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A new six-part epic covering the first year of service of the U.S.S. Enterprise-E, leading up to the events of the hit movie Star Trek: First Contact.

THAT SLEEP OF DEATH
BOOK IV

In the wake of increased concern over the Dominion threat, Dr. Beverly Crusher has attempted to improve morale on the Enterprise by starting up her theater company -- beginning with a production of A Christmas Carol. But before opening night, a devastating malady starts striking down the crew.

Forced to rely on a piece of technology she despises -- the Emergency Medical Hologram -- Dr. Crusher must find a cure before it's too late!

43 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 14, 2008

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Terri Osborne

15 books4 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Vladimir Ghinculov.
326 reviews5 followers
March 10, 2025
The fourth e-novella in the Slings and Arrows series is very short, about 40 pages. The story is a little medical drama mirrored in a play directed by Beverly Crusher. Nothing consistent, nothing much happening here.
Profile Image for Sean Randall.
2,138 reviews54 followers
January 9, 2013
I thought this book was far too quickly executed to be credible. The ratio of Dickens to reality was just silly, and having a main plot line that doesn't actually get solved in any meaningful way, a threat to the crew that is at once cleared up but is also left unresolved and an alien who seems to have been just fine for three centuries but is now "trapped by his flesh" is just bad writing. The author seems to have just run out of steam at the end, and although this is a miniseries and short works can work well, this one i'm afraid to say not only failed to make the cut but was pretty far off the mark to boot.
Profile Image for Kieran McAndrew.
3,098 reviews20 followers
January 13, 2025
A diplomatic envoy from the Gamma Quadrant causes a mysterious illness on the 'Enterprise'.

A very short sidestep in the wider serial, it reminds readers that Dr. Crusher is a strong character integral to the success of 'Star Trek: The Next Generation'.
Profile Image for David.
111 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2022
Summer 2022 Reading Entry #9. "That Sleep of Death" ("Star Trek: The Next Generation: Slings and Arrows, Book 4: That Sleep of Death") by Terri Osborne (2008). The fourth of a six-book series of ebooks (still not available in print form as of this time) released in 2007-2008 as part of Pocket Books' commemoration of the twentieth anniversary of the "Star Trek: The Next Generation" television series.

Each of the books in this series is written by a different author (or team of authors), and they all take place in the first year of service of the U.S.S. Enterprise-E (so, following the film "Star Trek Generations", in which the Enterprise from the tv series, NCC-1701-D, was destroyed, and prior to the following film, "Star Trek: First Contact", in which its replacement, the Enterprise NCC-1701-E, was introduced).

This fourth book in the "Slings and Arrows" series centers entirely on Dr. Beverly Crusher. As mentioned briefly in the previous book in the series ("The Insolence of Office"), Crusher is attempting to restart the on-ship theater company she once had going on the Enterprise-D before that ship was destroyed. The new, Enterprise-E, company is in rehearsals for "A Christmas Carol", with Data playing the narrator and Reginald "Reg" Barclay playing Scrooge. (Will Riker is reluctantly also in the play, playing Jacob Marley.)

At the same time, the Enterprise-E crew has its very first diplomatic mission aboard the new ship, to carry a Kendarayan envoy to a summit meeting so that the envoy can share important information regarding the Dominion (the only thing that really ties this story in with the overarching theme that runs through all six books, the impending war with the Dominion). This particular species, the Kendarayan, their skin secretes an iridescent layer of "sebum" that protects them.

However, as soon as the Kendarayan envoy comes aboard, members of the crew starting first with Deanna Troi start to lapse into deep comas during nighttime hours and Crusher has to find the cause. Signs point to the Kendarayan envoy as he has either been in direct contact with each of the fallen crewmembers or they in turn have apparently spread it to the others. Crusher is stymied, however, by the enjoy's refusal to allow her to take a sample of the sebum because, as he explains, is in actuality, a separate life form that each Kendarayan lives in coexistence with.

Crusher is also forced to have to activate the Emergency Medical Hologram that is being field tested aboard ship--something she recalls regretting agreeing to when the hologram program's creator, Dr. Louis Zimmerman asked her to when his first test ship, the U.S.S. Voyager, went missing--to assist her in monitoring the patients in the comas while she seeks out a cause and a cure. (Curiously, this book seems to indicate that Crusher is activating the Emergency Medical Program for the first time when it is also briefly seen in the previous book, "The Insolence of Office".)

