David R. George's Crucible Trilogy explores the legacy of one pivotal, crucial moment in the lives of the men at the heart of Star Trek - what led them to it, and to each other, and how their destinies were intertwined. For Doctor Leonard McCoy, life takes two paradoxically divergent paths. In one, displaced in time, he saves a woman from dying in a traffice accident, and in doing so alters Earth's history. Stranded in the past, he struggles to find a way back to his own century. But living an existence he was not meant to, he will eventually have to move on, and ultimately face the shadows born of his lost life. In the other, he is prevented from saving the woman's life, allowing Earth's history to remain unchanged. Returning to the present, he is nonetheless haunted by the echoes of an existence he never lived, and by fears which will bring him full circle to the shadows he never faced.
DAVID R. GEORGE III wrote the Crucible trilogy for Star Trek's 40th anniversary as well as Olympus Descending for Worlds of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Volume Three. He previously visited DS9 in the novels The 34th Rule, set during the timeframe of the series, and in Twilight, set after the finale. His other Star Trek contributions include a first season Voyager episode, "Prime Factors," and one of the Lost Era books, Serpents Among the Ruins, which hit the New York Times bestseller list in Fall, 2003. Currently he is writing a novella for Star Trek: Myriad Universes: Shattered Light, coming in December, 2010, from Gallery Books.
In his almost nonexistent spare time, David enjoys trying his hand at new experiences, from skydiving to auditioning--with his lovely wife, Karen--for "The New Newlywed Game", from hiking a glacier in Alaska to belly dancing in Tunisia, from ocean kayaking in Mexico to having dinner at an actual captain's table somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Recently, he performed his first wedding ceremony--which he and Karen also wrote--marrying their friends Jen and Ryan Van Riper. David believes that the world is a wide, wondrous place, with exciting adventures waiting around just about every corner.
He remains free on his own recognizance.
评分
评分
评分
评分
我通常对这种以异域风光为背景的故事不太感冒,总觉得容易流于表面,但这本书处理人际关系的深度实在令人惊喜。主角伊莎贝拉与她团队中那位沉默寡言的向导之间的微妙关系,是贯穿全书的一条暗线。他们之间没有刻意的浪漫化处理,更多的是基于对彼此专业能力和生存本能的尊重与依赖。那位向导,他似乎对丛林有着一种近乎本能的理解,远超任何地图或科学仪器能够提供的知识。他代表了另一种形式的“科学”——植根于世世代代的经验传承。当故事进入高潮,涉及到团队内部信任危机和外部势力的干预时,正是这种建立在互相试探基础上的信任,成为了他们能否全身而退的关键。角色塑造立体且充满灰色地带,没有绝对的好人或坏人,每个人都有自己的动机和盲区。
评分这本书的结构布局是典型的“包裹式”设计,每一个阶段的发现都导向更深层的谜团,像剥洋葱一样,每剥开一层,露出的核心都比想象中更令人不安。它巧妙地融合了冒险、神秘学元素和严肃的社会批判。有一段情节涉及到主角为了获取一件关键文物而不得不面对的道德困境——是保护人类研究的成果,还是尊重当地社群的信仰和领地——这个抉择展现了现代探险家身份的复杂性。作者没有给出简单的答案,而是将选择的重压直接放在了读者心上。阅读体验是一种持续的、高强度的智力投入,你需要时刻关注那些看似不经意的环境细节,因为它们很可能就是解开下一重谜团的钥匙。总的来说,这是一部需要你全神贯注去阅读,并且绝对值得你付出精力的作品,它在提供肾上腺素飙升的刺激之余,留下了悠长的回味。
评分这本关于一位年轻的植物学家在南美洲亚马逊雨林深处探索古老文明遗迹的冒险故事,简直让人欲罢不能。作者对于雨林的描写细致入微,你仿佛能闻到潮湿的泥土和腐烂植被的气味,感受到那种令人窒息的闷热和无处不在的生命力。主角伊莎贝拉的内心挣扎和成长刻画得极为深刻,她不仅要面对外部环境的重重危险——那些奇特的、从未被记载过的动植物,还有隐藏在丛林阴影中的神秘部落的警惕——更要处理自己对过去创伤的逃避。当她偶然发现那些似乎是某种失落文明留下的、被藤蔓缠绕的巨型石雕时,故事的基调陡然转变,从纯粹的自然探险变成了对历史真相的追寻。那种历史的厚重感和未知的恐惧交织在一起,让人手心冒汗。尤其喜欢作者处理她与当地向导之间的关系,那种文化冲突与相互依赖的张力,处理得非常微妙且真实,没有落入俗套的英雄主义叙事,而是展现了真正的跨文化理解的艰难与必要。
评分我必须说,这本书的叙事节奏处理得极其高明,它像一条蜿蜒的河流,时而平静舒缓,让我们沉浸在对植物学知识的探讨中,时而又突然激流勇进,将角色抛入生死攸关的境地。这本书的哲学思辨性也远超一般的类型小说。它不断地叩问“文明”的定义。那些在现代社会眼中被视为“原始”的社群,他们与自然和谐共存的模式,与主角所代表的、追求征服和记录的西方科学理性之间,形成了强烈的对比和反思。有一场戏,主角为了拯救一位受伤的同伴,不得不违背她最初的研究伦理,去寻求一个被她先前排斥的草药师的帮助,这个情节的转折点处理得非常精彩,体现了知识与智慧、理性与经验之间的复杂权衡。整体读下来,感觉像经历了一场漫长的、充满顿悟的旅程,读完后,我对“进步”这个词汇有了全新的审视。
评分这本书的文笔,老实说,相当有雕琢感,但并非矫揉造作,而是恰到好处地烘托出那种秘境的疏离感和历史的沧桑感。它大量运用了感官描写,让我深刻体会到探索的艰辛。不仅仅是视觉上的奇异生物,还有听觉上的寂静与突兀的兽吼,嗅觉上的腐朽与芬芳的混合体。我特别欣赏作者在处理时间跨度上的技巧。故事在伊莎贝拉的现在时叙事和她通过解读古代壁画所还原的过去场景之间,进行了流畅的切换。这种并行的叙事结构,使得故事的悬念层层递进,我们不仅好奇她接下来会遇到什么,也对那个消失的族群的命运充满了探究的欲望。虽然部分考古学的细节描述略显学术化,但正是这些扎实的背景支撑,让整个探险显得有血有肉,而不是空泛的幻想。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有