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Complete Cosmos - Discovery Into Deep Space
Four episodes from the award-winning series. Includes: Man In Space - Space Frontier, High Life, Where Next. Pioneers - Breakthrough, Earth Patrol, Robots. Cosmic Focus - Hubble's Eye, Light Fantastic, Milky Way. Deep Space - Infinity, Big Bang, Big Crunch, Black Holes, Dark Matter.
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£13.59
at choicesdirect.com
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BECKMANN VISUAL PUBLISHING The Complete Cosmos - Discovery Into Deep Space [1998]
Release Date: 2000-09-18, Rating Exempt,
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£15.99
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Deep Space
The NASA Mission Reports author: ; publisher: Apogee Books
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£22.95
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Pocket Books Hollow Men (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 304, Paperback, Pocket Books
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£5.59
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Apogee Books Deep Space
Pages: 96, Paperback, Apogee Books
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£6.95
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J.M. Dillard Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Emissary
Commanded by an embittered Starfleet officer and populated by a myriad of exotic aliens, the mysterious space station known as Deep Space Nine hovers on the edge...
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Availability: yes
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£7.10
at Audible UK
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Dafydd ab Hugh Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Fallen Heroes
When a troop of alien warriors demands the return of an imprisoned comrade - a prisoner no one on Deep Space Nine knows anything about...
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£6.71
at Audible UK
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Ira Steven Behr and Robert Hewitt Wolfe Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Legends of the Ferengi
"Once you have their money, never give it back." "Anything worth doing is worth doing for money." For centuries these and the other famous Ferengi "Rules of Acquisition"...
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Availability: yes
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£4.92
at Audible UK
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Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Millennium #1: The Fall of Terok Nor
Bajor is in flames. The corridors of Terok Nor echo with the sounds of battle. It is the end of the Cardassian Occupation...
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£7.48
at Audible UK
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Armin Shimerman and David R. George lll Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: The 34th Rule
For once, business is going well for Quark, not that anyone on Deep Space Nine truly appreciates his genius for finding profit...
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£4.37
at Audible UK
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K.W. Jeter Star Trek, Deep Space Nine: Warped
Political tensions on Bajor are once again on the rise, and the various factions may soon come to open conflict. In addition, a series of murders...
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£6.71
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Complete Cosmos - The Solar System/ Discovery Into Deep Space
Eight episodes from the award-winning series. Includes Man In Space - Space Frontier, High Life, Where Next. Pioneers - Breakthrough, Earth Patrol, Robots. Cosmic Focus - Hubble's Eye, Light Fantastic, Milky Way. Deep Space - Infinity, Big Bang, Big Crunch, Black Holes, Dark Matter, Hub Of The Planets - The Sun, Mercury, Venus. Earthspace - Earth, Moon, Aurorae And Eclipses. Mars, Life And Impacts - Mars, Lifequest, Impact. Outer Planets - Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus And Neptune, Realm Of The Comets.
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£17.99
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 1 (DVD) (Boxset)
Boxset containing twenty episodes. Emissary Part I, Emissary Part II, Past Prologue, A Man Alone, Babel, Captive Pursuit, Q-Less, Dax, The Passenger, Move Along Home, The Nagus, Vortex, Battle Lines, The Storyteller, Progress, If Wishes Were Horses, The Forsaken, Dramatis Personae, Duet, In the Hands of the Prophets.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 4 (DVD) (Boxset)
Boxset containing 26 episodes from Season Four. Includes The Way Of The Warrior Parts 1 & 2, The Visitor, Hippocratic Oath, Indiscretion, Rejoined, Starship Down, Little Green Men, The Sword Of Kahless, Our Man Bashir, Homefront, Paradise Lost, Crossfire, Return To Grace, Sons Of Mogh, Bar Association, Accession, Rules Of Engagement, Hard Time, Shattered Mirror, The Muse, For The Cause, To The Death, The Quickening, Body Parts and Broken Link.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 7 (DVD) (Boxset)