This is the first of the books in the "Slings and Arrows" series that left me feeling not overly impressed. Osborne's writing is fine, but it just doesn't feel like there's enough story here with the Kendarayan envoy/crewmembers falling into comas plot alone.

As I mentioned about "The Insolence of Office", that book felt like two separate "B-plots" from a typical "Next Generation" episode put together (and satisfyingly so). Here, it feels like we are missing either a secondary B-plot to go along with the Kendarayan one, or that the one we get isn't given enough room to be fully developed. As a result, "That Sleep of Death" feels like a decent long-ish short story (or "novelette") rather than a fully fleshed out novella/short novel. And the page count, a mere forty-four pages, by far the shortest of the six "Slings and Arrows" books, would seem to bear that out. (And the page count would have been even shorter if not for the scenes of the "Christmas Carol" rehearsals, which, aside from giving us some nice moments to get back into Beverly Crusher as a character, don't really add anything to rest of what's going on.)

There is one minor thing that bothered me. At one point during the story, Captain Picard is one of several who have fallen into one of these comas that Crusher is still trying to determine what is causing. Crusher immediately contacts Data and asks him to bring the Kendarayan envoy to sickbay right away. As soon as she has done this, Will Riker also falls into a coma in sickbay right in front of her, Nurse Ogawa, and the Emergency Medical Hologram. What bothers me is that Crusher didn't immediately contact Data again to inform him that with both Picard and Riker medically incapacitated, Data, as second officer, is now officially in command of the ship. It would seem to me that that would be something regulations would have required of her. (Granted, Data was already on his way to the envoy's quarters to bring him to sickbay, but still.)

Again, the writing is good here. Osborne gets the character of Beverly Crusher well. However, due to the Kendarayan plot being a rather simple one (it's obvious the envoy is in some way causing the comas), what we are primarily left with is Crusher reacting to the escalating problem (and the in between scenes at the play rehearsals). Perhaps if we could have followed the enjoy to his meeting with Troi early in the story, and later on his tour around the ship with Picard, it would have felt like a fuller, more fleshed out story (although that would have meant shifting away from Crusher as the sole point of view character).

As it is, "That Sleep of Death" is an enjoyable enough "Next Generation" short story or "novelette", but I have to say that it's not really necessary to read in order to enjoy the other books in the "Slings and Arrows" series. And, unlike the other books I've read in that series so far, it doesn't really "fill in" anything of any real importance between "Star Trek Generations" and "Star Trek: First Contact", aside from that Crusher does not end up liking the personality of the Emergency Medical Hologram. I believe that's what Osborne was going for, to explain why Crusher in "First Contact" says she had "sworn never to use one of these things" right before activating the EMH to distract the Borg drones while she and her staff and patients escaped. But there really isn't enough interaction here between her and the EMH (or scenes with the EMH actually treating patients) to really make that come across here in this story.

As a result of all of the above, I gave "That Sleep of Death" a three out of five stars on GoodReads. Next up: "Star Trek: The Next Generation: Section 31: Rogue", one of four "Section 31" novels that came out in 2001. I'm reading it in between books four and five of "Slings and Arrows"as the editor of the latter series, Keith R.A. DeCandido, says the last two "S&A" books take place simultaneously with each other and following the events of "Rogue".

(Previous Summer 2022 Reading Entries: #1: "Star Trek: Avenger" by William Shatner (1997; novel); #2: "Batman vs. Ra's Al Ghul" by Neal Adams (2019-2021, six-issue comic book limited-series; 2021 collected hardcover edition); #3: “Superman: Birthright” by Mark Waid, Leinil Francis Wu, and Gerry Alanguilan (twelve-issue comic book limited series; 2003 to 2004; read on DC Universe Infinite, also available in hardcover and softcover editions); #4: "Star Trek: The Next Generation: Slings and Arrows Book 1: A Sea of Troubles" by J. Steven York and Christina F. York (2007; novella), #5: "The Orville Season 1.5: New Beginnings" by David A. Goodman and David Cabeza (2019, four issue comic book limited series; 2020 collected trade paperback edition), #6: "Star Trek: The Next Generation: Slings and Arrows, Book 2: The Oppressor's Wrong" by Phaedra Weldon), #7: "Superman: Secret Origin" by Geoff Johns, Gary Frank, and Jon Sibal (2009-2010, six-issue comic book limited series; 2019 "Deluxe Edition" collected hardcover edition), #8: "Star Trek: The Next Generation: Slings and Arrows, Book 3: The Insolence of Office" by William Leisner (2007).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Dan.
323 reviews15 followers
April 25, 2015
The first true disappointment of the Slings and Arrows series. An overly rushed setup and payoff meant that I felt no sense of the stakes or danger in this story. A quick resolution to the plot that was barely explained left me scratching my head at the end of the book. However, small touches such as the return of Dr. Crusher's theatre company from the TNG series make the TNG film era a little more palatable.

