Dive back into David Mack’s Dark Arts series with this novelette set prior to the events of The Iron Codex.
This book has everything you want from a Star Trek story – true-crime podcasting, terms like “ghosting” and “Googling,” and of course Skype. Wait a minute…
Dust off your VCR, grab that unmarked tape, and press Play. You’re about to get… what’s that?… The tape is extinct? How does a tape go extinct? So is it a DVD now?… No, it’s a… what?!
Question: How many smelters could a smelter melter melt if a smelter melter could melt smelters?
Answer: As many smelters as a smelter melter could melt if a smelter melter could melt smelters.
Picard and Riker have always worked well together. So what happened? Did the promotion to Admiral get to Riker’s head? I mean, sort of, I guess… But how is Picard supposed to stop his old protege when he’s always a step (or more) behind?
The end of Narnia is told in this, the seventh published and last chronological, tale in the Chronic-WHAT?!-cles of Narnia.
Captain Garrett of the Enterprise-C on the cover? Great! A Cardassian image also on the cover? This is going to be epic! Or is it?
A deadly virus running rampant and killing almost everyone who comes into contact with it. Scientists believe they’ve got a way to contain it, but the President won’t make the call. And now, the coronavirus, er, Andromeda Strain may be spreading even further!
The creation of Narnia is told in this, the sixth published but first chronological, tale in the Chronic-WHAT?!-cles of Narnia. It is a tale of magic, adventure, and friendship.
The Chronic-WHAT?!-cles of Narnia continues with this lovely entry taking place… not in Narnia. Featuring such favored elements of children’s literature as horse theft, kidnapping, running away, doing battle, and of course slavery.