Boxset containing 26 episodes from Series Seven. Includes Image In The Sand, Shadows And Symbols, Afterimage, Take Me Out To The Holosuite, Chrysalis, Treachery, Faith And The Great River, Once More Unto The Breach, The Siege Of AR-558, Covenant, It's Only A Paper Moon, Prodigal Daughter, The Emperor's New Cloak, Field Of Fire, Chimera, Badda-Bing Badda Bang, Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges, Penumbra, 'Til Death Do Us Part, Strange Bedfellows, The Changin Face Of Evil, When It Rains..., Tacking Into The Wind, Extreme Measures, The Dogs Of War, and What You Leave Behind Parts 1 and 2.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 5 (DVD) (Boxset)
Boxset containing 26 episodes from Season Five. Includes Apocalypse Rising, The Ship, Nor The Battle Strong, The Assignment, Trials And Tribble-ations, Let He Who Is Without Sin..., Things Pat, The Ascent, rapture, The Darkness And The Light, The Begotten, For The Uniform, In Purgatory's Shadow, By Inferno's Light, Doctor Bashir, I Presume?, A Simple Investigation, Business As Usual, Ties Of Blood And Water, Ferengi Love Songs, Soldiers Of The Empire, Children Of Time, Blaze Of Glory, Empok Nor, In The Cards and Call To Arms.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 3 (Boxset) (DVD)
Boxset containing the whole of Series Three, comprising 26 episodes. Deep Space Nine is a Cardassian Space Station orbiting Bajor, a conquered world that is being evacuated by the Cardassians as a result of a peace treaty with the Federation. The station is positioned in orbit over a stable wormhole that allows instant travel to a far distant quadrant of space. Ben Sisko is in charge of the station and his second in command is Major Kira, who has spent her whole life fighting the Cardassians. Odo, the chief of security is a humanoid and the sole known member of a shape-shifting race.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 6 (DVD) (Boxset)
Boxset containing all 26 episodes from Series Six. Includes A Time To Stand, Rocks And Shoals, Suns And Daughters, Behind The Lines, Favor The Bold, Sacrifice Of Angels, Your Are Cordially Invited..., Resurrection, Statistical Probabilities, The Magnificent Ferengi, Waltz, Who Mourns For Morn?, Far Beyond The Stars, One Little Ship, Horror Among Thieves, Change Of Heart, Wrongs Darker Than Death Or Night, Inquisition, In The Pale Moonlight, His Way, The Reckoning, Valiant, Profit And Lace, Time's Orphan, The Sound Of Her Voice and Tears Of The Prophets.
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£72.24
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Star Trek - Deep Space Nine - Complete Series 2 (DVD) (Boxset)
Season two boxset containing 7 DVDs. Features episodes: The Homecoming, The Circle, The Siege, Invasive Procedures, Cardassians, Melora, Rules Of Acquisition, Necessary Evil, Second Sight, Sanctuary, Rivals, The Alternate, Armageddon Game, Whispers, Paradise, Shadowplay, Playing God, Profit And Loss, Blood Oath, The Marquis Part I, The Marquis Part II, The Wire, Crossover, The Collaborator, Tribunal and The Jem'Hadar. Also includes bonus disc - Virtual Space Station CD-ROM.
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£72.24
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BECKMANN VISUAL PUBLISHING The Complete Cosmos - The Solar System Discovery Into Deep Space [2000]
Release Date: 2002-09-09, Rating Exempt,
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£16.97
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 5 [1995]
<I>Deep Space Nine</I>'s fifth series was a turning point from which there was no going back. Character and information overload took over, and the complicated twists and turns in the build up to war either hooked viewers securely, or sent them away with a headache. The Klingon faction instigated by Worf's arrival was occasionally played for laughs, but mostly their hard-headed personalities made all efforts at diplomacy moot. <p>In the opening episode a chilling possibility is proposed as to why might be: have the Changelings infiltrated already and replaced key personnel? Some fans saw this as a flawed <I>X-Files</I>-sty le development. Nevertheless it sowed a seed of insidious suspicion from here on, affecting all the principal casts' relationship with one another, even allowing Odo and Quark an opportunity to confess a degree of friendship. Expanding on the new theme of duplication, the crew also made numerous trips to their Mirror Universe counterparts. <p> As well as new uniforms and the milestone 100th episode, Nana Visitor and Alexander Siddig comically got to disguise the arrival of their child during filming. More laughs came from the fan favourite Trials and Tribble-ations with CG allowing Sisko and crew to interact with Kirk and a cameo from Leonard Nimoy. Avery Brooks began taking a backseat as of this year, partly a result of the now-overcrowded cast. Although Sisko's destiny would be foreshadowed by his first vision and the introduction of the Pah-wraiths, the Captain was in an increasingly sulky mood. Brooks only directed one episode, allowing room for regulars LeVar Burton and Rene Auberjonois to do more behind the camera. Joining them were Alexander Siddig, Michael Dorn and even Andrew Robinson. Available space started to seem hardly deep enough. --<I>Paul Tonks</I>
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£50.97
