Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Tears of the Singers
The Tears of the Singers | Melinda Snodgrass
3 posts | 4 read | 3 to read
The Tears Of The Singers Captain Kirk and the U.S.S Enterprise join the Klingons to avert disaster in the Taygeta V system -- where a time/space warp has swallowed a spaceship without a trace. Spock suspects a link between the anomaly and the inhabitants of Taygeta, semi-aquatic creatures killed for the jewel-like tears secreted at the moment of death. But a mutinous Klingon officer threatens the vital mission, as a desperate Kirk and Spock race to save the Taygetians, the Federation -- and the entire universe!
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Chittavrtti
The Tears of the Singers | Melinda Snodgrass
post image

I enjoyed the return of Kor and a bit of a different perspective of Kirk. Could have done with less of the “feisty” but fragile women motif though. Copyright for this story is 1984. According to the author note this is the only book Melinda Snodgrass wrote in the series. She then began scriptwriting for the New Generation.

2 likes1 stack add
review
RamsFan1963
The Tears of the Singers | Melinda Snodgrass
post image
Mehso-so

Like the TV series, some Star Trek books are great, some are meh. This is definitely meh. I appreciate the spotlight on Uhura, but at times it felt like I was reading a romance novel, her relationship was so sappy and coy. Plus, anyone who's seen one episode of ST knows what usually happens to the love interests of any of the main characters. 3 💥💥💥 out of 5

blurb
Taayasbooks
The Tears of the Singers | Melinda Snodgrass

Ah, that's how Spock recognized the songs of humpbacks. He had encountered species singing like them earlier. Quite interesting. I'd have loved if there had been some meta about the link between the book and the later movie. Or something like 'That must be the reason why those species sound similar, Captain. This probe seems to communicate with all of them over a great distance.'
Still very interesting.

3 likes1 stack add