart Faulwell is asked to lead a team, trying to decrypt Dominion messages, and falls in love there. And Sonya Gomez has to improvise her way out of a mission gone wrong, all the while being the calm beacon of strength for her crew.
Granted, all the stories deal with past events, before the crew of the daVinci was even formed, but they serve to further portray the characters which before have remained quite bland due to the concentration on technobabble and ingenious ideas. I'm eagerly awaiting Book 2.