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 2 [1995]
The second series of <I>Star Trek: Deep Space Nine</I> must have caused mixed feelings for those involved. There was a sense of optimism behind the scenes that stemmed from having gained a loyal following--made up of plenty of new fans--in its relatively short first year. The show had genuinely succeeded in being different from its predecessors. Better still, <I>The Next Generation</I> would be bowing out gracefully halfway through this year. So it was that, with several more series guaranteed, the writers changed tack from standalone tales and into long-running story arcs. This was immediately evident in the format-testing three-part opening. Through the actions of Kira and her old pals, we saw that the Bajorans would only ever work toward their own agenda, whereas the Cardassians easily switched sides to suit their various agendas. The Federation was hardly innocent of political machinations either, especially with the discovery of the Maquis terrorists a few episodes later. <p> This three-way dynamic would underpin the entire run of the show. Expanding upon it was the handover of the Klingon saga from <I>The Original Series</I> and <I>TNG</I>, in which old warhorses Kor, Kang and Koloth first appeared. That left the Ferengi to maintain an element of fun with their Rules of Acquisition (Number 112: Never have sex with the boss's sister), exploration of their sexist culture and, naturally, through everything touched by the scene-stealing Quark (who was rewarded with a cameo for his real life wife). What seemed like standalone stories--Odo meeting his mentor, a trip into <I>The Original Series</I>' parallel universe and the culminating encounter with some super-soldiers (the Jem'Hadar)--later turned out to be more optimistic seed-sowing. Unfortunately, this second series also began with some concern about a competitor franchise, which started at exactly the same time as <I>TNG</I> ended. The impact of <I>Babylon 5</I> on <I>DS9</I> and TV SF in general by the end of the year could never have been envisioned at the start. --<I>Paul Tonks</I>
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£50.97
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 7 [1995]
The seventh and final series of <I>Deep Space Nine</I> came down to loose ends, tying some existing ones together and allowing others to unravel. Symptomatic of the unwillingness to let <I>DS9</I> go was the immediate arrival of a replacement Dax, though poor Nichole deBoer as Ezri Dax had to have known she'd already missed the boat. Her appearance encouraged last-minute romances to blossom, with Bashir finally getting some action, Odo finally getting together with Kira and Sisko finally proposing to Kassidy. Another contributing cute factor were numerous trips to the Holosuite wherein the all-knowing Vic Fontaine dished out philosophical advice. That was when the crew weren't in there to play baseball against the Vulcans or when Nog wasn't commiserating about the loss of a leg. <p> Oh yes, and don't forget the war! There was an early announcement that the show would attempt a 10-part resolution to the Dominion War, but viewers could be forgiven for forgetting all about it with so much sentimental distraction. When the horrors of war did resurface, they at least injected a few surprises into the mix. Odo and his ambiguously evil Founders were hit with a melting disease, prompting a backstabbing race for the power of developing and owning a cure. The original baddie Cardassians finally settled on the Federation's side. <p> Contrary to these interesting twists, however, were the unexpected turns taken by matters relating to Sisko's spiritual destiny. Suddenly the mystery of the wormhole and an entire religious belief system was reduced to the problem of translating correctly the words of a sacred book. The struggle to join with some evil aliens significantly diluted the attempt at resolving what had begun seven years before in the show's pilot episode. Ultimately, Sisko's destiny, as with all those who'd followed him to the open-ended climax, was to be decided elsewhere. In a move that was either bold and daring--or possibly born of desperation for not having thought things through properly--the show's storylines were to be continued in a series of spin-off books. --<I>Paul Tonks</I>
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£40.97
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Complete Seasons 1-7
Release Date: 2004-09-27, Rating Suitable for 15 years and over,
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£337.99
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DEEP SPACE NINE LOGO-PEWTER K/R.(3)
author: ; publisher: GOLDS
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£6.99
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Constable and Robinson Deep Space: New Pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope
