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Star Trek Online: The Needs of the Many

Star Trek Online: The Needs of the ManyAuthor: Michael A. Martin
Publisher: Pocket
Category: Book

List Price: $7.99
Buy Used: $1.50
as of 7/30/2010 13:29 CDT details
You Save: $6.49 (81%)

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New (33) Used (23) from $1.50

Seller: lookatabook
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 341,475

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Edition: Original
Pages: 419
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 143918657X
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781439186572
ASIN: 143918657X

Publication Date: March 30, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781439186572
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

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  • Kindle Edition - Star Trek Online: The Needs of the Many

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Prior to the terror-filled times of the Long War—the seemingly endless struggle against the Undine, a paranoid, shape-shifting race once known only as Species 8472—enemy sleeper agents quietly penetrated every echelon of Federation society, as well as other starfaring civilizations throughout the Alpha and Beta quadrants. The ensuing conflict shook humanity to its very core, often placing its highest ideals against a pure survival instinct. All too frequently, the Undine War demanded the harshest of sacrifices and exacted the steepest of personal costs from the countless millions whose lives the great interdimensional clash forever altered.

Drawn from his exhaustive research and interviews, The Needs of the Many delivers a glimpse of Betar Prize–winning author Jake Sisko’s comprehensive "living history" of this tumultuous era. With collaborator Michael A. Martin, Sisko illuminates an often-poorly-understood time, an age marked indelibly by both fear and courage—not to mention the willingness of multitudes of unsung heroes who became the living embodiment of the ancient Vulcan philosopher Surak’s famous axiom, "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few."


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6



5 out of 5 stars A little different, but necessary.   April 8, 2010
cjdaweasel (USA)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

I don't read a lot of fiction because it's usually not my thing. I do love Star Trek, and I'm a subscriber to STO (Star Trek Online) so I figured this was a no brainer for 8 bucks. Is it the most compelling book I've ever read? Not by a long shot, but that's not really the point, is it?

Thus far, there have been only two ways to get the story for STO: Read the unbelievably dry path to 2409 (which is in the book's appendix) or play the game. And having done both of those myself, I still didn't "get it". The story seemed to be a series of unrelated events, and while I got the gist of path of the Federation and its enemies/allies, recognized recurring characters and such, I didn't feel connected to the universe. I felt like I was flying along earning points and getting snippets of a larger picture I just wasn't grasping.

However, this book as changed that quite a bit, and I think that's what it is for. In order to bring the average Star Trek guy up to speed they needed to bring a multitude of characters in, located in disparate and sometimes not directly interlocking stories. In short, they needed to bring this universe alive by giving it a background. With Jake Sisko as a journalist, interviewing people, it gives you deeper snapshots of pivotal parts of the Undine War. Having read this book I feel like I actually have a flipping clue what's going on now. The game is less a series of missions to be completed and more a story that needs resolution.

The Point:
For $8, if you're a regular STO player then you need to pick this up. If you're a regular Star Trek book reader (of which I am not) and you don't play STO then you probably should go elsewhere.



5 out of 5 stars Better than most give it credit for.   April 19, 2010
Cody Glenn (Greenville, Texas)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I suppose I should start by saying that unlike most books of this genre, published for MMO's, this one is not a novel. It is a fictional book, obviously, but the purpose of the book is less to take the reader through a traditional Star Trek story, and more to formally inform them of events that have transpired.

I'll happily admit that the book is a fascinating little read about the political and scientific developments that have occurred since we last left the Next Generation/Deep Space Nine/Voyager era of Star Trek, to now. If you took the opportunity to read the Star Trek: Countdown comic book, then you're already somewhat familiar with the ongoing destinies of some of our characters, as Jean-Luc Picard has moved on to become Ambassador to Vulcan, Worf has become a General in the Klingon Empire, Data has become Captain of the Enterprise-E, and Geordi La Forge has moved on to build his own starships, while spending some time with the Soong Foundation.
Star Trek: The Needs of the Many expands on what we already know in the Path to 2409, with personal interviews with many of the well-known (and not-so-well-known) characters, as well as military reports, all detailing personal experiences and transgressions over the last several years.

The dominant topic is the Undine War, painting a clearer picture of the way Starfleet Officers, as well as MACO's, were personally affected by the widespread paranoia that ensued in nearly every diplomatic system in and around the Federation. There is considerable discussion regarding the United Federation of Planets, Gorn Hegemony, Klingon Empire, Cardassian Union, and other political structures that were affected by the war, or had a hand in it.

Among those most-notably interviewed by Jake Sisko are Garak, Quark, Admiral Kathryn Janeway, General Worf, Bruce Maddox, Kassidy Yates, Vic Fontaine, Captain Geordi La Forge, and one Rene Picard.

All in all, I'd highly recommend the book to anyone playing Star Trek Online, as it provides an in-depth better look at the storyline than we're privy to in the game. It explains many of the occurrences that have happened during and since the Undine War, and explains implications of how they affect every member of Starfleet today. The book does an excellent job of staying true to continuity (with one small exception; see below) and expanding on what we already know with entirely new information, while giving us the honor and privilege of "catching up with old friends."

