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niko: (Drom - Never Easy)
Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010 01:52 am

Fandom: Andromeda

Notes: This is actually sort of complete, in terms of hitting the beats I wanted to hit, but it's so clunky and awkward.  I open it and poke at it every once in a while, but can't seem to get interested enough to rework it the way it needs.  I give up.  This is officially as good as it's ever going to get. :)

This was going to be a [livejournal.com profile] fic_on_demand  response to an older, previously fulfilled request that caught my eye.  The prompt was:  "Dylan contemplates Gaheris's direct descendant who nows serves under his command, and realizes that it does bother him a tad."

 

Snip )
niko: (Default)
Friday, November 2nd, 2007 07:45 pm

I haven't done any "real" writing in years, and every time I try to get back into it, I get all tangled up in mechanics and give us after a sentence or two.  So.  Making a small effort this month to participate in mini-nano.  I'm forcing myself to *Not. Care.* if stuff sucks, because otherwise, I'll never continue.  

Of course, I got off to a rousing start by missing the first day, but here's two drabbles to make up for it. 

Day 1 (belated) - Andromeda drabble )

 

Day 2 - Andromeda drabble )
niko: (Nami)
Thursday, February 15th, 2007 10:11 pm

Posting as part of [livejournal.com profile] wip_amnesty weekend.  

Fandom:  Andromeda
Untitled, Gen
Missing scene-ish for The Widening Gyre.

I think from the end that I was aiming for this to pursue some fix for Beka never really having any on-screen bonding moments with Harper during the magog larvae arc, but it didn't go.  I rather like the Tyr POV in this bit, though.

Read more... )
niko: (Default)
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2004 10:04 pm

So, I went into the latest Andromeda book (Waystation, by Steven McDonald) with a little trepidation. The first Drom book was an easy win because it visited pre-drom backstory (always a good thing) and was written by an author I'd heard good things about. The second one was an easy win because, hey!, written by a series writer. This was the first book that a) I wasn't familiar with the author, and b) was firmly set in the post-RHW Drom-verse. Oh, and c) while I was waiting to buy the book, I turned to a random page and ended up at a scene where Dylan hauls off and slaps Beka over something. Given (a) and (b), this briefly read moment didn't give me stellar confidence that the author knew these characters. :) (Happily, there was a reason for the scene in context, and Dylan wasn't just being written as an ass for no reason. Yay! :) )

I have to say, I was pleasantly surprised. Waystation offers a solid "coulda-been-an-episode" plot with some quite successful character- and universe-building elements. The focus of the book is primarily on Trance (gold, although purple-girl puts in an appearance or two) and visits some of my favorite territory for Dylan: finding out about the shadowy corners that existed in the original Commonwealth. Gold Trance is handled well, and it's refreshing to get inside her head and not have all the mystical mumbo-jumbo coming out of it...I feel like I know the character better now, although I'm still not sure that she could ever work as well as the real Trance.  Dylan is not drawn in demigod mode, although he tossed around "It's never easy" too much for my taste. (That phrase just rubs salt in the wound for me every single time.) The rest of our main cast all act and sound right in their supporting roles and get plenty of "screen time", avoiding the "Trance-and-Dylan" show that the tv series has become.  I also quite liked a couple original characters who joined Andromeda's crew for this episode.  Much of the action of the book takes place on board Andromeda, so adding new folks into the mix kept the witty banter from getting too stale.

niko: (Default)
Thursday, December 4th, 2003 05:29 pm
Well, here's my first blog. Wheeee! :)

I decided to start blogging as a way to record commentary of books, movies, etc. I learned long ago that most of my friends and family have no interest in the same things I enjoy, so I've stopped trying to share with them. And I usually don't have deep enough thoughts to submit them in a more "official" BBS or newsgroup setting. This'll give me a place to prattle without the pressure to be interesting or worthwhile.

So, right now, I'm reading The Broken Places by Ethlie Ann Vare and Daniel Morris. It's a TV tie-in to what used to be a favorite show of mine, Andromeda. The show sucks now, and I'm not usually jazzed by tie-in novels, but I really enjoyed the first Drom book (Destruction of Illusions by Keith R.A. DeCandido) and Ethlie was a writer when the show was good, so this title was worth a look.

I'm liking it very much. As is to be expected, the character's voices are spot on, and that's one of the chief reasons to read this sort of book, I think - to be able to "watch" the story play out in your head complete with the actors you're so familiar with. At least that's why I enjoy it. Not that the plot is incidental or anything, but it's difficult to look at that objectively. Would the plot be good without the Andromeda ties? No idea. But it's certainly good at capturing what made Andromeda good in the first place: witty, intelligent characters, each with his/her own dysfunctional charm, and a sci-fi setup that's got some meat to it.