The Hubble Space Telescope was launched in April 1990 and was one of the most expensive single science projects ever and cost over a billion US dollars. It was also an enormous disappointment, at least initially, as the images were blurred because of an error in the manufacture of a crucial mirror. Fortunately, as Goodwin and Gribbin tell us, the problem was solved in December 1993, by the crew of the Space Shuttle Endeavour when they installed new optics which compensated for the flaws in the mirror. <p>The new sharp images are stunning and <I>Deep Space</I> gives a selection of nearly 60 of them. They range from the brightest star, the so-called Pistol Star, discovered in the early 1990s, which is 100 times more massive than the Sun, to the most distant galaxy, 13 billion light years away and the spectrum of light from a black hole, the active galaxy M84. Each image is accompanied by a short text description on the facing page with cross-references to the glossary to explain the more technical terms used. Some of the images might be confusing to the uninitiated, they look like psychedelic or op art images thanks to the false colour and magnification used.<p>Simon Goodwin is an academic astronomer at the University of Sussex an John Gribbin is a well known science writer and author of several books on astronomy. Together they have collaborated on previous collections of Hubble images such as <I>Hubble's Universe</I> to which this volume is a sequel. The text might be hard work for a novice but the pictures are inspirational. --<I>Douglas Palmer</I>
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£11.21
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 6 [1995]
<I>Deep Space Nine</I>'s sixth series began ambitiously with a six-part story arc devoted to the Dominion War. This was a brave move in many ways, but a sensible one too. Whereas other SF shows wouldn't commit to showing the impact of war (<I>Babylon 5</I>), here there were numerous visible sacrifices. Characters were frequently kidnapped and held prisoner, allowing screen time for other members of the ever-growing cast (at its peak there were as many as 18 individuals with speaking roles per episode). This year also introduced the idea of Starfleet Intelligence and its sinister Section 31; alliances were built only to crumble almost immediately; Sisko led a suicide mission and at long last his destiny as the Emissary took a serious turn. <p> Amid all this <I>sturm und drang</I> the writers felt it necessary to inject some levity. In fact, there was so much comedic sidetracking this year it actually seemed sometimes as if they were afraid of the series' dark tone. Witness: Quark undergoing a temporary sex change, leading a <I>Magnificent Seven</I>-style band of Ferengi (with a cameo from Iggy Pop), Morn's non-speaking character being sorely missed, the blend of Troi and Guinan into 60's crooner Vic Fontaine and, in one fan favourite episode (Far Beyond the Stars), Sisko having visions of himself and the crew as 1950s staff writers on pulp magazine <I>Incredible Tales</I>. There were also cute reconciliations amongst Worf's extended family (leading to <I>Trek</I>'s first cast wedding), and even the revelation of Bashir's genetically enhanced origins quickly became a subject for easy jokes. <p> Any of these events would have been satisfactorily cute if the war had ended and the show had moved on. But confusing the viewer, every so often the battle would be rejoined mid-episode. The clinching proof that no grand design was really at work was in the sudden and brutal dispatch of Dax. Actress Terry Farrell gave sufficient forewarning of having had enough of the show, but specifically asked not to be killed off. Despite all the jarring humour scattered about after the strong opening, the show seemed unable to avoid reverting to shock tactics for its finale. All of which hardly made the promised final year seem a particularly enticing prospect. --<I>Paul Tonks</I>
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£50.97
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 1 [1995]
Of all the spin-off TV incarnations of <I>Star Trek</I>, <I>Deep Space Nine</I> had the hardest job persuading an audience to watch. By all accounts, Gene Roddenberry had concerns about the idea before his death in 1991. It took two more years to develop, and when it finally aired in 1993 reasons for that concern were evident right away. The show was dark (literally), characters argued a lot, no one went anywhere and the neighbouring natives were hardly ever friendly. Yet for all that the show went against the grain of The Great Bird's original vision of the future, it undeniably caught the mood of the time, incorporating a complex political backdrop that mirrored our own. <p> In the casting, there was a clear intent to differentiate the show from its predecessors. Genre stalwarts Tony Todd and James Earl Jones were considered for Commander Sisko before Avery Brooks. The one let down at the time was that Michelle Forbes did not carry Ensign Ro across from <I>TNG</I>, but when the explosive Nana Visitor defiantly slapped her hand on a console in the pilot episode, viewers knew they were in for a different crew dynamic. In fact, the two-part pilot show (The Emissary) is largely responsible for <I>DS9</I>'s early success. Mysterious, spiritual, claustrophobic, funny and feisty, it remains the most attention-grabbing series opener (apart from the Classic original) the franchise has had. The first year may have relied on a few too many familiar faces--like Picard, Q and Lwaxana Troi--but these were more than outweighed by