Autorenbild.

Christian Humberg

Autor von Prometheus: Fire with Fire

31+ Werke 266 Mitglieder 8 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: Writer Christian Humberg at the sci-fi convention FedCon in Bonn, Germany, 2017. By DianeAnna - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=59868371

Reihen

Werke von Christian Humberg

Prometheus: Fire with Fire (2016) 72 Exemplare
Prometheus: In the Heart of Chaos (2016) — Autor — 46 Exemplare
50 Jahre Lego Stein (2008) 26 Exemplare
Flucht ins Dunkel (2012) 5 Exemplare
Geister des Krieges (2013) 4 Exemplare
In 80 Welten durch den Tag (2015) 4 Exemplare
Hundeleben — Autor — 2 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Star Trek - Deep Space Nine: Offenbarung (Buch 1) (2001) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben434 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 8.02: Offenbarung 2 (2001) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben397 Exemplare
Der Abgrund (2001) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben373 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 8.10: Einheit (2003) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben308 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 8.06: Mission Gamma II - Dieser Graue Geist (2002) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben285 Exemplare
Mission Gamma: Twilight (2002) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben284 Exemplare
Mission Gamma: Cathedral (2002) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben282 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 8.04: Dämonen der Luft und Finsternis (2001) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben280 Exemplare
Mission Gamma: Lesser Evil (2002) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben263 Exemplare
Rising Son (2003) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben261 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 9.01: Kriegspfad (2006) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben224 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 9.02: Entsetzliches Gleichmaß (2008) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben166 Exemplare
Star Trek - Deep Space Nine 9.03: Der Seelenschlüssel (2009) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben154 Exemplare
Star Trek - Die Welten von Deep Space Nine 01: Cardassia - Die Lotusblume (2012) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben6 Exemplare
Star Trek - Die Welten von Deep Space Nine 3: Trill - Unvereinigt (2012) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben5 Exemplare
Star Trek - Die Welten von Deep Space Nine 6: Das Dominion - Fall der Götter (2013) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben3 Exemplare
Star Trek - Die Welten von Deep Space Nine 02: Andor - Paradigma (2012) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben2 Exemplare
Die Wächter von Aquaterra (2017) 2 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Humberg, Christian
Geburtstag
1976
Geburtsort
Gerolstein

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Great fun on the Final Frontier!

While many of the Trek novels have been translated - it's always been *from* English. This book is a first - a German Trek novel, now translated into English, and it's great fun. Lots of action, and - perhaps with an eye to tensions in our time - intrigue around terrorist acts. It's part of a new series by these authors and happily I already have next installment in hand!
 
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mrklingon | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 22, 2023 |
In my review of the audiobook, I praised this installment. Well, I said it was the best one, which isn't the same thing. Indeed, it starts a bit excitingly for once, with some desperate actions by the crews of the Prometheus and Bortas to escape the chaos zone they entered into at the end of the previous book.

Unfortunately, the book is still fully capable of frittering away its narrative energy because then we're back into, buckle up, a meeting scene! A whole chapter is devoted to a meeting where the main takeaway is that Spock thinks they should look something up in Memory Alpha. This should have been two lines of dialogue, tops! No one wants to read a debate about whether or not someone should send an e-mail!

So then we pop over to Memory Alpha of course, and here's your final big cameo for Star Trek's fiftieth anniversary... freaking Kosinski from "Where No One Has Gone Before." Wow, how did they get him back? No, the question is why? Why in the middle of this novel do we have to squander a chapter on this guy updating us on his life story, watching the news, and looking at maps in a library!? (Okay, he's not really the last big cameo, that's Wesley Crusher... a moment that is totally gratuitous... but hey so is everything else in this book.)

The problem is (and here I disagree with my 2019 self when he reviewed the audiobook) that then the Prometheus and Bortas split up, and now all the Prometheus is doing is flying to the origin of the Ancient Reds, picking up one of them, and flying back to Lembatta. You might think, That's not enough content to fill up a 350-page novel, and well, you'd be right. It feels like the Prometheus crew is barely in this one... but maybe that's a blessing in disguise. It certainly feels like they barely do anything in it, basically just being a ferry service. At a time when things should be escalating, there's actually less going on.

So how can they fill up the book's pages? By suddenly giving us the adventures of a new set of boring characters, some Rigellian chelon admiral and the ship he's on. One whole chapter is about trying to figure out a guy's password. None of it is ever really relevant to anything.

