Search
Home
Mobile Site Caption Comp Monthly Poll Sudden Death Book Reviews Game Reviews Colour Key Statistics Cookie Usage
FED SHIPS OTHER A-K FLEETS WEAPONRY SPECIES PERSONNEL TIMELINE CALCULATOR GALLERIES TEMPORAL
STATIONS OTHER L-Z LINEAGE SIZE CHARTS BATTLES OTHER PEOPLE SCI-TECH STYLING POLITICS TEMP. SHIPS
ARTICLES REVIEWS LISTS RECREATION SEARCH SITE GUIDE WHAT'S NEW MAIL AUTHOR LINKS-AWARDS SHOPS FORUM

Weapons
Antiproton
Beam
Borg Shield
Drainer
Breen Energy
Dampener
Chroniton
torpedoes
Contact
Weapons

CRM-114

Disintegrator

Disruptors
Druoda
warhead
Echo
Papa 607
Isokinetic
cannon
Isolytic
subspace weapons
Isomagnetic
disintergrator

Lasers
Maco
Rifle

Mines
Pain
Stick
Phase
Weapons
Phased
Polaron Beam

Phasers
Photon
Grenades
Photon
Torpedoes
Plasma
Weapons
Projectile
Weapons
Quantum
Torpedoes
Spatial
Torpedo
Subspace
Warhead
Thalaron
Generator
Tholian
Web
Transphasic
Torpedoes
Tricobalt
Device
Trilithium
Torpedoes
Xindi Slug
Thrower
Xindi
Weapon
Additional
Weapons

All Books

Title : Crucible: McCoy: Provenance of Shadows
Writers : David R. George III
Year : 2006
Rating : 4.0000 for 3 reviewsAdd your own review
Reviewer : Brett Rating : 3
Review : Generally a good read. I liked that it covered a long period of time from the original 5 year voyage through to the launch of Enterprise D. I also liked the alternate timeline that McCoy had changed; certainly filled in a gap. Very well done. Mr. George did a nice job of weaving back and forth and really touched on all of the important events from TOS to the movies and beyond. My only criticism is that the novel is inconsistent with other novels. While I am aware that the novels are not cannon and that this allows for some lattitude, I think Mr. George should have been more sensitive to the other authors who wrote that the Guardian was not destroyed and that McCoy lived to be about 150 or so (in this book, McCoy dies at age 139). Minor things overall but still important for overall continuity. I also got a wee bit teary-eyed at the romanticism of McCoy finally coming to terms with his life and finding the love of his life. I look forward to the next two in this series.
Reviewer : Yetiman Rating : 5
Review : David George does an excellent job of delving into the psyche of McCoy while connecting so many of the events in the Original Series. I absolutely love the development of McCoy's character. I found it refreshing, as so many Trek novels focus more on plot, rather than character.
Reviewer : drakkillus Rating : 4
Review : w\Wonderful story of two possible lives of Dr. McCoy from the future and the past, this book weaves all sorts of different Star Trek mythos into it, from Edith Keeler to Benny Russell. Very imaginitive read.
Add your own review

Copyright Graham Kennedy Page views : 2,193 Last updated : 1 Jan 1970