Originally posted by Marsden
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Jane Killick, Clark's Law, and DS9
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Regarding #8, I didn't find it to be offensively bad. It was short (Has some 1 page chapters!) and harmless. Some think it tries too hard to be funny. [shrug] I didn't pencil in any notes except that pages 86-87 were where the author's humor was getting out of control, but if I had to sum up #8 in one word, it would "forgettable."
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Thank you.
Answers like OmahaStar posted disturb me. He isn't the only one, of course, but there is a significant number of posters that by rote have declared certain episodes to be bad and everyone else should agree with their assessment by definition. I rather liked almost all of Infection and have never seen why it's supposed to be bad. I liked all of TKO. Grey 17... well I made a whole thread about a year or so about that. I sometimes wonder if some people even like Babylon 5 when I hear that kind of stuff.
I have the 3 trilogies, The Shadow Within and To Dream in the City of Sorrows and I was wondering about picking up some of the others cheap, but I don't think I will bother. I mostly got those based on a recomondation made by KoshN some time ago, possibly 2 years, and I couldn't remember about Personal Agendas as it was supposed to be in a better era of accuracy but somehow missed, apparently.
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Originally posted by Marsden View PostKoshN, what do you thing about "Personal Agendas"? that was book 8. JMS did sound too happy but he really didn't condemn any of the book as you have, so I'd like to hear what you think, please.
Here are some comments I penciled into #4 when I read it:
NON CANON. RIDICULOUS. Inconsistent with "In the Beginning." Only the Epilogue was any good.
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Originally posted by OmahaStar View PostIt was terrible. No, that doesn't quite describe it. Ok, you know how TKO was half-great, half-lousy, with the Susan story being great, and pretty much the rest being lousy? And how Grey 17 has a tiny little bit of awesome, surrounded by suck?
And how Infection has this tiny itty bitty scrap of "oh, that's cool" in an episode that makes you want to put a bullet through your brain?
Well, what if you mixed together the worst parts of those three episodes, in book form, and then made it even worse? You'd get Personal Agendas. And I believe I'm even being a bit kind to the writer here.
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Originally posted by Marsden View PostKoshN, what do you thing about "Personal Agendas"? that was book 8. JMS did sound too happy but he really didn't condemn any of the book as you have, so I'd like to hear what you think, please.
And how Infection has this tiny itty bitty scrap of "oh, that's cool" in an episode that makes you want to put a bullet through your brain?
Well, what if you mixed together the worst parts of those three episodes, in book form, and then made it even worse? You'd get Personal Agendas. And I believe I'm even being a bit kind to the writer here.
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KoshN, what do you thing about "Personal Agendas"? that was book 8. JMS did sound too happy but he really didn't condemn any of the book as you have, so I'd like to hear what you think, please.
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Originally posted by Delenn_of_Mir View PostI have heard the non canon B5 books are atrocious, although I do want to get "Clark's Law" because that is the only part of the Earth Alliance Civil War that I was dissatisfied with. We never got to get to Know Clark as a person, or really got to know the story of what drove him to collaborate with the shadows and to kill President Santiago. And I will prolly get the others eventually. Knowing me I will likely find a way to enjoy them, since I have already enjoyed a few movies that other fans seem to hate. *crosses fingers*
Dell# 4 and #5 were the two worst of the Dell 1 thru 6 & 8, IMO. #4 is Clark's Law. I have 1 thru 6 and 8 ONLY because I'm a completist. #5 is as dry as sawdust and builds up and builds up to .....nothing. The best thing about #5 is the cover art. I also found the "A Call to Arms" novelization mostly clumsy and worthless.Last edited by KoshN; 06-11-2012, 08:24 PM.
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Originally posted by JoeD80 View PostI think they are worth collecting. They have interviews from cast and crew organized episode-by-episode making it kind of a journey through the production. There aren't tons of pages like some of the Star Trek guide books but they have interesting stuff in them.
They vary quite a bit in quality for sure. I enjoyed the first book myself.