Full review: http://treklit.blogspot.com/2015/04/S...
Profile Image for Tara.
103 reviews10 followers
April 13, 2013
The resolution occurred too quickly, and wasn't satisfying at all. It just happened. Disappointing, to say the least.
Profile Image for Joel Jorden.
Author 10 books2 followers
February 16, 2026
Every Star Trek series has a handful of episodes that aren't good, aren't bad, and are just there. You know the ones. You always skip them on your rewatch, or maybe you always fell asleep watching this one.

Well, hit the "next episode" button on this novella and move on, there's really not much to see here. Instead, you should read one of the author's much better contributions in one of these collections!


Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Prophecy and Change Anthology

Star Trek Voyager: Distant Shores
Profile Image for Matthew.
287 reviews16 followers
December 5, 2017
I've been mostly finding things to enjoy in this e-book series, but this is a real let down. Extremely short, making it not at all worth the money, and also just a bit of a silly story. Dr. Crusher is trying to put on a stage play version of A Christmas Carol when a new alien ambassador starts causing members of the crew to fall asleep - a metaphor for this story, perhaps?

It has some entertaining parts such as Crusher's interactions with the Emergency Medical Hologram, but most of the other characters just don't sound like the people we knew from the show. It's all a bit pointless and overall, very uninteresting.
Profile Image for Todd R.
308 reviews21 followers
July 12, 2020
I really like these small serial novels. The content is focused and authors have less room to meander...it's an episode size adventure or problem and that's it. Perfect.

Don't get me wrong this one was extremely short. But I knew what I was getting when I bought it, so I won't complain about it...I enjoyed the story, the characters, and the events.
Profile Image for Angela.
2,596 reviews72 followers
October 14, 2017
This novel looks at Beverly and her first use of the EMH. Dr Crusher has to solve a mysterious illness while trying to put on a production of 'A Christmas Carol'. An ambassador has come aboard that may hold the key. It's a fun short read, and has some good interactions with the EMH. A good read.
Profile Image for R.
863 reviews5 followers
February 20, 2025
This was a good, quick story, and I always enjoy anything that's Beverly-centric.

It's also got a little something of a Christmas vibe, so I enjoyed that aspect of it, as well.

If those things appeal to you, then I'd recommend it!
Profile Image for RougeMyst.
48 reviews
July 9, 2021
It was a very… Unsatisfactory ending, but I have to say that everything except the last chapter was executed to perfection. 4.5 stars
18 reviews
December 28, 2019
The entire novella seems rushed, Dr. Crusher is in 1 of several places, her quarters, the transporter room, sickbay or the ship's holodeck getting ready for a play, the entire book.

After welcoming an envoy against The Dominion onboard, with the other senior staff, Dr. Crusher is called after her shift is finished to attend Troi, who has fallen into a coma. She then proceeds trying to determine the cause single handed overnight, unsuccessfully. After being in a coma overnight, Troi wakes back up & is allowed to leave while supervised by non medical personnel, & isn't asked to wear any monitoring devices!

After 6 or so others fall ill Crusher asks the envoy to examine him, but isn't allowed.


In chapter 3, why are Dr. Crusher & Nurse Ogawa the only medical staff apparently in sickbay? Crusher is CMO, & Ogawa is the senior nurse, on a ship of almost 1000 people. There should be other staff to get the heavy equipment Crusher uses out of the closet & monitor Troi overnight. Poorly conceived plot point for activating the EMH.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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