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Unworthy: Star Trek: Voyager
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Unworthy: Star Trek: Voyager
Unavailable
Unworthy: Star Trek: Voyager
Ebook402 pages4 hours

Unworthy: Star Trek: Voyager

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this ebook

In the climactic conclusion to the Star Trek: Destinytrilogy the greatest menace to the galaxy, the Borg, were absorbed into the Caeliar gestalt -- with one exception, Seven of Nine, who finds herself trapped in a half existence, neither drone nor human. Seven agrees to join Chakotay, the former captain of the USS Voyager, to rendezvous with the ships that Starfleet Command has sent into the Delta Quadrant and see if they can solve the mystery of the Caeliar's disappearance. In a region of space which has lived in fear of instant annihilation, Voyager is charged with reaching out to possible allies and resolving old enmities. But these are not the friendly stars of the Federation, and out here the unknown and the unexpected cannot be dealt with by standard Starfleet protocols.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 11, 2012
ISBN9781471109300
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Unworthy: Star Trek: Voyager
Author

Kirsten Beyer

Kirsten Beyer was a cocreator of the acclaimed hit Paramount+ series Star Trek: Picard, where she served as writer and supervising producer for season one and a coexecutive producer for season two. She has also written and produced Star Trek: Discovery and is currently a coexecutive producer on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. She is the New York Times bestselling author of the last ten Star Trek: Voyager novels, including 2020’s To Lose the Earth, for which she was the narrator of the audiobook edition. She contributed the short story “Isabo’s Shirt” to Star Trek: Voyager: Distant Shores Anthology. In 2006, Kirsten appeared at Hollywood’s Unknown Theater in their productions of Johnson Over Jordan, This Old Planet, and Harold Pinter’s The Hothouse, which the Los Angeles Times called “unmissable.” She lives in Los Angeles.

Read more from Kirsten Beyer

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Reviews for Unworthy

Rating: 4.073529705882352 out of 5 stars
4/5

34 ratings6 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    What do you call a reboot that gets rebooted? That's what this book was for the Voyager novel series.The Borg have been neutralized, again, (and maybe only for the moment? Are TPTB really gonna totally get rid of one of their best and most creepy villain ever?) And so Voyager and a bunch of other ships go back into the Delta Quadrant. They have all the new toys. Slipstream drives, and a whole ship that can be crewed with holograms, the Galen.Honestly, the characters on Voyager and on Galen (including Reginald Barclay on the Galen) were my favorite, well, they andthe stowaways from the Torres family.I think that they have done a great job combining the TV Voyager characters, like Paris, Kim, Torres,with the new characters like Voyager's new Captain, and the Admiral of the fleet, and even a character from a different Star Trek Original Novel Series, the SCE series, Nancy Conlan.The plots and subplots aren't too surprising. They stumble upon the Indign, a cooperative species that has quite the story. They also bump into Species 8472 (Really, isn't the Delta Quadrant bigger than a bread box?) I wasn't surprised by most of the twist, but, it was a well written and well plotted book that was a fun and quick read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book starts Voyager's second journey into the Delta Quadrant. Beyer does not limit herself to that which TV shows are limited to. Unworthy is more imaginative than the show could have been in many ways, but the pace is slow at times.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Much better than the last one, glad I kept on with these. I enjoy the voyager fleet concept.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a good book straight forward story an enemy that needs to be overcome overall not too complex for a star trek book but that can be a good thing and I liked to see how the story developed. A good book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This exciting continuation of the Star Trek world is fun and fresh without flitting into obnoxious alternate realities or retreating behind established relationships and plots.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It's been a long time since I have read a new Star Trek book but I could not pass up on this one because I always wondered what happened to the crew of Voyager after they returned to Earth. Little did I know Beyer had written Star Trek Voyager: Full Circle which I believe is the book right before Unworthy. Since I have not read Full Circle some things were a little confusing for me but you can still follow the story and really get pulled in. It was sad to read about a Voyager journey without Janeway captaining the ship but most of the original crew makes an appearance in this book. I loved getting little glimpses of little Miral and seeing the old crew come together again in the return to the Delta Quadrant. We even see a brief appearance of Valerie Archer from species 8472. The book does leave you hanging a little to see if Paris and Kim can iron out their differences. There was not as much action as in the previous Star Trek books I have read but this was still an enjoyable read. I will definitely be looking for the next book to find out what happens to the beefed up holographic medical assistant that is now rogue in the Delta Quadrant.