Well in "Voices of Authority" it's shown that he collaborated with the Shadows because Morden asked him "what do you want?" and his answer was that he wanted Santiago dead. Maybe he just never liked the guy? Don't forget that the Shadows needed someone who had enough power-lust because *they* wanted to get to the telepaths in Psi Corps. If it wasn't Clark, they would have found someone else; so I think that Clark's motivations aren't really all that important to the story. He was a tool for the Shadows to use and then he got obsessed with control.
Varying in quality could make reading them like a bumpy adventure then. Good times!
Dangit! Now You've forced me to go back and rewatch an episode to check for something I may have missed before. You can imagine how this upsets me.
Originally posted by Joe NazzaroPersonally, I'm not a big fan of the Boxtree non-fiction books. While there might have been some merit back in the days when there was virtually no B5 product out there, I think most long-time fans (of which I obviously include members of this forum) may find them a bit sparse in terms of information. But since Boxtree had the license initially, they were pretty much the only game in town at the time. I know from talking to Jane at the time, as we were covering the same beat so to speak, she wasn't given very much time or money to do the program guides, which were cheap and cheerful for lack of a better term. I have no doubt that if Jane had been given more resources, the books could have been that much better. Just my opinion of course, but I like to think it's an informed one.Last edited by Delenn_of_Mir; 06-10-2012, 08:37 PM.
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Originally posted by Delenn_of_Mir View PostAre the Jane Killick scene by scene books worth collecting?
Originally posted by Delenn_of_Mir View PostI have heard the non canon B5 books are atrocious
Originally posted by Delenn_of_Mir View Postor really got to know the story of what drove him to collaborate with the shadows and to kill President Santiago.
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Personally, I'm not a big fan of the Boxtree non-fiction books. While there might have been some merit back in the days when there was virtually no B5 product out there, I think most long-time fans (of which I obviously include members of this forum) may find them a bit sparse in terms of information. But since Boxtree had the license initially, they were pretty much the only game in town at the time. I know from talking to Jane at the time, as we were covering the same beat so to speak, she wasn't given very much time or money to do the program guides, which were cheap and cheerful for lack of a better term. I have no doubt that if Jane had been given more resources, the books could have been that much better. Just my opinion of course, but I like to think it's an informed one.
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Jane Killick, Clark's Law, and DS9
Are the Jane Killick scene by scene books worth collecting? I will likely collect them anyway just because they are about B5, but I would like to collect the best B5 items first, and then move on to the other stuff that I'd have to have just to be a completist, but that may not actually add anything to the B5 experience. Unless of course there isn't anything out there like that.
The script books are still too expensive for my taste and I have all of the canon trilogies, pluse "To Dream in the city of Sorrows, and The Shadow Within - my favorite standalone, so far" . I also have the "In Valen's Name" comics, and The price of peace, graphic novel" .
I have heard the non canon B5 books are atrocious, although I do want to get "Clark's Law" because that is the only part of the Earth Alliance Civil War that I was dissatisfied with. We never got to get to Know Clark as a person, or really got to know the story of what drove him to collaborate with the shadows and to kill President Santiago. And I will prolly get the others eventually. Knowing me I will likely find a way to enjoy them, since I have already enjoyed a few movies that other fans seem to hate. *crosses fingers*
I am rereading my Price of Peace gn and just realized we do get to meet Clark briefly and see a little of earth. I'd forgotten.
I especially want to know this part of the story because I am currently on season 4 of DS9, and just watched the trek version of that war. JMS is of course the master, and I still prefer anything B5 over anything Trek, however, with the Trek 2 part episode we did get to know Leyton pretty well, and what drove him, and we actually got to be on Earth during the Martial Law aspects, as short and inconsequential as it turned out to be.
I thought by not going to Earth it helped us viewers to feel the isolation felt by everyone aboard B5, and to just hear secondhand what was going on down below, so I am not complaining, but I still feel like I am missing a tiny piece of the puzzle.Last edited by Delenn_of_Mir; 06-10-2012, 06:24 PM.Tags: None
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