Showing posts with label The Fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Fall. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Books covers: Atonement, Ascendance, and posters!

The novel cover reveals are coming a pace at the moment, hot on the heels of the latest Seekers and Titan covers, Pocket Books have released a couple more.

Due out in September is Kirsten Beyer's Atonement, the final book in the current trilogy within her Voyager relaunch, continuing on from Protectors and Acts of Contrition. StarTrek.com have released the cover, featuring an illustration of Admiral Janeway by Alan Dingman:


Here's a reminder of the blurb:
Admiral Kathryn Janeway faces a tribunal determined to execute her for supposed crimes committed during Voyager’s maiden trek through the Delta Quadrant. Captain Chakotay knows that the Kinara, several species now allied against the Full Circle fleet, are not all they appear to be. The Confederacy of the Worlds of the First Quadrant—a pact he cannot trust—is his only hope for unraveling the Kinara’s true agenda and rescuing Admiral Janeway. Meanwhile, Seven and Tom Paris are forced to betray the trust of their superiors in a desperate bid to reveal the lengths to which a fellow officer has gone in the name of protecting the Federation from the legendary Caeliar.

Coming in January will be David R. George III's Ascendance, a follow-up his forthcoming DS9 novel, Sacraments of Fire. David has released that cover on his Facebook page, which features both the new DS9 and the Defiant (with something exciting happening to it!), with the artwork by Doug Drexler:


Continue after the jump for the blurb for this one too, plus news of some new posters featuring novel artwork!

Saturday, 21 February 2015

Books bits: Armageddon, Wit, and more

There have been several new covers for forthcoming Star Trek books released recently, plus some other bits of books news, which you'll find below.

First up an exciting new cover for Dayton Ward's TNG novel, Armageddon's Arrow. The cover art is by Doug Drexler, with a spacey background from Ali Ries.Via StarTrek.com:


Armageddon's Arrow, due out in June, will see the USS Enterprise-E embarking on it's new mission of exploration. Here's the blurb:
It is a new age of exploration, and the U.S.S. Enterprise is dispatched to “the Odyssean Pass,” a region charted only by unmanned probes and believed to contain numerous inhabited worlds. Approaching a star system with two such planets, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his crew find a massive alien vessel, drifting in interstellar space for decades. Sensors detect life aboard the derelict—aliens held in suspended animation.

Thought to be an immense sleeper ship, the vessel actually is a weapon capable of destroying entire worlds . . . the final gambit in a war that has raged for generations across the nearby system. Now caught in the middle of this conflict, Captain Picard attempts to mediate, as both sides want this doomsday weapon . . . which was sent from the future with the sole purpose of ending the interplanetary war before it even began!

More books news after the jump:

Monday, 26 January 2015

Cross Cult's Foundations, and schedule updates

Cross Cult have revealed (on their Star Trek books Facebook page) the new cover art for several of their forthcoming German translations of Corps of Engineers ebook novellas. The three new designs below are for the Foundations trilogy, by Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore. They are books seventeen to nineteen in the Corps of Engineer series, and will get their German release starting in December.



Cross Cult have also released finalised versions of several other Corps of Engineers books they previously posted artwork for. Continue after the jump to check out those, and news of German books schedule updates:

Monday, 20 October 2014

New Cross Cult covers: The Fall, COE, and more

It's been a while since I posted any updates from German Star Trek books publisher Cross Cult, and since my last post their cover artist, Martin Frei, has been busy generating new artwork for many of their forthcoming releases. The most recently revealed new artwork (on their Star Trek books Facebook page) is for two books in The Fall series. Cross Cult will be reusing the US cover art for three of the five books, but they have decided to replace both of the Enterprise-E covers - Una McCormack's The Crimson Shadow, and Dayton Ward's Peaceable Kingdoms.

Here are the new covers, which will be turning up, translated into German, in the winter of 2015/1016. So far Cross Cult have only settled on the German title for one book in the series, The Crimson Shadow, the first of the two cover here, which will be known as Der Karminrote Schatten:



Continue after the jump for the latest new Corps of Engineers artwork, and lots more finalised covers for new Cross Cult releases:

Saturday, 21 June 2014

New German audiobook, and latest Cross Cult updates

Here's some very exciting news for German audiobook fans. A new Star Trek publisher, Highscore Music, has announced it will very soon be releasing a full cast audio adaptation of the first TNG relaunch novel; Michael Jan Friedman's Death in Winter, aka Tod Im Winter. And when I say full cast it's no exaggeration, on their Facebook page they list over forty actors involved, with almost every character in the book getting a unique voice! Those actors include the German dub voices of all the main TNG characters in the book too!