Overall, this book reads like someone took all the least interesting aspects of Destiny-era fiction—mediocre original characters, tedious political plots, gratuitous continuity references—and amped them up as far as they would go. So I guess it fits in with its era... mission accomplished? But there's a base level of enjoyment in even this era's worst book that I just could not find in the Prometheus trilogy, with its stilted dialogue and tedious prose.

Continuity Notes:
  • This book is clearly dated to overlapping with Takedown by a reference to the opening of the Far Embassy. Only here it's called the "Embassy of Distance"—I guess neither translator nor editor picked up on it being a reference, so the term got translated back into English out of German.
  • So in my "continuity notes" on all these November 2385–set novels (of which there are a lot), I've been making snarky comments about their lack of mention of the Lembatta crisis. I hope it's clear that this isn't really a rag on those books, as the Prometheus trilogy was written much later. Rather, it's a rag on this trilogy for its totally nonsensical chronological placement. Overlapping with Takedown seals the deal: at no point in the middle of this trilogy do communications go out across the galaxy; when Takedown opens, clearly nothing like a galactic terrorism crisis is underway. Why did the writers pick such a packed month... a month where the events of this trilogy clearly cannot happen? It's an unforced error. Even if it was set one month later in December, that would be fine; the trilogy would only overlap with a couple Deep Space Nine stories that give no sense of the greater galactic situation. Or, though this would require more changes, what if the whole thing took place in the run-up to The Fall, thus neatly explaining why Ishan's more militaristic message might be appealing to the Federation? But placing it here makes no sense.
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Stevil2001 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2023 |
Okay, so here we have another Prometheus novel that felt like it could have been a third of a novel. Let's tackle this one a bit differently. I want to move through it in order, not quite chapter-by-chapter, but significant chapter by significant chapter.
  • Chapter 2: A recap of where we're at so far, which is mostly characters talking about how they haven't actually learned anything yet.
  • Chapter 4: A chapter set on the Klingon ship. On the one hand, these kind of feel like distractions; on the other hand, they almost read like they're by a different writer(s) to the rest of the book, because these characters actually have personalities and are trying to do things that bring them into conflict with one another.
  • Chapter 5: For some reason, Lwaxana Troi is in this book.
  • Chapter 6: The Klingon High Council meets to complain about how little is happening in this book.
  • Chapter 7: One of the trilogy's ongoing subplots is about how women shouldn't be just having casual but enthusiastic sex all the time.
  • Chapter 12: One of the very annoying things in the first book were a large number of chapters where boring people did boring things and then at the end they all blew up. Here's another one, alas, but thankfully it's the only one in this book.
  • Chapter 13: The Klingon High Council meets to have the same conversation over again as in chapter 6. I don't think you need either of these two chapters, but you certainly didn't need both of them.
  • Chapter 14: Over 150 pages into the second book in this trilogy, Captain Adams finally makes an interesting decision. The Klingon captain, Kromm, decides he is going to bombard innocent civilians in order to get some answers. Adams places Prometheus between the Bortas and the planet to stop him. How is Adams going to deescalate this situation and save the innocent civilians?
  • Chapter 15: Don't worry, Captain Adams is in no danger of joining the pantheon of clever Star Trek captains. The showdown fizzles out when Lwaxana on Earth calls in a favor from Picard who calls in a favor from Worf who calls in a favor from Martok who orders Kromm to stand down. And that's it.
  • Chapter 18: Another meeting where people complain about how little has happened, but in this case it's the Federation Council. So many interminable meeting scenes in these books.
  • Chapter 19: Finally the characters figure out something that's been obvious the entire book, which is that some kind of external influence is making everyone more aggressive and xenophobic.
  • Chapter 22: Lwaxana figures out that what's happening now is linked to the disappearance of the Valiant a century ago. I am not sure why she is making every significant plot breakthrough and not our supposed main characters.
  • Chapters 24-5: The main characters do a lot of technobabble to figure out where the crashed Valiant is. It's a very undramatic way to climax your novel.
  • Chapter 27: Spock is the one who makes a key breakthrough in the subplot on the Klingon ship.
  • Chapter 30: Spock figures out that the cause of everything here is the entity from "Day of the Dove." This is doubly frustrating: one, the attentive reader could have figured this out six hundred pages ago from the prologue to the first book, and two, it's yet another breakthrough by literally anyone other than the crew of the Prometheus.
And that's it, that's the book. A bunch of meetings, the main characters doing almost nothing, the Klingons, Spock, and Lwaxana Troi being responsible for most of what does happen. It could have been one-third as long.

