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The Delta Anomaly (2010)

by Rick Barba(Favorite Author)
3.59 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
1442412410 (ISBN13: 9781442412415)
languge
English
publisher
Simon Spotlight
series
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy (2010 series)
review 1: The first installment in the Starfleet Academy series of YA books set in the newly rebooted Star Trek universe. It follows Kirk (played my Chris Pine in the movies) during his time at the academy.This is the third book in the series that I've read and the second by Barba. Luckily these stories are all quite self contained so reading them out of order is not a big deal, although watching the first movie before reading the books is highly recommended.As I keep finding while reading YA books; I am NOT the target audience and so I keep noticing just how thin the plots are. I find things are not pursued to my satisfaction and that the characters can move on from certain events like they have ADD. The ability for characters to switch from being in peril to hitting on an attr... moreactive girl in the span of one paragraph is a bit concerning. Although this is played for humor it tended to take me out of the story.In this book Kirk is in the middle of some practical away mission tests. At the same time there is a serial killer roaming the streets of San Fransisco striking on foggy nights.There is no story unless Kirk and the gang are involved in the attacks; how they are initially drawn in worked extremely well. As a matter of fact the first encounter with the killer, known as the Doctor, happened during my favorite scene in the book where kirk is fending off the advances of Gaila in a local bar.The story switches from classes to the investigation quite frequently. Obviously the SFPD are involved in the murders and they quickly realize starfleet can help, I was continually being thrown out of the story thinking, "that would never happen" as the police handed more and more responsibility to starfleet cadets. Cadets!Even the final confrontation with the Doctor, which called for so much suspension of disbelief that I nearly started laughing out loud. Everything about the investigation worked, it was only in the author's choice of who was tasked with trying to apprehend the bad guy that struck me as improbable.Would I recommend the book? To be honest, no. But the author gets his legs in The Gemini Agent which had better plotting with an interesting twist ending, and he also got the voices of the characters better in his second book.I believe the flaw in the books speaks more to the flaw in the series and that seems to point to the editors at Simon Spotlight. Lets face it; kids in school are kids in school, I would much rather read about something plausible, like how they cope with difficult classmates and instructors. Instead the reader is constantly being asked to believe that Kirk has been saving the world since day one. It's a bit much.There is only one more book in the series to read ...
review 2: 3.5 Stars. As I've become increasingly obsessed with all things Star Trek-related (thanks to the J.J. Abrams' films), it was only a matter of time before I explored some of the Trek fiction that's available. While I've become increasingly fond of the original series character incarnations, I couldn't resist a novel that utilized the re-boot characters that I love so well. The Delta Anomaly is the first entry in the Starfleet Academy series, which explores the lives of Kirk, McCoy, Spock, and Uhura before the events of the 2009 film that brought them together aboard the Enterprise. Before Spock and Uhura were a couple, before Kirk and Spock were on speaking terms, The Delta Anomaly explores the lives of these four key Trek players and their lives as cadets at the Academy that would make them the officers countless fans have known and loved for decades (in one incarnation or the other *wink*).The novel opens with a murder high atop San Francisco's Transamerica Pyramid, shortly followed by an attack on Gaila, the green-skinned Orion cadet with whom Kirk has a brief fling in the 2009 film. Gaila is rescued by Kirk, but disturbing evidence discovered in subsequent medical examinations raises fears that the infamous "Doctor" has returned to prowl the streets of San Francisco once more. The Doctor is known for striking on fog-shrouded nights, and leaving no visible marks of violence on his victims -- but nonetheless stripping them of select internal organs. Tasked with stopping a killer as elusive as the vapor cloaking San Francisco's mist-shrouded streets, Kirk, McCoy, and Uhura -- with a little assistance from a newly-minted instructor called Spock -- must put aside their differences in order to take on a killer threatening Starfleet's finest, a mission that threatens to cost them one of their own.It's been several years since I've read a category science fiction novel (I cut my teeth on the Star Wars Extended Universe series), and while The Delta Anomaly doesn't have the depth of my favorites from that fandom -- mostly due to the abbreviated YA-length -- it is a fast-paced, enjoyable glimpse into Kirk & company's early years. I really liked the conceit of transplanting a Jack the Ripper-esque killer into the world of Star Trek, and the subsequent investigation and revelation concerning the Doctor's origins and purpose are nicely suggestive of a episode in its tone and subject matter. Having the Doctor serve as a lethal, alien mirror of Starfleet's exploration mandate works well in forcing Kirk, McCoy, and Uhura to view that said mandate from their would-be subject's perspective.This novel doesn't simply focus on the mystery of the Doctor -- it also provides some insight into the academic experience of Starfleet cadets. I loved the chance to see Kirk as someone other than a playboy, a hotshot braggart -- but he also manages to channel some of his soon-to-be legendary bravado into his studies. It's refreshing to see this newer incarnation of Kirk so driven to succeed at the Academy -- particularly in the test scenarios designed to measure his potential leadership ability (a dry run for the Kobayashi Maru test he faces in the 2009 film).The Delta Anomaly is a fast-paced, enjoyable little slice of Star Trek-colored escapism sure to satisfy fans looking to spend an hour or two with the characters we've grown to love outside of the two Abrams films. The principle players are sketched in a manner reasonably faithful to their on-screen counterparts, and the balance of academia, mystery, and yes -- even a dash of romance (I LOVED seeing Kirk go all doe-eyed over Hannah the barista!) makes one wish that somehow we could get a television series (as well as more films) featuring these new Trek characters. I'll definitely be reading more in the series. less
Reviews (see all)
rai
Anything that gives me Spock/Uhura moments is good in my book, which this book does. Thank You.
Christina
Yes, it's fan fiction, but it's decent fan fiction. I refuse to apologize, damn it!
twilightmania
What you expect from tie-in series fiction, nothing more and nothing less.
kazz
it had a great twist to what you thought was normal
axelprincess
It was ok, if a bit slow
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