The book is being split into eight episodes, which will be available to download from Amazon.de and iTunes from the end of the month. There don't appear to be plans to release as a CD, nor details of other titles to come, yet. Thanks to Jens Deffner (of UnrealitySF) and Christian Freitag for sending news of this my way.

The more established German Trek publisher, Cross Cult, also has something new. Having recently revealed, on their Facebook page, their covers for Kirsten Beyer's Voyager relaunch books Projekt Full Circle (Full Circle) and Unwürdig (Unworthy).


These square designs will most likely sit above a title block for the final covers (following the precedent of the other Voyager books from Cross Cult). Featured on the covers, along with Tom and B'Elanna, are Cross Cult's rendition of the refit USS Voyager, and Mark Rademaker's USS Planck (from the 2012 Ships of the Line calendar). While the rest of Rademaker's fleet designs appear less prominently in little stacks of ships on either cover. These books are due in October this year and March 2015.

Continue after the jump for more Cross Cult news:

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Book bits: Post-The Fall hints, Rise of the Federation, and more

Next time on TNG and DS9...
A few bits of books news for you, starting with the new hints of Trek-lit to come after The Fall. In a recent interview with Trek FM's Literary Treks podcast, Dayton Ward, mainly discussing his finale to The Fall, Peaceable Kingdoms, also briefly discussed what's coming next, giving the first hint of what Una McCormack's Home Again might be dealing with, and also seeming to give further confirmation David R. George III will be continue the DS9 story at some point, as well as maybe seeming to imply he is himself in line to continue the TNG adventures:
I think it takes place fairly soon after Peaceable Kingdoms, at least in the continuity. In fact I believe it's going to follow up on a thread. Because right now Crusher, the way I had it at the end of Peaceable Kingdoms, Crusher's on her way to DS9 to act as an interim chief medical officer, until they can find a permanent replacement for Bashir. Now whether she stays there or not, remains to be seen, but given her family situation, I don't expect that she'll stay there very long. Plus I kind of said at the end of Peaceable Kingdoms, that she's going to meet up with the Enterprise at some point soon. But I think Una wants to tell a story with her at DS9, before I, or whoever, gets to pick them up again. It will be fun with, David George is writing a story where she is going to be the CMO of Deep Space 9, so you know, who knows...
Meanwhile in another podcast, Trek Mate's Ten Forward, James Swallow, also primarily talking about his The Fall entry, The Poisoned Chalice, also briefly discussed next month's Titan ebook, Absent Enemies, confirming John Jackson Miller's novella will picking up the Titan thread following The Fall:
That follows directly on from the events of The Poisoned Chalice. It's a bit more of a stand-alone story, but that's got some interesting stuff. Again, it has Riker as Admiral, trying to fit that in with the role that Titan's portrayed in previous books.
Meanwhile, looking ahead to April's release of the next Enterprise: Rise of the Federation novel, Tower of Babel, Christopher L. Bennett has updated his website, with commentary on the development of the novel, including discussion of what the book will be exploring:
It's hard for me to look at Tower of Babel objectively, since the writing process was so turbulent. There are probably things I could've done better, but now that I think about it, there are a number of things I'm rather proud of. In particular, I had fun with the worldbuilding of the Rigel system, taking all the disparate references to Rigel this and Rigel that in the screen canon, along with the ones in the current novel continuity, and building a cohesive whole out of them. Why did I choose Rigel as the first major addition to the young Federation? Because I wanted Archer to go after a major prize, a coalition of worlds whose addition to the union would increase its size and power significantly in one fell swoop, so that the stakes would be as high as possible. And I didn't just want to create some hitherto-unknown civilization, since that would raise the question of why it was never heard of later on. Rigel has so many distinct worlds and cultures that it gave me a rich multispecies community in a single system -- although it did come with certain conceptual problems and contradictions that I had to navigate my way around. Also, ENT's "Demons" and "Terra Prime" had included Rigelians among the delegates to the initial Coalition of Planets talks, and a couple of earlier sources (the classic Spaceflight Chronology and the novel Starfleet Year One) had postulated Rigel as a founding or very early member of the Federation, in contrast to the traditionally accepted founders of Earth, Vulcan, Andoria, Tellar, and Alpha Centauri. So the idea of Rigel being in at the beginning, or nearly so, had some precedent.
A little closer still, next month's Voyager novel, Kirsten Beyer's Protectors, is starting to show up right now, and Simon and Schuster have put up an excerpt to tempt you with. You can find all of chapter one, here.

