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| Gateways #7: What Lay Beyond (Star Trek) | 
| Authors: Diane Carey, Peter David, Keith R. A. Decandido, Christie Golden, Robert Greenberger, Susan Wright Publisher: Star Trek Category: Book
List Price: $6.99 Buy Used: $0.65 You Save: $6.34 (91%)
New (5) from $11.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 29 reviews Sales Rank: 682785
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 488 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.2 x 1.2
ISBN: 0743456831 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.0876208 EAN: 9780743456838 ASIN: 0743456831
Publication Date: October 1, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Satisfaction Guaranteed. SAME DAY SHIPPING. X-Library Book with usual markings/attachments. Normal shelf and display wear.
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Product Description Created by the ancient Iconians, the Gateways offer instantaneous transport across unimaginable distances. Throughout the known galaxy, the sudden reactivation of the Gateways has destabilized interstellar relations -- and forced several of Starfleet's finest commanders to leap through separate Gateways into the unknown.
Captain James T. Kirk of Star Trek, The Original Series. Captain Jean-Luc Picard of Star Trek: The Next Generation (R). Colonel Kira Nerys of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (R). Captain Kathryn Janeway of Star Trek: Voyager (R). Captains Calhoun and Shelby of Star Trek: New Frontier . Captain Nick Keller of Star Trek: New Earth.
All of these heroes have taken the ultimate gamble: hurling themselves through a Gateway without any forewarning of what lay beyond. Now each must face his or her own unique challenge, while struggling to find a way back to the ships and homes left behind....
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| Customer Reviews: Read 24 more reviews...
Seriously disappointing. June 7, 2008 When one creates a seven-book series, the first six books of which end on cliffhangers as the main characters are lost through hyper-technological gateways, to be concluded in book seven, the only possible justification for doing so (from an artistic standpoint, as opposed to a "this is a cheap way to sell an extra book" standpoint) is if the last book ties the first six stories all together, with the six heros brought together through space and time for an otherwise-impossible joint venture, something like the various episodes of "Dr. Who" in which the multiple incarnations of The Doctor travel though time to team up in complex, fan-pleasing stories.
This series does not do that. Book seven is simply a compendium of six conclusions to six separate stories; there is no crossover at all except for the very slight connection between the Next Generation, DS9 and New Frontier series given that those are all more or less temporally co-located. But their respective captains do NOT end in the same place, working together in a multi-series crossover. There is no real reason why this was not a six-book series with each book fifty pages longer, as it could easily have been, except, as I say, this made for a cheap excuse to sell an extra book. The first six books in the series had no endings; this book is simply a collection of endings. If you haven't read all of the previous books in the series (and fairly recently, at that) it will make no sense. And none of the previous books can stand alone; without this book, they are all without value. My advice is to buy whichever of the first six books seem interesting, and this one, and read only the ending to that story immediately after reading the previous book. Or better yet, skip the entire series as a worthless piece of pushy salesmanship with no literary merit. The writing isn't bad, but the cheesy design of the series is annoying enough to make it worth boycotting.
A cheap shot by the publisher August 14, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I gave this book a low mark not because of the stories, but because of the format and that this is a cheap trick to sell an extra book.
This is the 7th of a set - not a series, but a set - of books about the Ionian-built gateways. I have not problems with the actual stories. They are good, well-written, Star Trek fare, spanning all televised series and the later book series that developed.
What really ticks me off is that none of the stories are complete. They are all continued and reach their conclusions in separate sections of this book. So what this book is is the final chapters of 6 other books.
This book does not stand alone in any way, nor does it tie the other stories together. Why not just conclude each book in the set as it was written!
If you have read any of volumes 1-6 of this set you will need to read this one to find out how it ends.
I would buy it used or check it out from the library, though, just to send the publisher a message.
