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Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15
 
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Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15 [Mass Market Paperback]

Steven Savile
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
Price: CDN$ 9.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

SG-1 are asked by the Tok'ra to rescue a creature known as Mujina. The last of its species, Mujina is devoid of face or form and draws its substance from the needs of those around it. The creature is an archetype - a hero for all, a villain for all, depending upon whose influence it falls under. And the Goa'uld Apophis, understanding the potential for havoc Mujina offers, has set his heart on possessing the creature.

About the Author

Steven Savile has edited a number of critically acclaimed anthologies, including Elemental, Redbrick Eden, and Doctor Who Short Trips: Destination Prague. He also compiled Smoke Ghost & Other Apparitions and Black Gondolier and Other Stories, the collected horror stories of Fritz Leiber. He is the author of the Von Carstein Vampire trilogy (Inheritance, Dominion, Retribution) set in Games Workshop's popular Warhammer world. He wrote the best-selling original audio novel Torchwood: Hidden for BBC Audiobooks, as well as a novel based in the Primeval universe. He has also written for Star Wars, Jurassic Park, and four incarnations of The Doctor.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars confusing, Oct 5 2010
By 
Harmony K. (Canada) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15 (Mass Market Paperback)
I own all the Stargate books and generally like them all, with a few exceptions. This is one of the weakest. Still enjoyable, but I won't bother reading it again.

Unfortunately, it is unfinished. It obviously requires a second volume. Until then, all other books in the series (starting with SG1-16, Four Dragons, by Diana Botsford) will just magically have SG1 back to base and ready to start a new adventure. Not good at all for continuity.
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Amazon.com: 1.7 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)

40 of 43 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Who Has the Idiot Ball?, Sep 4 2010
By Geonn W. Cannon "geonn" - Published on Amazon.com
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This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15 (Mass Market Paperback)
THIS REVIEW HAS SPOILERS! Read at your own risk, but I'll offer the same warning to anyone who is actually considering buying this book.

*
*

There are so many problems with this book, I don't even know where to start. The good parts feel rushed and forced-in. The part I felt like I could actually like felt like the outline for a much longer story with the SG-1 team forced into it. Even that I could have forgiven, but the basic errors I can't overlook.

* A voice cannot drip with malfeasance. It's just not possible. The word I believe the author and editor was looking for is "malevolence."
* Incoming wormholes do not require Walter to engage chevrons.
* A man's hand does not look anything like a woman's hand. Another character confirms this after a chapter of pointless worrying about who the hand belongs to. There should have been no doubt whatsoever just from looking at it.
* Harry MAYBOURNE. Not Mayberry. Mayberry is where Opie lives with Aunt Bee. Maybourne is the person you wouldn't want to see with the creature.
* SG-1 goes to a prison planet without considering the Gate may be booby trapped.
* Sam and Jack both act like it's impossible for a wormhole to jump from one Gate to another (this despite the fact Sam has done it on purpose at this point). And an addition.
* If you're going to pretend Solitudes didn't happen, don't reference it 11 pages later.
* The point of origin is unique to each Stargate and DHD. A DHD has 38 symbols and a point of origin. The only thing necessary to discover an unknown planet's point of origin is to look at the device and find the symbol that looks unusual.
* Why is the team so concerned with keeping the creature away from Apophis specifically when Teal'c later (page 176) declare Apophis is dead? It's not a lie. Teal'c wouldn't lie about a victory he had yet to achieve; he's too honorable for that. And yes, Apophis had a bad habit of coming back to life. But worrying about what Apophis would do with the creature isn't a worst-case scenario, it's an impossible-case scenario. No one on the team would entertain it. There are plenty of other bad Goa'ulds out there who could have been name dropped.

My biggest problem is with the ending, but I won't go into that here. I've spoiled enough. Suffice to say it was one of the most wholly unsatisfying endings I have ever read. If the author was setting up a sequel, good luck. That's the one Stargate novel I will never even consider buying.

One last point: SG-1 (or any team) who has been presumed dead for over a month would have their IDCs locked out. Given the way the novel ends, I can only assume the entire team died against the iris. And given the way the novel made me feel about the team, I really didn't have a problem with that.

23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars I would give this ZERO STARS if I could!, Sep 6 2010
By Shanda Robertson - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15 (Mass Market Paperback)
This is absolutely the worst SG1 novel I have ever read (and I've read them all). I wish I had not spent the money. I agree with everything Cannon said. He clearly slogged through this horrible piece of tripe, which is more than I can say. I forced myself to skim the last half just because I hate not finishing what I've started.

The Fandemonium novels are hit or miss as far as I'm concerned, but there are several good ones. I was not a fan of this story and the writing was atrocious. (Was he paid an extra nickel for every time he used his thesaurus?) But the biggest and in my opinion absolutely unforgiveable offense is that he clearly had no idea about the characters or the universe of Stargate. Sam was barely there. Daniel was a whiney baby, completely useless, apparently he just can't keep up with Sam's intellect. Teal'c was verbose. Jack was indescribably annoying. And the presence of the team seemed to be a minor inconvenience to the story the author really wanted to tell, which had nothing to do with Stargate.

The point of this publishing company was that it was started by fans, for fans and the books were originally written by SG fanfic authors. Sally Malcolm, owner and chief executive of Fandemonium explained in an interview that they have moved away from that model is because she believed there weren't publishing enough male authors. Because a majority of authors in SG fandom are women, they went searching elsewhere. (And I'm going to take a Sam Carter moment to say that just because my reproductive organs are on the inside instead of the outside doesn't mean I can't write fiction just as well as any man--and definitely better than Savile. If they started out with all male authors I doubt gender would have ever come up.)

I can understand MGM approving this book because their people don't need to know the franchise that well, and let's face it, they need the money. But Malcolm, who most definitely knows better, should never have allowed it to even get that far.

13 of 16 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars I agree with Geonn Cannon, Sep 4 2010
By E. Hagan "Xweetie" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Power Behind the Throne: SG1-15 (Mass Market Paperback)
Am not doing a separate review of the book itself. Read Cannon's and my comment on his/her review. But I did want to score it since the 5 star review is so glowing and thinks that Cannon didn't read the book. I can tell he did read it, as have I. Our ratings are accurate for the reasonable reader.

I've certainly read worse SG-1 novels (am doing so right now as a matter of fact), but paying readers deserve a fair assessment before they spend money. Readers - beware of Fandemonium and non-fan authors who many only be doing it for the money.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 17 reviews  1.7 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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