Continue after the jump for a little more from the authors of The Fall books:

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Book bits: Section 31, Seekers, The Fall, and new German releases

The latest Star Trek books news, starting with a look ahead to some of 2014's novels:

Mock-up cover
In a recent interview with Trek Mate's Ten Forward podcast, David Mack outlined his plans for his next 24th century novel, Section 31: Disavowed:
It's really gonna be a hardcore spy-thriller-type-thing. It's essentially, Bashir, after The Fall, has to find a new modus vivendi. He's got a new life, he's not in Starfleet any more, Sarina Douglas has followed him out of Starfleet. And Disavowed is essentially about him beginning the process of infiltrating Section 31 and insinuating himself into the organisation, as part of his long term strategy, along with Sarina Douglas, to take the organisation down from within.
Mock-up cover
Before Section 31 at the end of 2014, Mack also has Second Nature, his initial volume in the new Seekers series (a spin-off from Vanguard), due in the middle of the year. He also summarised how that series is being approached:
It's designed as a much more straight-forward, light, fun, action-adventure, with a bit of humour. It's supposed to be in that sort of lighter vein of Star Trek that you had back in the 1970s anthologies of the episodes; the adaptations of the episodes by James Blish. So it's going to have that retro look and feel, in terms of the cover and the cover design, layout, and typography.

We're also writing these books to be a bit shorter, rather than ninety to a hundred thousand words, we're aiming closer to seventy to eighty thousand words. So they're going to be lighter, they're going to be faster. They're just designed to be quick fun little adventures, without all the politics, without all the darkness.
In contrast to the politics-light approach of Seekers, the current 24th century series, The Fall, is steeped in continuity and politics, as James Swallow summarised in a recent interview with Trek FM's Literary Treks:
This is a Federation trying to get back on the up-swing; dealing with the Typhon Pact, and all these other threats to its existence. It's a Federation that's completely unlike the one that we've seen in the TV shows. I think the books really reflect that; it's a Federation where the people feel embattled. There's an entire generation of people coming up in Starfleet, and they're people who've lived through the war with the Borg. Young people who are now joining Starfleet and they have different ideas about the way that Starfleet should be, and maybe they're coming at it with a more militant more aggressive stand-point - Which is not what Starfleet is about. Or is it what Starfleet is about, now? It's the dynamic tension between these two world-views; if you end up being to quick to reach for your sword, eventually that's the first thing you do in every situation, and that's not Star Trek. But it's reflecting what feels to me, a realistic evolution of that culture. Trying to find their way back to their try ideals are - This is very definitely a story about that; our characters, and in a larger sense the Federation, being confronted with two paths...
Swallow also hinted at his plans for future Star Trek books. While nothing is set in stone yet, he is looking to do a five-year-mission TOS novel, and later, another Titan novel.

You can hear both David Mack and James Swallow talking much more about their books by listening to their complete interviews, on Trek Mate and Trek FM respectively .

In other books news, German readers have several new translations on the way from Panini. Three of the recent quirkier books are all coming out in February:


Monday, 11 November 2013

Behind the scenes of the new Deep Space 9

Doug Drexler has posted a gallery on Facebook, full of artwork from the development of the new Deep Space 9, made for it's debut on covers in The Fall novel series this year. Doug has posted concept art from Andy Probert, who created the design based on David R. George III's description from the novels. There are also lots of renderings from Douglas Graves, who built the computer model, and alternate cover designs from Mr Drexler himself.

Here are a couple of test renderings of the final model, which give us a great overview of the design:


I've picked out some of my favourite images from the gallery, and those that reveal some interesting details, to take a tour through the design process below. But you'll find loads more on Facebook, so be sure to check it out.