refreshingly detailed explorations of cultures old and new (Trill, Bajoran, Cardassian, Ferengi). As it turned out, <I>Deep Space Nine</I> was the boldest venture into Roddenberry's galaxy that had been (or ever would be) seen. <p> <B>On the DVD:</B> <I>Star Trek Deep Space Nine, Series 1</I>'s hour of special features is split between seven featurettes that really would have worked better edited together. Covering the show's origins and most aspects of Year One's production design, they all crib from interviews with actors and crew from the 1992 shoot (exclusively so in the 10 Hidden Files). Other interviews conducted in 1999 and 2002 tend to be more revealing, although the solo section on Major Kira is curiously lacking in recent input. While the designers describe their work with passion, creators Michael Piller and Rick Berman come off as stiff and lacking in knowledge. Hopefully this is something that will improve through the next six box sets. The interactive CD-ROM to build a <I>DS9</I> database on your PC is something that will become more involving, too. Obviously the most important thing is the episodes themselves, and despite the lack of a commentary to enhance the best of them, sound in 5.1 and the crisp full-frame picture do them ample justice. --<I>Paul Tonks</I> END
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£50.97
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Star Trek Mission Gamma: This Gray Spirit Bk. 2 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 396, Paperback, Star Trek
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£4.79
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Simon & Schuster Inc The 34th Rule (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Young Adult S.)
Pages: 431, Paperback, Simon & Schuster Inc
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£4.79
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Pocket Books Worlds of Deep Space Nine: The Dominion and Ferenginar No. 3 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 320, Paperback, Pocket Books
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£5.59
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Star Trek Rising Son (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 320, Paperback, Star Trek
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£5.59
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Star Trek Unity (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 416, Hardcover, Star Trek
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£9.89
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Star Trek Stitch in Time (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
This is the autobiography of Garak, the secretive Cardassian tailor, spy and former intelligence operative who made frequent guest appearances on <I>Star Trek: Deep Space Nine</I>. Written by <I>Andrew J. Robinson</I>, the actor who played him on the show, it is a suitably ironic, oblique and at times obscure set of reminiscences. Robinson weaves together three different timeframes, one set after the end of the Dominion War as Garak and other surviving Cardassians strive to rebuild their shattered civilisation, one aboard DS9 that runs parallel to the events of season seven of the TV show, and one--the bulk of the book-which follows Garak's life from his childhood at Cardassia's premier military academy, through his career in the Obsidian Order, and on to his fall from grace and banishment to Terok Nor. The novel is held together with theme rather than an overall plot: exploring the power of secrecy and lies, and the masks we all wear to hide our true selves. It is an interesting fleshing-out of Cardassian society and a fine evocation of Garak by the actor who gave him life. Although some key events are deliberately still shrouded in mystery, the book captures a sense of the essential character beneath the ever-shifting masks. <I>Elizabeth Sourbut</I>
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£3.41
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The Complete Cosmos The Solar System / Discovery Into Deep Space (Two Discs)
The Complete Cosmos The Solar System / Discovery Into Deep Space (Two Discs) DVD Region 2 The Complete Cosmos The Solar System / Discovery Into Deep Space (Two Discs), Catalogue Number: BDV003, Release Date: 09/09/2002
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£24.99
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 3 [1995]
<I>Deep Space Nine</I>'s third series begins eventfully, with Sisko promoted to captain and being gifted a prototype warship equipped with a cloaking device, while Odo learns where he came from. In the two-part opening tale, this clever gambit is played to hook viewers into the idea of <I>DS9</I> becoming an ongoing mystery/conflict show. Why the sudden intense format tweaking? Mostly this was to ensure the show continued to thrive when a really rather greedy production hierarchy fast-tracked <I>Voyager</I> onto the air mid-season (cue unnecessary crossover episode with Tuvok). Of greater concern was ratings thief <I>Babylon 5</I>, which played its counter-<I>Trek</I> ; cards at precisely the right time. Fortunately the result (initially at least) was a genuine boost for <I>DS9</I>. <p> Cast members seemed to have hit their