Battlestar Galactica
by Jeffrey A. Carver
Synopsis: Adama is about to retire. The Galactica is about to be decommissioned. The Cylons are about to return. The Twelve Colonies of Kobol are about to destroyed. Mankind is about to be wiped out. Fortunately only two of those "about to"s will come true. Unfortunately those two will decimate mankind down to 50,000 people - and that's it.
My Opinion: It's the novelization of the mini series and it follows the script very closely, including the jumps between the several plot locations (Galactica, Caprica, Colonial One, ...). I've read better and worse novelizations, a better one would be
Babylon 5: In the Beginning and worse ones would be the original
Star Wars trilogy.
The Cylons' Secret
by Craig Shaw Gardner
Synopsis: 20 years since the Cylons have left the colonies and 20 years until they will come back. Adama has rejoined the forces and is now Colonel and the XO of the Battlestar Galactica. He has managed to get Tigh on the ship where he serves as Viper pilot instructor.
Tom Zarek on the other hand is a member of a scavenger ship. One day they stumble across a research station on a planet far away from the colonies. There they are still conducting research on and with (original) Cylons. Neither party knows that there are beings who closely follow that research and that they have a great interest to keep that station "off the radar".
My Opinion: Not that interesting in my opinion. The text is easy to read and the story is pretty much straight-forward. Who the mysterious beings might be isn't much of a guesswork when you know the series and the number of different lifeforms in the
BSG universe. The author didn't contradict the canonical history to the best of my knowledge. But that also means that he didn't tell us anything new about them - at least not very much.
Sagittarius is Bleeding
by Peter David
Synopsis: The story of this book is set between the second season episodes
Black Market (2x14) and
Scar (2x15). President Roslin has weird hallucinations. She sees Sharon Valerii everywhere. Has this something to do with the fact that she's got the blood of Sharon's unborn child to heal her cancer? She can't sleep and when she does - or even when she's awake - she gets a message: "Sagittarius is bleeding".
One of the ships in the fleet, the Bifrost, belongs to the Midguardians, a group of heathens who does not believe in the Lords of Kobol. They ask for permission to be recognized as 13th Colony of Kobol - or as 14th, if you count Earth. And they can offer something in exhange.
My Opinion: This was an interesting read. I like books from the author - Peter David - who has also written books in the
Star Trek and
Babylon 5 (and other) franchises. It didn't became clear until the end what exactly the Midguardians were planning and all the characters behaved like they would in a TV episode. OK, we've never heard of these Midguardians before and probably never will again but in a fleet of 50,000 indivduals who can know them all?
While I liked the book in general, I have one problem with a certain character - especially at the end of the book.
Boxey - who played a key role in this book (but wasn't seen on the show for quite some time now) - is suspected of being a Cylon. Of course it was Baltar who has put him in the spotlight. That itself is not a problem. But the end clearly indicated that he is actually a human model and unless he doesn't become the twelveth human model in the show this was a plot hole. The book is non-canon but I honestly don't see the reason why Peter David did this. It wasn't even necessary for the story.