Young Adult Books (1993-1998)
No. | Title | Author | Released |
---|---|---|---|
Star Trek: The Next Generation Starfleet Academy | |||
1 | Worf's First Adventure | Peter David | 1993 |
2 | Line of Fire | Peter David | 1993 |
3 | Survival | Peter David | 1993 |
4 | Capture the Flag | John Vornholt | 1994 |
5 | Atlantis Station | V.E. Mitchell | 1994 |
6 | Mystery of the Missing Crew | Michael Jan Friedman | 1995 |
7 | Secret of the Lizard People | Michael Jan Friedman | 1995 |
8 | Starfall | Brad Strickland and Barbara Strickland | 1995 |
9 | Nova Command | Brad Strickland and Barbara Strickland | 1995 |
10 | Loyalties | Patricia Barnes-Svarney | 1996 |
11 | Crossfire | John Vornholt | 1996 |
12 | Breakaway | Bobbi JG Weiss and David Cosy Weiss | 1997 |
13 | The Haunted Starship | Brad Ferguson | 1997 |
14 | Deceptions | Bobbi JG Weiss and David Cosy Weiss | 1998 |
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | |||
1 | The Star Ghost | Brad Strickland | 1994 |
2 | Stowaways | Brad Strickland | 1994 |
3 | Prisoners of Peace | John Peel | 1994 |
4 | The Pet | Mel Gilden and Ted Pedersen | 1994 |
5 | Arcade | Diana G. Gallagher | 1995 |
6 | Field Trip | John Peel | 1995 |
7 | Gypsy World | Ted Pedersen | 1996 |
8 | Highest Score | Kem Antilles (Kevin J. Anderson & Rebecca Moesta) | 1996 |
9 | Cardassian Imps | Mel Gilden | 1997 |
10 | Space Camp | Ted Pedersen | 1997 |
11 | Day of Honor: Honor Bound | Diana G. Gallagher | 1997 |
12 | Trapped in Time | Ted Pedersen | 1998 |
Star Trek: The Original Series | |||
1 | Crisis on Vulcan | Brad Strickland and Barbara Strickland | 1996 |
2 | Aftershock | John Vornholt | 1996 |
3 | Cadet Kirk | Diane Carey | 1996 |
Star Trek: Voyager | |||
1 | Lifeline | Bobbi JG Weiss and David Cody Weiss | 1997 |
2 | The Chance Factor | Diana G. Gallagher and Martin R. Burke | 1997 |
3 | Quarantine | Patricia Barnes-Svarney | 1997 |
Read more about this topic: The Children Of Hamlin
Famous quotes containing the words young, adult and/or books:
“There are acacias, a graceful species amusingly devitalized by sentimentality, this kind drooping its leaves with the grace of a young widow bowed in controllable grief, this one obscuring them with a smooth silver as of placid tears. They please, like the minor French novelists of the eighteenth century, by suggesting a universe in which nothing cuts deep.”
—Rebecca West (18921983)
“The writer, unlike his non-writing adult friend, has no predisposed outlook; he seldom observes deliberately. He sees what he did not intend to see; he remembers what does not seem wholly possible. Inattentive learner in the schoolroom of life, he keeps some faculty free to veer and wander. His is the roving eye.”
—Elizabeth Bowen (18991973)
“No common-place is ever effectually got rid of, except by essentially emptying ones self of it into a book; for once trapped in a book, then the book can be put into the fire, and all will be well. But they are not always put into the fire; and this accounts for the vast majority of miserable books over those of positive merit.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)