stride and played off one another more assuredly than before. For example, Odo's character took several additional interesting twists, especially in his relationship with Kira. Rene Auberjonois had a very good year, directing two episodes to boot. Avery Brooks had begun this trend with the previous year's penultimate show. The real surprise was seeing Jonathan Frakes's name working behind the camera on three occasions, because he also appeared on screen in his alternate rogue Riker role, when Thomas dramatically steals the Defiant. Other welcome cameos that aided the feeling of casual camaraderie included the return of Lwaxana Troi, as well as first appearances by Quark's Mum, the spooky Founder Leader, the lovely Leeta and the sneaky Eddington. Clint Howard--a cult <I>Trek</I> figure--was briefly welcomed back, and with the many faces of Jeffrey Combs another was born. Stories progressed the complicated Bajoran/Cardassian healing process, while simultaneously brewing potential conflicts far worse than the behind-the-scenes ratings war. --<I>Paul Tonks</I>
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£40.97
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Star Trek Avatar: Bk. 1 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 284, Paperback, Star Trek
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 11 to 13 days
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£4.19
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McGraw-Hill Education Star Trek Deep Space 9: Avatar Book One (Star Trek Deep Space 9)
Paperback, McGraw-Hill Education
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£5.99
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Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 4 [1995]
The fourth series of <I>Deep Space Nine</I> can be summed up in one word: Klingons! The show's producers apparently felt beset from all sides. <I>Babylon 5</I> was a huge hit, as was <I>Star Trek: Voyager</I>, the flagship of new channel UPN. Stepping up <I>DS9</I>'s action quotient seemed to be the answer. Time would tell, however, whether doing so via <I>Trek</I>'s tried-and-tested former bad guys was the best solution. Opening with a special two-hour extravaganza, the new year was immediately unfamiliar. Dennis McCarthy's original theme--despite winning an Emmy--was deemed too subdued. As its upbeat new rendition kicked off, the station was seen in battle and swarming with activity. Moments later, we met old/new crewmember Worf, whose sudden appearance was the result of a brewing invasive strategy by the Klingons. This initiated the first of many loyalty shifts, as the Cardassians became the victims. With plenty of re-appearances by Gowron, Kor and Kurn, it was clear that an ongoing space opera was being crafted. Dukat revealed a tragedy-ridden daughter; Odo's relationship with his people (and Kira) became increasingly melancholy; and even the Jem'Hadar foot soldiers were given a sympathetic angle by their drug addiction. <p> Adding to the layers of ambiguity about Earth's (read: the Producers') position over being at war, was the outing of Eddington and Sisko's girlfriend as rebel activists. Lest we forget the homely/spiritual side of the Captain, time was spent with a future version of Jake, with his father (Brock Peters), and on the nature of his role as The Emissary. Avery Brooks worked behind the camera a couple of times, but this year the surprise was LeVar Burton directing five shows. There was still time for comedy: the Ferengi warped back to Roswell in 1947 and Bashir played at James Bond. But the year will be recalled predominately for its violence. One of the episodes Burton directed had its fight scenes drastically cut, while the series as a whole won an Emmy for its space battle effects. <p> <B>On the DVD:</B> <I>Deep Space Nine, Series 4</I> contains more than two hours of extra features. Although they might all have been better compiled into one long documentary, the sections devoted to Aliens, Production Design and Artwork are, nevertheless, nicely contained. Charting New Territory is a 20-minute featurette on all the big changes attempted this year: Worf's introduction, arming the station and being daring with stand-alone episodes. There's also a terrific and candid dossier on Michael Dorn (Worf), ten mini-cameo cast tales, four seasons' worth of episode introductions, and a well-stocked Photo Gallery. All this can be found on the set's seventh disc; there's also the fourth CD-ROM disc, which allows you to build your own station at home. --<I>Paul Tonks</I> END
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Worlds of Deep Space Nine
The second in a series of novels set on the various alien worlds that make up the universe of Star Trek: "Deep Space Nine" author: Mangels, Andy; publisher: Pocket Books
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Worlds of Deep Space Nine
This third in a series of novels is set on the various alien worlds that make up the universe of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. author: George, David R.; publisher: Pocket Books
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Star Trek 34th Rule (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Audio Cassette, Star Trek