Continuity Notes:
  • Not as reference-heavy as the first book, but the book does recap what we learned about the "Day of the Dove" entity from The Q Continuum, even carrying over the name that book gave it, (*).
Stray Observations:
  • Not sure what I think of a book whose moral is clearly "don't be a xenophobe" also having one of its few significant breakthroughs coming from gratuitous torture.
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Stevil2001 | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 13, 2023 |
Back in 2018, Big Finish Productions released an audiobook of this novel read by Alec Newman, which I reviewed for Unreality SF. I did not like it very much, either the novel qua novel or as an audiobook. But I wanted to actually read the book in its chronological context, so here I am giving it a second go.

It is a bit odd reading it here; it picks up right from The Fall: Peaceable Kingdoms. That novel ended on 27 October with zh'Tarash being elected president of the Federation; this opens on 29 October with her inaugural speech. But that book also ended as a sort of send-off to the political thriller aspects of Star Trek novels and continuous galactic crises... and this book plunges us straight into another political thriller and galactic crisis. Alien terrorists are suicide bombing Federation (and, later, Klingon) facilities in what surely must be an even less subtle 9/11 allegory than Enterprise's Xindi arc.

So if you have space politics fatigue when it comes to Star Trek novels, this is not the one for you... On top of that, the space politics are not very interesting. There are occasional chapters devoted to what the Klingon High Council or Federation Council is deliberating; this is pretty much never interesting, as characters we don't care about have conversations about things we already know. The scenes seem primarily used to make it clear that the authors did indeed read Articles of the Federation, but serve no real purpose in the actual story.

That is a criticism you could aim, in fact, at a significant portion of this book. The authors love to write chapters about irrelevant characters learning or doing things (e.g., a retired Romulan spy, a sneaky Ferengi, Martok, twice Miradorn mercenaries, a Federation communications office on a starbase); these characters are pretty much never interesting. Meanwhile, the actual main characters don't seem to do very much at all. Captain Adams of the Prometheus talks to Ro on DS9 about the inauguration... but why? A group of Prometheus characters watch Quark dither with a broken viewscreen... but why? I think you could lop the first seventy-seven pages off this book and begin with the current chapter seven, and no one would have even noticed. Even after that point, it drags. Basically one thing of importance happens in this book: the Prometheus does some investigating, and some members of its crew are captured, and they get away and learn one interesting thing in the process. That's a few chapters, not an almost 400-page novel.

Part of the issue seems to be that the writers of the book aren't quite sure what it wants to be. Is the Prometheus trilogy a single story about a galactic crisis? Or the pilot for an ongoing set of adventures about the USS Prometheus? (Similar to how the first four New Frontier novels worked.) If it's the former, the scenes of characters around the galaxy kind of make sense... but the scenes of the Prometheus crew do not, as they don't really add anything to the story. We learn about the tactical officer's love life, and the engineer's heritage, and how one guy really likes juice, and so on. But if this is meant to set up the cast of the Prometheus as a ship, it fails there because these people are utterly uninteresting as characters, and because nothing they do really seems to matter.

I was vaguely hopeful that divorced from Alec Newman's plodding, mispronunciation-filled reading I might like this more... but to be honest, I didn't think I would, and I didn't. The main benefit of reading it myself is that it didn't take me eleven hours to get through it.

Continuity Notes:
  • The book often reads like it was written by Roy Thomas, with the characters taking pains to think about or mention totally irrelevant continuity points, like the Ferengi on Alpha Eridani II who has to think about the fact that before the planet became a Romulan subject world, it was an Earth colony terrorized by the Redjac entity because that was mentioned in "Wolf in the Fold."
  • There are a lot of deep cuts here. When O'Brien meets the Prometheus's Kirk-descended chief engineer, he mentions that another Kirk descendant once served on DS9, referring to a one-off Malibu comic from twenty years prior.
Other Notes:
  • Titan changed the cover from its original German publication, replacing the image of the Prometheus with a less dynamic one, but thankfully getting rid the original's silly flaming logo. (Though the new logo is a very boring one.) Weirdly, the Big Finish audiobook reverts to the German cover and logo.
  • Alexander Rozkenko is in this book. I couldn't tell you why; he doesn't do anything. Also the authors seem to think that the Federation ambassador to the Klingons is someone who works for the Klingons.
  • On top of that, Spock is here too. But, again, who knows why.
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Stevil2001 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 24, 2023 |

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Werke
31
Auch von
19
Mitglieder
266
Beliebtheit
#86,736
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
8
ISBNs
46
Sprachen
1

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