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Star Trek: The Dominion War #3

Tunnel Through the Stars

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From the Gamma Quadrant they came, hordes of merciless Jem'Hadar soldiers commanded by the shape-changing Founders, who seek to conquer both the United Federation of Planets and the Klingon™ Empire. Now that the Dominion has joined forces with the Cardassians, and claimed "Deep Space Nine™ " as their prize, Starfleet is running out of time. As a secret military project nears completion, the destiny of the entire Alpha Quadrant depends on the courage of a few.
In the Federation's time of greatest peril, as the "Starship Enterprise™ " readies itself for battle, Captain Jean-Luc Picard leads a desperate mission of espionage deep into the heart of the hostile Cardassian Empire. Unless they can prevent the Dominion from creating an artificial wormhole, hordes of fresh Jem'Hadar warriors and Changelings will pour into the Alpha Quadrant, dooming the Federation to unconditional surrender. But there may be a traitor along on the mission and Picard finds he cannot trust even his closest allies.

269 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published December 1, 1998

About the author

John Vornholt

97 books93 followers
John Vornholt also writes as Caroline Goode.

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5 stars
156 (24%)
4 stars
248 (39%)
3 stars
193 (30%)
2 stars
31 (4%)
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4 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for Kaotic.
432 reviews30 followers
June 22, 2017
Now this is what I was looking for. A powerful story against a powerful enemy, against all odds, with excitement I haven't already seen.

You know all those memes that say something to the tune of "there isn't enough pages left for all that needs to happen?" I felt that way by the end of this, but it somehow managed to pull it off.

Excellent story.
Profile Image for Joshua Palmatier.
Author 52 books140 followers
January 5, 2013
This is the second half of the Enterprise's escapades during the Dominion War, not told or shown during Deep Space Nine's run. Basically, Picard hears a rumor that the Dominion is building a wormhole in Cardassian space and with the help of Ro, who's Maquis friends have been displaced and killed by the Cardassians and their Dominion allies, they infiltrate Cardassian space to verify the rumor and, if they can, destroy the wormhole before it can be activated. In the first book, the discover that the rumor is true and manage to help save some of the Federation prisoners being forced to work on completing the wormhole as slave labor. They've retreated to the Badlands in order to figure out how to either disable or destroy the wormhole before it can be completed.

And that's where this second book picks up. Picard and crew begin formulating a plan, but sabotage forces them to consider the possibility that they have a traitor on board. It also forces them to fight for survival in the Badlands, where they discover some long abandoned ships. Once they've retrieved food and water (and discovered the secret of the ships) they turn their attention back to the wormhole and come up with a plan to at least hurt the progress on building the wormhole, in the hopes of giving the Federation enough time to destroy it before it can be used. The only problem is, it's a suicide mission, since the traitor in their midst has destroyed their ability to contact the Enterprise to ask for help.

This was a good follow-through with what was built up in the first book. In fact, I enjoyed this book more than the first, which felt kind of rambling in places. This one was much more focused, and adding the traitor and the fight to survive even before they can consider how to disable the wormhole was well done. My only real complaint was that the ship's ability to get as close as they got to the wormhole pushed the wall of believability. And then that wall crumbled when the traitor notifies the Dominion of their position and only one Dominion ship is sent to find them. Once that ship is destroyed, there isn't a second attempt made to locate them and plans progress after that without the Dominion continuing the search or even reacting to the destruction of the one ship. So there were some credibility problems with the main plot toward the end of the book, when the action kicks into high gear. But this is Star Trek, and there are often parts of plots where the bad guys should have reacted in more intelligent ways, so most readers will forgive all of this and just enjoy the story. And I did enjoy the story. The main action at the end, once their final plans are put into motion, is great.

So, an enjoyable addition to the Star Trek universe and a great additional facet to the Dominion War we saw being played on out Deep Space Nine.
Profile Image for Will.
191 reviews
June 8, 2020
Book #3, but the 2nd with TNG crew, taking place during The Dominion War, which mainly involved the DS9 show/characters. This one dealt more with Picard, LaForge, Ro and the ragtag crew on a small craft, as opposed to a galactic war. Of course, it surrounds Picard and team finding a way to the artificial wormhole that will be the end of the Federation, if the Dominion enters the Alpha Quadrant through it. Their task is to disable or destroy it. However, there is a "spy" "enemy" on the ship. Is it the Romulan? Is it Ro?, is it someone else? This was more of a mystery Star Trek as opposed to normal fare. A secondary storyline dealt with the Enterprise still docked at a starbase, while Riker, is trying the help a lady friend overcome her fears.

A fast read and would have been a good episode back in the day, as others have pointed out.
Profile Image for Sean Randall.
1,979 reviews45 followers
November 3, 2019
A Brilliant continuation, our heroes facing very long odds, and the set of chapters with the changeling were tense and exciting. Just the sort of adventure you pick up these books for.
Profile Image for Michael T Bradley.
863 reviews5 followers
February 14, 2018
Overall I dug this little tale of 'what was the Enterprise crew during the Dominion War?' My biggest issue with it is that the Data subplot (he gets left on an alien planet w/a malfunctioning shuttle) just goes nowhere for far too long (I honestly don't even remember how it got resolved), but everything else felt fitting, from Riker dealing with a PTSD war veteran via his penis to a surgically altered Picard serving under Ro Laren.