The book is incredibly well-written, and I honestly hope to see more of them in the near and distant future. If you're looking for a place to purchase the book, Star Trek Online: The Needs of the Many, is available for purchase through Amazon in paperback, as well as Kindle e-book format.



5 out of 5 stars Great Book   April 21, 2010
R. Conway (Earth, Sol System, Milky Way Galaxy)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

This was a really great book. It gave a variety of perspectives from the Unidine War. From the MACO grunts boarding a Unidine Ship, to Star Fleet Intelligence, to Star Fleet Department of Temporal Investigations, to the UFP Saurian president. This was easy to follow and gave a great insight to an intruiging conflict. Worth the money.


3 out of 5 stars "The Needs of the Many..." are clearly not fulfilled   April 5, 2010
Eric L. Reyes Altamirano (Mexico, D.F. Mexico)
8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Wow...

I walked into reading this book with pretty high expectations, mostly because I've had the experience of the universe it unveils via the Star Trek Online MMORPG that's been recently released. To me this book meant a way to grasp greater understanding for the twisted events that lead up to the fractured universe that prevails in the STO game, in some hope to comprehend how things could get "that much worse" for the Federation and its allies as players quickly discover in that universe. For the uninitiated, keep reading.

In terms of the goal of being an illuminating history? It does that quite well. You come to comprehend what has happened to Star Trek's universe that leaves things in so many shambles. It even explains the mindset that the game designers behind Star Trek Online went with rather than a more classical approach to Star Trek where peaceful exploration and diplomacy would take a far stronger mantle than they really do. So far that, bravo, this novel really leaves no question as to what is going on and why it's going on.

But that's about the only goal I feel this novel achieved. I've read literally dozens of other Trek novels. Some I've enjoyed, others I'm willing to admit having hated, and others were lukewarm. At the end of the day though, I've come to accept these novels as a reasonable and acceptable replacement for the disappearance of Star Trek's ongoing post Nemesis development from the air, film, or digital waves. It's with that sentiment that I came to the point where I wanted to put this book down and not finish it on countless occasions. The excruciating level to which this book goes to exclude practically every single DS9, Voyager or TNG novel covering the post tv-series era is enormous. It was only morbid curiosity for how the author would reconcile the exception of years of novel writing from other writers involved with Star Trek today, that got me through to the end.

I was rewarded with a rather solid explanation for my efforts. The narrative certainly helped. The choice of characters portrayed also kept me going. But this book stings like a scorpion tale. It's not terrible, but it's not great. It's the wannabe Star Trek XI of the 24th-25th century Star Trek era, and in much the same way Star Trek XI was hard to swallow due to how very much it changed everything on such a fundamental level (but okay, I came to accept and even enjoy it), this novel left me bereft of any hope that we would see any kind of rebirth of anything the original Star Trek timeline had held for its audiences. That wasn't its goal I would imagine. Its goal was likely to help bridge enormous gaps between the events of Star Trek X: Nemesis and the timeline being enacted in Star Trek Online. Again, it does that well, but be prepared to go out with a heavy feeling in your stomach, if you even manage to get to the end. For though the writing is good, I can't stop shaking my head at how contrary and wrong the overall "flipping the universe upside-down" feels.



2 out of 5 stars Not the best current Star Trek book out there.   April 3, 2010
Paynesgrey
14 out of 15 found this review helpful

I'm a little disapointed with this one. I normally consume Trek books of any era, by any author with great delight. You don't even want to know how many copies of "How Much For Just The Planet" I have.

I don't regret buying this one, but I regret not buying it at a used book store for less.

One issue is perhaps unavoidable given the overall format. With the whole "Living History" idea, I expect some certain similarities in tone and format to World War Z. But on this one, there are a couple times when I can almost hear the rustle of pages from That Other Book in the background. Again, that could be simply because it's a "living history" about a massive war.

The other, greater issue is the author's clear and obvious choice to politicize the book. Between dedicating the book to a currently active politician, and making assorted thinly veiled references to policies of a Recent President Who Shall Not Be Named as well as current events, it gets pretty ham-handed.

Social commentary has always been an enriching element in Star Trek, but this work is somewhat tainted by it's level of current-day political commentary, enhanced by the "narrator's" penchant for wistfully sermonizing, sermons which become downright sticky and gooey sweet.

"Jake" ends up reducing the notional interviews from interviews to a socio-political soapbox for the author to use him to mumble from, a vehicle for his own commentary as opposed to focussing on the experiences and stories of his interview subjects. It's rarely a good thing when the focus of a documentary becomes the interviewer, and not the subjects or their stories. If I want to read an author's politicizing, I'll go to their homepage or blog. The digs at a recent administration and political faction become a wink at the camera that damages the immersion, and wastes type that could have been used telling a better story. (This being despite my personal dislike of said administration.)

Still, there are some good vignettes, some good bits of dialogue, but it's somewhat inferior to what I've come to expect in current Star Trek reading material.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 6


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