Building on David R. George III's description in Raise the Dawn, the process started with Andy Probert pondering possible interpretations, which eventually settled into the design we now becoming familiar with, finally approved with a test CG model:


Much more after the jump, starting with a look at one of DS9's massive hangers, which houses one of Andy Probert's newly designed salvage tugs, which are set to appear in the 2015 Ships of the Line calendar:

Monday, 4 November 2013

Book bits: 2014 schedule fills out

Amazon has added a load of new listings for Star Trek novels and ebooks, revealing all sorts of new information about the 2014 prose line-up.

That includes confirmation that Jeffrey Lang will be returning to the world of Star Trek, with a new TNG novel, Light Fantastic - This is the Data and Lal focused follow-up to Cold Equations, David Mack recently revealed is in the works. Amazon suggest this will be out of at the end of June, and also provide this most exciting blurb:
The continuation of the epic story begun in the New York Times bestselling Next Generation trilogy COLD EQUATIONS. A now-resurrected Data and his android "daughter" Lal must face off against the holographic entity James Moriarity, who is determined to acquire android bodies in order to live a "real-world" immortal life.
They have also revealed some details about Scott Pearson's forthcoming ebook novella. It will be a TOS story, called The More Things Change, and will be out in early July.

Also now listed are the first two books in the new Vanguard spin-off series, Seekers. These have gained titles now. David Mack's first book in the series is now called Second Nature, while Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore's book two is Point of Divergence.

You might recall when Seekers was announced, the authors planned to have the books be titled purely by number, ie Seekers 1 and Seekers 2. Alas the publishers shot down this retro idea, as David Mack explained on his blog:
Long story short, we were overruled on this by the publisher. I’ll spare you the book-industry technobabble, but the simple explanation is that we were told the automated, meta-tagged, keyword-driven sales system that connects publishers, wholesalers, and retailers, would have suffered some kind of cyber-seizure if we had denied it titles. So, the books will now have titles. Win some, lose some.
Dayton Ward also noted on his blog, that despite the Amazon listing identifying these as TOS books, they wont be released under that banner.

With these latest additions, the 2014 schedule for novels so far goes like this:
With them joined by an increasingly regular line of ebook novellas:
For as much as there is to know about each of these titles, hit the prose button on my 2014 schedule page, where you'll find links to all my previous coverage.

Meanwhile in the present, Literary Treks' latest podcast includes an interview with Una McCormack, in which they dissect her latest work of Trek, The Crimson Shadow, the second book in The Fall series. It's a fascinating (and spoiler filled) discussion, delving into politics, religion, sociology and history. For instance, McCormack identified her real world influences in developing post-war Cardassia:
...it was that combination of reflecting on post-war Europe, and reflecting on what's currently happening, particularly in places like Greece, and thinking, well let's think what these pressures are, let's think them through; and what kind of solutions people might try, somebody like Garak might try, to prevent Cardassia going nationalist again.
Listen in to Literary Treks for much more. But make sure to read The Crimson Shadow first; they don't actually give away the biggest spoilers, but you wont have a clue what they're talking about! Plus it's a brilliant novel, so if you haven't read it, you must!

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Super spoilery new blurb for Peaceable Kingdoms

Simon and Schuster have released a new blurb for the final book in The Fall series, Dayton Ward's Peaceable Kingdoms. I guess now the series is under-way they feel more comfortable spilling the beans, but if you haven't Revelation and Dust yet I suggest you read no further on this page! It also rather gives away some of the outcomes on the way in the middle books in the series, so if you're spoiler averse I'd stop here too. New blurb after the jump, and this picture of the cover:


Tuesday, 15 October 2013

New Data book coming, and other Trek-lit news

There is some interesting news and discussion about Star Trek books coming out via various interviews around the web lately. The biggest news item comes from David Mack, who was interviewed by TrekCore. He revealed a new Data novel is in the works, but not from him:
I have it on good authority that a writer who understands Data quite well is working on a new novel that will chronicle what happens to Data and Lal after the events of Cold Equations, Book III: The Body Electric. However, because it’s not my book, I’m not going to tell you anything about it—not the title, not even the author...
My obvious guess would be Jeffrey Lang, returning to Trek to follow up Cold Equations, which itself built upon Lang's Data-centric novel Immortal Coil. Whoever it is, more Data sounds good to me!