The POW escapees are an interesting bunch, and I especially liked the unjoined Trill scientist collaborator who thinks everyone else is a moron because 'wars come and go, but scientific discoveries are always correct.' A slightly unique twist on the Oppenheimer naivete that led to the atomic bomb. It was nice to see someone who was, in essence, pro-Dominion for reasons other than 'boo, hiss' or political.

Since DS9 is kind of the center of the Dominion War, it must have been difficult trying to figure out what to have the Enterprise doing that wasn't just pchew pchew, and I think having Picard & everyone involved in his plot going up against a second wormhole that the Dominion was building worked. It had a real sense of urgency, much bigger than a mere firefight could have accomplished, while not overshadowing what was going on with DS9. Good choice there.
Profile Image for Octavia Cade.
Author 89 books125 followers
May 7, 2024
There's four books in this series. I read the first two of them back in mid-2022, I think it was, and then I must have got distracted, because I forgot about it entirely! I do dislike leaving a series unfinished, and I was quite enjoying it, so lucky for me the library still seems to have the last two volumes. Better hurry up and get to the last one quick before it disappears from the shelves.

Coming back to the series after a two year gap, and it's easy to get back into. Not quite standalone, but I didn't need to recall every detail from the first two books for this to make sense either. It's very closely focused on Picard and a small team of disparate individuals trying to sabotage a Dominion facility, so in many ways the wider war is relatively absent. It's a quick, adventurous read, likeable and fast-paced. I also enjoyed the very small subplot about a brief love interest of Riker's, notable not for the romance but for representation, in one person, of the psychological effect the war is having on Starfleet personnel. It's got to be a horrendous job, patching up ships so that more people can be sent out to die, so the (admittedly skimpy) exploration of this was a nice touch.
Profile Image for Andy Stjohn.
140 reviews2 followers
May 21, 2023
TNG: Donimon War #3: Tunnel Through the Stars by John Vornholt

Now, this is a great follow up! This book is definitely a step up from the last one and includes more parts of DS9 that I like. It’s a very tense book and you’re not sure they’re going to succeed, even though you know they are going to in the end. Vornholt does an excellent job with rising the stakes, especially with the intruder subplot. I rolled my eyes at it first and for some reason I suspected Taruik as he would the least likely to sabotage it in the beginning. But I did not expect the Founder twist, which made this book so much better.

Overall, a very and suspense filled book and a great answer to what the crew of TNG was doing during the Dominon War.

Overall 7.5/10
Profile Image for Craig.
392 reviews2 followers
September 7, 2018
Not as good as his first but still a decent little novel. Once you get past the disappointment of not reading about the Enterprise in action during the Dominion War you can appreciate the story for what it is. A few new interesting characters (plus a nod to The Shining (Captain Jack Torrance anyone?)) add to the mix which puts regulars on the back burner which is too bad. However, I found this story had to strive to be original enough and I don't want to spoil anything so I will leave it at that. I was hoping for a bit more but Vornholt's books are definitely the stronger half of the Dominion War series.
Profile Image for Rocky Sunico.
2,227 reviews24 followers
October 15, 2023
This third book in this Dominion War arc of books is pretty exciting as we go back to the original story of Captain Picard's mission to confirm the existence of a Dominion-controlled artificial wormhole that may resolve their resupply issues after the mining of the Bajoran wormhole. It's quite the thrilling notion of a small crew that has infiltrated Dominion space in a craft that has no legitimate combat abilities, especially against the Dominion.

There's a lot of tension and the crew can only do so much given their limited resources. And that can add a bit of frustration to the reading as the characters keep hitting the same walls over and over. But on the whole it's still a good adventure and a solid TNG-esque story.
Profile Image for Christopher Lutz.
424 reviews
June 20, 2017
Closer to three and a half stars, Tunnel Through the Stars was a good enough tale of the Dominion War, but it was frustrating having the Enterprise sitting out 99% of the story at a Starbase. The reason I read both parts of this story was to see the Enterprise and her crew on the front lines fighting the Dominion. The sabotage mission behind enemy lines was well written and all, just not what I was hoping for with this TNG story.
Profile Image for Amanda.
935 reviews13 followers
December 7, 2018
This was a wildly inconsistent conclusion to a weirdly plotted book. They even spoil the 4th book in it. Also, I don't think Ro Laren's characterization was well done. I also don't understand why
Profile Image for Corey.
219 reviews25 followers
June 10, 2024
This was much better, huge improvement over the first book in this series by the same author.

I quite enjoyed this one, the author definitely did a better job this time around.