Story-GOOD.... Extra Book-BAD June 22, 2004 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I didn't get into the Gateways series until this book was out in paperback, so I didn't have the continuity problems some others had.The stories (I read TNG, DS9, NF, and VOY) are great with TNG's being the best. However there was ABSOLUTELY NO reason for this last book. Every one of the conclusions in this book could have been added to the end of their original books. Being each ending was only about an extra couple of chapters. One thing I was quite disappointed about upon receiving the book was that I originally thought that the last book would be some kind of compilation story where somehow the different crews interact in some manner. Instead the book is not one story to be read from cover to cover, but a compilation of a bunch of endings to the previous stories. One thing readers should know about Gateways is that if you don't plan to read more than 2 of them you probably shouldn't read any of them unless you are comfortable with throwing away your money on the last book simply for two more chapters.
can be skipped without losing continuity April 19, 2004 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Gateways What Lay Beyond is a compilation of the conclusions to all of the Star Trek Gateways series. Personally I only read "Horn and Ivory" which is the conclusion to the Deep Space Nine Gateways series. There is nothing astounding to the conclusion. First of all, I will warn everyone that spoilers follow. So stop reading now if you want don't want to know what happens. The whole story is focused on Kira, none of the other DS9 crew plays a role. In the last Gateways book, we find Kira stranded on a deserted planet in the Delta Quadrant dieing of theta radiation poisoning and Taranatar recovering from a brutal fight with a Hirogen. We also know that at the end of the last Gateways book, Kira staggers into a gateway that keeps flashing between two places. We would expect something to happen like her being returned to DS9 or Bajor but that's not quite what happens. After staggering into the Gateway, Kira is transported to a familiar planet 30,000 years in the past. The rest of the story has nothing to do with solving the mystery of the Gateways, it only opens up more questions. Not until the final chapter do we find out what happened with the evacuation. It's a nice litte story, but you can easily skip it and go on to the Deep Space Nine Gamma series.
DS9: "Horn and Ivory": Kira's conclusion. February 5, 2004 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
To be fair this is a rating of only one of the stories in the book. It is "Horn and Ivory", the conclusion of the DS9 Season 8 Relaunch book "Demons of Air and Darkness" (also book 4 of the Gateways septuplet).I agree the marketing scheme of making dedicated readers buy the hardcover of this 7th book simply because it wraps up any (and every) one of the first 6 books is deceitful. Myself having read only the DS9 Gateway book as part of the relaunch, I was angered at the idea. Luckily, if you are reading this review, you no longer have to buy the hardcover, but can settle for the cheap paperback. Therefore, my review takes that into consideration. I'll say that reading Book 4 and its conclusion in this book raised a few questions that I wonder as to whether or not they are solved/explained in the others Gateway books. I deem they probably are, and for that reason, perhaps buying this book simply for one book's conclusion rather than 6, is an incentive to go read the other books. Many have said the DS9 story is one of the best, and indeed I found it was excellent, but in time I may go back to read the other Gateway books. As it is, this is a review for "Horn and Ivory" by the marvelous deCandido. At the conclusion of "Demons of Air and Darkness", Kira steps through a Gateway to be with what she believes are the Prophets. Where does it take her? Well of course it sends her back 30,000 years to a time of Bajor's past before the uniting of the world. At first, I did not realize that the entire sequel was only about Kira. By the time I had finished the short story, I was glad it was, because deCandido does the best job portraying Kira that I've read so far. You really start to understand her and feel what she feels. You get to understand Kira's nostalgia (of sorts) for the days of the Resistance, but more importantly you get to see her committed to being a good commander. The plot. At first I was worried why we were in the old days, but slowly I got heavily involved into it and realized that where Kira had ended up had ties to her real life. The book is about Kira rediscovering herself and understanding where she is in her life and coming to terms with what she's lost. At its base, the book asks: do you give up, or go on. The author certainly knows Kira well enough to answer the question for her, and I was glad watching her grow. It was also wonderful getting to read about Bajor's fragile past before its unification and before the Prophets were worshipped by the majority of Bajor. Keith did an excellent job with this novel since to me it really didn't feel like a Trek novel or a DS9 novel, but more of a Medieval-type story with Kira thrust into it. Yet it works nicely somehow, and for that I give the book 4 stars. I couldn't give it 5 because though it does a good job, it deals only with Kira and none of the other DS9 crew. Only Garak's book, "A Stitch in Time" managed to pull off writing about one main DS9 character without becoming nostalgic for the other characters. So there you have my brief review for what I consider to be Episode 6 of the DS9 Season 8 Relaunch novels. I read "Demons of Air and Darkness" in under two days, and immediately wanted to read the conclusion in this book. Thus my review is only for the DS9 Kira story, "Horn and Ivory" and not as a conclusion to the Gateway septuplet. If you read "Demons of Air and Darkness" and tolerate or love Kira and want to know what happens to her at the end of that book, you'll want to read her conclusion. If you have not read "Demons of Air and Darkness", do not read "Horn and Ivory" as it does not stand well on its own (as it is not meant to!).
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