Star Trek: The Next Generation: Before Dishonor
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4.4 • 112 Ratings
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- $1.99
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
A Star Trek novel in which the Borg, driven to near extinction, abandon their old patterns and launch a final, ruthless campaign against the Federation, forcing the USS Enterprise to confront a terrifying evolution of the Collective.
An enemy so intractable that it cannot be reasoned with. The entire race thinks with one mind and strives toward one purpose: to add our biological distinctiveness to their own and wipe out individuality, to make every living thing Borg.
In over two centuries, the Federation has never encountered a greater threat. Twice Starfleet assembled and threw countless starships to stand against them. The Borg were stopped, the price paid in blood. Humanity breathed a sigh of relief, assuming it was safe. And with the destruction of the transwarp conduits, the Federation believed that the killing blow had finally been struck against the Borg.
Driven to the point of extinction, the Borg continue to fight for their very existence, for their culture. They will not be denied. They must not be stopped. The old rules and assumptions regarding how the Collective should act have been dismissed. Now the Borg kill first, assimilate later.
When the Enterprise manages to thwart them once again, the Borg turn inward. The dark places that even the drones never realized existed are turned outward against the enemy they have never been able to defeat. What is revealed is the thing that no one believed the Borg could do.
Customer Reviews
Great book, but typos galore.
There are a lot of typos in this book that aren't in the print version. I'm guessing they happened in the transfer process.
Still not for me
This book just felt so out of place with what started in Resistance and with the continuing novels of Greater Than the Sum and the Destiny Trilogy. It’s very bizarre in seeing the Borg “evolve” but in a way that feels cartoonish and silly. Essentially you see the Borg adapt their assimilation practice by “eating” ships and planets. I appreciated what the Homecoming series adapted (from the 2 part Dark Frontier Voyager episodes) and make a virus that would lead to assimilation but this felt like a step too far into the impractical. Also a lot of the behaviors of the crew felt off and the whole tone of the novel was too silly and too “Funny” for the seriousness of the events taking place. Finally, if this had been the end of Janeway I would’ve been severely disappointed because it is not a proper send off for her character.
A must read for any Star Trek fan.
This is a good book and it has a humorous ending. A must read for any Star Trek fan.