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Pawns and Symbols

Pawns and Symbols

List Price: $2.99
Your Price: $2.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: So Boring!
Review: It's SO VERY BORING! I'm falling asleep! Aaaaah!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: So Boring!
Review: It's SO VERY BORING! I'm falling asleep! Aaaaah!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This was an excellent book portaying Klingon Society.
Review: Pawns and Symbols was a excellent book, not only because of an excellently written story, but because of the history it shows. These Klingons are pre-ridge Klingons and there manner is slightly different. The ' slave girl'/informant shows this very well. She was drawn into the society and liked it. I would recommed this book to everyone, even if you dislike Klingons.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Almost worth five stars.
Review: This was a marvellous sequel to both the "The Trouble With Tribbles" AND "Day of the Dove" original series episodes, with a minor reference to the "More Tribbles, More Troubles", animated episode, as well. It is very well written, and ties all of the references to existing stories in together well; the characters are handled skillfully, and mostly plausibly. I have only a couple of minor quibbles that (barely) take it down from five stars to four: first, the subplot involving Chekov's romance with the Romulan woman seemed somewhat irrelevant and superfluous, and second, the subplot involving the lost memories seemed unnecessary to the storyline as well, something of a red herring for the reader to be preoccupied with that turned out to be much less important than the foreshadowing suggested. Other than that, the storyline, a fairly complex one even without the irrelevancies thrown in for filler, was very well handled and hung together well. A good treatment of Klingons, neither overly complimentary toward their warrior culture, nor unnecessarily stereotyping them as simply bad guys, but rather a portrayal that I could respect and appreciate.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Almost worth five stars.
Review: This was a marvellous sequel to both the "The Trouble With Tribbles" AND "Day of the Dove" original series episodes, with a minor reference to the "More Tribbles, More Troubles", animated episode, as well. It is very well written, and ties all of the references to existing stories in together well; the characters are handled skillfully, and mostly plausibly. I have only a couple of minor quibbles that (barely) take it down from five stars to four: first, the subplot involving Chekov's romance with the Romulan woman seemed somewhat irrelevant and superfluous, and second, the subplot involving the lost memories seemed unnecessary to the storyline as well, something of a red herring for the reader to be preoccupied with that turned out to be much less important than the foreshadowing suggested. Other than that, the storyline, a fairly complex one even without the irrelevancies thrown in for filler, was very well handled and hung together well. A good treatment of Klingons, neither overly complimentary toward their warrior culture, nor unnecessarily stereotyping them as simply bad guys, but rather a portrayal that I could respect and appreciate.


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