Star Trek - Enterprise 2
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Beschreibung
Beiträge
DNF: This story was - I am sorry - boring, at least to the point, where I quit (a bit more than one third in). First of all, I HATE Section 31 and spy stuff. I'm sorry, I just find it boring. (Much like I find most things that are called action boring. I prefer character studies, sociological stuff, actual exploration, ... basically Season 1 and 2 of Enterprise over S 3 and 4, though 4 was a lot better than three.) (Why am I telling you this? Well, so that you know which point my review is coming from and if you can relate, or if you, in fact, enjoy the stuff I dislike.) Anyway, there was just so much thinking about tactics and undercover missions and neither actual character depth nor anything happening, that I gave up. Not to mention that this makes the alliance that's growing at this point, look very bad. I mean, some people from ally 1 get abducted and ally 2 (Earth) says 'Oh well, we can't risk doing something about it, this could destroy the alliance'. Like ... HOW?! Illogical. In fact, this is a great foundation for an alliance, because if ONE ally is threatened or hurt, it hurts the organisation as a whole. And what better way to start one than to stand up for one another? So ... we have a lot of illogical nonsense, an organisation that I hate (S31) and a plot that doesn't give anything to work with. And the few character moments are even contradictory. Okay, most neurotypical humans are ... not understandable at all. But those few character moments feature T'Pol, the ONE character that's supposed to be relatable for neurodiverse people thanks to Vulcans being neurodiverse coded. And what do they do? They write her like a massively neurotypical human. Yeah, this book was not for me and I gave up, because I was so desinterested that I began procrastinating reading by doing household chores.
Beschreibung
Beiträge
DNF: This story was - I am sorry - boring, at least to the point, where I quit (a bit more than one third in). First of all, I HATE Section 31 and spy stuff. I'm sorry, I just find it boring. (Much like I find most things that are called action boring. I prefer character studies, sociological stuff, actual exploration, ... basically Season 1 and 2 of Enterprise over S 3 and 4, though 4 was a lot better than three.) (Why am I telling you this? Well, so that you know which point my review is coming from and if you can relate, or if you, in fact, enjoy the stuff I dislike.) Anyway, there was just so much thinking about tactics and undercover missions and neither actual character depth nor anything happening, that I gave up. Not to mention that this makes the alliance that's growing at this point, look very bad. I mean, some people from ally 1 get abducted and ally 2 (Earth) says 'Oh well, we can't risk doing something about it, this could destroy the alliance'. Like ... HOW?! Illogical. In fact, this is a great foundation for an alliance, because if ONE ally is threatened or hurt, it hurts the organisation as a whole. And what better way to start one than to stand up for one another? So ... we have a lot of illogical nonsense, an organisation that I hate (S31) and a plot that doesn't give anything to work with. And the few character moments are even contradictory. Okay, most neurotypical humans are ... not understandable at all. But those few character moments feature T'Pol, the ONE character that's supposed to be relatable for neurodiverse people thanks to Vulcans being neurodiverse coded. And what do they do? They write her like a massively neurotypical human. Yeah, this book was not for me and I gave up, because I was so desinterested that I began procrastinating reading by doing household chores.