Mack did of course talk about his own work too, going right back through his career, and giving some interesting insights into life as a writer. Coming right up to date he gave a pretty lengthy description of his forthcoming The Fall novel, A Ceremony of Losses:
As some readers might recall, in Dayton Ward’s Typhon Pact novel Paths of Disharmony, the Tholian Assembly revealed to the Andorians that, for more than a century, Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets have suppressed information from Operation Vanguard that might have helped lead to a cure for their fertility crisis. The uproar from this revelation led to the rise of the Treishya, a reactionary political party on Andor, and to a vote (by a narrow majority in a plebiscite election) to secede from the Federation.

Now it’s a few years later, and the Andorians seem no closer to finding a cure, even with the intelligence provided by the scheming Tholians. Everyone tries to manipulate the crisis for political gain. Meanwhile, Andor’s scientists, including Thirishar ch’Thane, are desperate. Unless the declining birthrate is reversed within a year, the Andorian people will hit a tipping point, one from which they might never recover.

In this fearful climate, Shar reaches out to his old friend, Doctor Julian Bashir, for help. There isn't much Bashir can do without access to the restricted Operation Vanguard data. Though there is a way he might gain access to it, even the attempt would mean risking not just his career but his freedom if he’s caught by Starfleet—especially considering the belligerent foreign policy of the new president pro tem, who has decided to stand as a candidate for the presidency in the upcoming special election.

If Bashir somehow finds a cure, his life will be in danger if the Tholians or the Andorian reactionaries in power learn of it—because his mercy mission would threaten their control over Andor and its people. All Bashir wants is to do the right thing—and every major power between him and Andor is prepared to use deadly force to prevent him from doing anything at all.
He also gave a briefer description of the new Vanguard spin-off series, Seekers:
Well, we’re keeping the plot under wraps for the moment. The current plan is for the first two books to tell a two-part story that will serve as a re-introduction to the crews of the Archer-class scout ship Sagittarius and the Constitution-class cruiser Endeavour.
Meanwhile, David R. George III appeared on both Literary Treks and The G and T Show. Both discussions talked at length about his entry in The Fall, Revelation and Dust. Some interesting discussion of the multiple threads in the book, but listen at your peril if you haven't read it yet, they're very spoilery. If you haven't yet picked it up, George offered this summary of the different areas he aimed to have the book cover in his discussion with The G and T Show:
I had to introduce the new Deep Space Nine. I had to begin The Fall, and set some plot lines up. And I had to continue this story of Deep Space Nine. And to a smaller extent, I also wanted to pay tribute to Deep Space Nine, because it was the twentieth anniversary year of the show.
In both interviews he compared the idea at the core of The Fall to an "Archduke Ferdinand moment", here's how he explained that to Literary Treks:
...the editor came to us, with, initially had the notion that perhaps we would have an Archduke Ferdinand moment. Which is to say, when Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated, it actually spurred World War One. And so, there was this idea that perhaps having an event like that in the Star Trek universe, would be a good launching point for a series.
Talking with Literary Treks he also talked a bit about the design process of the new Deep Space 9, including some of the changes that came about thanks to the visualisation of the design for the cover happening concurrently. For instance the new command center, the hub, moved, and changed names, during the course of the design:
I decided early on that the new control center of the new Deep Space Nine was not going to be easily vulnerable by being outside, exposed, on the top of the station. So I buried at the very center of Deep Space Nine, and I called it "the core"...
...for my own reference, I created a blueprint of the core. What it looked like, where each of the stations were. I created that, then I sent that off to the artists - Just so they would have an idea of what I was writing; not that they were going to produce a picture of that or anything.

I don't remember exactly how this happened, but somewhere along, their input made me relocate the core. Which, once I'd moved it out of the very center of the space station, I felt I could no longer call it the core, because that just didn't work. But I moved it once again to the top of the station. I did it because the exterior that they created, made that control center I had created (that blueprint), it just fit physically, perfectly at the top of the station, where there are four rings...
...it was just the perfect place, because the control center happened to have four turbolifts. It was perfect up there, so I relocated it up there, and decided to call it the hub; because that's what it was, and it just made more sense.
One final bit of news, Jens Deffner (my regular tipster, and contributor to Unreality SF and The G and T Show), pointed me towards a tweet made by Paula Block a while ago:

So I guess that's a pretty decent clue that Paula Block and Terry Erdmann's forthcoming ebook novella, their first fiction entry in their Trek bibliography, might be a DS9 tale.