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Rebound by Sagebrush Prisoners of Peace (Star Trek Deep Space Nine (Hardcover))
Library Binding, Rebound by Sagebrush
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Star Trek The Left Hand of Destiny (Star Trek Book 2- Deep Space Nine)
Pages: 320, Paperback, Star Trek
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Star Trek Deep Space Nine Companion (Star Trek Deep Space Nine)
Finally, here is a book that covers all seven seasons of <I>Star Trek: Deep Space Nine</I>. And, at 725 pages, this companion covers them in considerable depth. <I>Terry J Erdmann</I> had access to the set throughout the seven seasons, resulting in a volume filled with interviews and anecdotes. A brief introduction to each season is followed by an episode-by-episode guide, consisting of writing, directing and acting credits, stardate where known, a detailed plot summary and then a lengthy analysis including interviews with the actors and production staff. These provide a wealth of detail that gives the reader a real feeling for all the behind-the-scenes work that goes into producing the finished shows. At more than twice the length of the previous <I>Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion</I>, the coverage feels very thorough, although more biographical information on the actors would have been welcome. Dotted through the book are longer interviews, and at the end there is a piece about the very last day of filming. An appendix provides an alphabetical listing of episodes for easy reference. Thebook is liberally illustrated with photographs and drawings but, sadly, these are all black and white. But, that aside, this is an essential addition to the bookshelves of long-time fans, as well as providing an accessible introduction for those less familiar with the show. --<I>Elizabeth Sourbut</I>
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Star Trek Ferengi Rules of Acquisition (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
In this slim, pocket-sized volume, Ira Stephen Behr lists 70 of the total 285 <I>Ferengi Rules of Acquisition</I> that guide the behaviour of all Ferengi businessmen (the rest have not yet been revealed to mere humans). The introduction, ostensibly written by Quark, DS9's resident Ferengi bartender, sells the Rules in language amusingly similar to that used by the 100s of books currently available that promise to teach the reader how to succeed in business. Quark assures us that if we want to live the good life and see our profits increase, all we need to do is memorise, contemplate and apply the Rules of Acquisition. However, as the 19th Rule reminds us, Satisfaction is not guaranteed.<p>The body of the book consists of the Rules themselves, one to a page, illustrated by a dozen black and white stills from the shows. Some are downright cynical, like Rule 261, A wealthy man can afford anything except a conscience but others make straightforward business sense, such as Rule 218, Always know what you're buying. <p>This book may not make you rich but it certainly underlines the similarities between Ferengi business practices and the free-market capitalism we see all around us today and reminds us all that there is more than a grain of truth in the 284th Rule: Deep down everyone's a Ferengi. --<I>Elizabeth Sourbut</I>
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Star Trek Millennium Omnibus (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 960, Paperback, Star Trek
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Star Trek Mission Gamma: Lesser Evil Bk. 4 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 288, Paperback, Star Trek
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Star Trek Prophecy and Change (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 464, Paperback, Star Trek
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Pocket Books Worlds of Deep Space Nine: Trill and Bajor No. 2 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 384, Paperback, Pocket Books
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Pocket Books Unity (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 308, Paperback, Pocket Books
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University Press of Florida Big Dish: Building America's Deep Space Connection to the Planets
Pages: 264, Hardcover, University Press of Florida
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Watson-Guptill Publications Inc.,U.S. Dynamic Figure Drawing: A New Approach to Drawing the Moving Figure in Deep Space and Foreshortening
Pages: 176, Paperback, Watson-Guptill Publications Inc.,U.S.
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Pocket Books Warpath (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine S.)
Pages: 320, Paperback, Pocket Books
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Dark Horse Comics,U.S. Trigun: Deep Space Planet Future Gun Action!: v. 2
Pages: 332, Paperback, Dark Horse Comics,U.S.
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Gateway The Only Planet of Choice: Essential Briefings from Deep Space
Pages: 357, Paperback, Gateway
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Apogee Books Deep Space: The NASA Mission Reports
Pages: 432, Paperback, Apogee Books
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