Sunday, 22 September 2013

Peaceable Kingdoms cover and blurb

StarTrek.com have revealed the cover for Dayton Ward's Peaceable Kingdoms, the final novel in The Fall series, which is bringing the series to a conclusion at the end of the year.


Anyone recognise the ship the Enterprise is firing on? StarTrek.com also posted a new blurb:
The United Federation of Planets takes the first hopeful steps beyond the uncertainty and tragedy that has overshadowed recent events in the Alpha Quadrant. Even as elements of the Typhon Pact have been implicated in a devastating attack against the Federation, William Riker holds key knowledge of the true criminals—a revelation that could threaten the fragile Federation-Cardassian alliance. Time is running out to apprehend those responsible for the brutal crime.

Questions and concerns also continue to swell around the ambitious Bajoran Ishan Anjar, who has risen through the ranks of the Federation Council while using the recent bloodshed to further a belligerent, hawkish political agenda against the Typhon Pact. Riker must dispatch his closest friend, Captain Jean-Luc Picard, in a desperate attempt to uncover the truth. But as Picard and the Enterprise crew pursue the few remaining clues, Riker must act on growing suspicions that someone within Ishan’s inner circle has been in league with the criminals from the very beginning…

Continue after the jump for a reminder of all the other covers and blurbs from the series:

Friday, 20 September 2013

Books bits, including more ebooks, and a letter from Garak

The expanding line of new Star Trek ebook exclusive novellas continues to grow! I've recently become aware of a couple more titles due to come out next year, plus there are some new and changed release dates for the books previously known about:

Absent Enemies, by John Jackson Miller
Seasons of Light and Darkness, by Michael A. Martin
Shadow of the Machine, by Scott Harrison
TBA, by Scott Pearson
TBA, by Paula M. Block and Terry J. Erdmann
It looks to me like Simon and Schuster are going for an every other month release pattern here. So I would expect the two TBAs to slot into the gaps in June and August, or if something else shows up to fill one of those, then in December.

In other prose news, Una McCormack has revealed, in an an interview with TrekCore, that her mysterious new book, Home Again, is indeed real, and not just a glitch on Amazon. While Amazon currently only list it in ebook format, McCormack described it as a novel, and also suggested the title isn't final, but gave no other details.

McCormack also told TrekCore about her forthcoming book in The Fall series, The Crimson Shadow, explaining how it involves a Cardassian novel:
The title of my novel is a direct reference to Meditations on a Crimson Shadow. That book plays an important part in my book, and you’ll find out more about Preloc’s book when you read my story.
She also gave a brief overview of what to expect from the book to TrekCore, but gave a more detailed summary in another interview with StarTrek.com:
Picard and Garak are the central point of view characters with whom readers will be familiar. Garak's story carried on the theme that's been central to his narrative in the books: coming to terms with what's happened to Cardassia, and trying to make amends. The book is set in a post-war Cardassia that's choosing between returning to its old belligerence or forging on with the new relationships it has been forming with the other powers in the Khitomer Accords. With Picard, I was able to explore Federation ambivalence towards their new allies. There are a couple of other point of view characters, one of whom, a member of the Cardassian police force, is an original creation of mine, and another is the Cardassian officer Ravel Dygan, whom regular readers will know has been serving on the Enterprise and who played a part in my last novel Brinkmanship. Both of these are a generation younger than Garak, and so I was able to use them to reflect upon what it would be like to inherit a destroyed civilization, and know that your life's work is going to have to be patching up what the previous generation all but ruined.
See also told StarTrek.com how her books fits into the overall narrative of The Fall:
...a "major event" happens in Revelation and Dust: The Crimson Shadow shows the build-up to this event from different perspectives, and some of the initial fallout. We learn more about what that event means, and this is picked up and expanded in A Ceremony of Losses.
If you make your way to Simon and Schuster's listing for the book, you can find an excerpt. Which starts with the following letter from Garak (continues after the jump):

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