Interesting story!
Profile Image for F. William Davis.
846 reviews42 followers
September 15, 2020
I think my opinion of this book suffers because I read it while tired and fairly distracted by other thoughts. It was a good story with some spectacularly Trek moments.
Profile Image for Kirby Evans.
239 reviews1 follower
July 30, 2023
An entertaining side jag in the Dominion War. A little more linear than the first TNG book. Honestly read because it was $1 and get me caught up on GoodReads goal.
Profile Image for Nathan.
95 reviews14 followers
August 27, 2016
This is a review of both halves of the TNG Dominion War duology, since they're basically one novel split in two.

The context: This story takes place between First Contact and Insurrection, simultaneously with the first few episodes (or more precisely probably episodes 3 or so through 6) of Deep Space Nine's sixth season. I think it's the first major TNG story post-First Contact. The next TNG Dominion War novel will be The Battle of Betazed, which takes place roughly a year after this; in the meantime the crew of the Enterprise will have a Data mystery, adventures with the X-Men and Q, and the Dominion War comic The Gorn Crisis. This duology also features recurring character Ro Laren and characters from the TNG episode "Lower Decks."

The content: I haven't read Star Trek novels in probably close to 20 years. But I've been rewatching DS9 over the last year and my inner continuity nerd wanted to flesh out that crisis. So I checked out the DS9 novel Hollow Men and the Tales of the Dominion War anthology, and then took a look to see what the TNG crew had been doing during the war.

John Vornholt seemed like a great fit for this project. Author of acclaimed early TNG novels like Masks, he had also previously tackled the Maquis in Antimatter and even Maquis Ro (sort of) in Rogue Saucer. So a TNG Dominion War story seemed right up his alley.

Unfortunately, this is terribly disappointing. First, it's one novel's worth of plot bloated into two novels, with lots of repetitive filler. Nearly half of it has nothing to do with the Dominion War at all, consisting of side quests to give the characters something to do. It's also barely a TNG story. The Enterprise is out of commission for virtually the whole thing, with most of the characters barely there. It's essentially a Picard, Ro, and Sam Lavelle adventure, which is fine, but not really enough of an event to justify a duology or to sell the Dominion War concept in prose, which is I think a terrible missed opportunity for Pocket's Star Trek line. It's also fairly poorly written, the prose nothing to write home about, and the characters mostly rather thin. And it's uncomfortable the extent to which Vornholt constantly sexualizes nearly every female character.

This book is not without value if read more to flesh out the fictional conflict than for the quality of the novel itself. It does a better job illustrating just how poorly the war was going at that point than DS9 really managed to do with its victories nearly every episode, and it does show that the war was bigger than just the battles for DS9, and that the Dominion had other things going on. Unfortunately some of the Dominion's actions don't seem quite to fit with its characterization in the show, but nothing too egregious there.

Overall it's difficult to recommend this duology to any but the most die-hard fans or to continuity nerds like me.
Profile Image for Alex.
125 reviews
March 7, 2021
Pretty good follow up to the previous TNG: Dominion book. Good drama, action, and character moments. Clearly written by someone who knows Star Trek.
71 reviews
May 9, 2015
This is book three of The Dominion War. It finishes up the story started in book one. Really they are one novel, divided.

The Enterprise learns that the Dominion is building an artificial wormhole, somewhere in Cardassian space. The war is going very badly and if the Dominion can easily bring in reinforcements, the Federation is doomed.

So Picard, La Forge, and company must penetrate deep into enemy territory disguised as Bajoran traders. Needless to say, it isn't easy.

This book has a good plot and some quite imaginative moments that set it above the normal Star Trek novel.
Profile Image for Steve.
1,158 reviews
March 4, 2013
I quite enjoyed this sequel to Behind Enemy Lines. It picks up right where the previous book finished. I wasn't sure about some of the plot devices used in the first half of the book, but they all come together in the climax for a gripping read. I would have loved to have seen these two books as a two part episode of TNG ...
Profile Image for Michael White.
10 reviews
June 18, 2014
This was a great conclusion to the Next Generation portion of this series. It had great action all the way thru the book. Honestly there is a weird side story starting about the 25% mark to the 50% mark. It just felt like the author was trying to extend the book.....maybe I am wrong. But once we got back to the main story it was nail biting all the way to the end. The fate of the Galaxy rested with Captain Jean Luc Picard and his ragtag crew of rescued prisoners, civilians and spies!
Profile Image for Tammy.
559 reviews20 followers
August 16, 2010
Picard, Geordi, Ro Laren, and a ragtag bunch of escapees from a Dominion work camp work to destroy an artificial wormhole before it goes live and the invasion from the Gamma quadrant begins.

I read the first two books many years ago, so I didn't remember the context for the book. As a result, it was a bit confusing at the onset. The plot was pretty good though.

Profile Image for Jason Vargo.
151 reviews
June 19, 2015
Focusing on Picard and his rag tag crew, Tunnel Through the Stars plays like a less interesting version of DS9's own "The Adversary." The problem here, by and large, is the supporting characters don't get any development to speak of. Plus, the plot devices seem to be just that: obstacles for the crew to overcome instead of being natural to the story.
551 reviews3 followers
January 26, 2017
A step up from book 1 of the series. My main problem is that I actually enjoyed the "side quests" the crew went on, but I felt like so little of the book actually dealt with the Dominion War. The side plot with Riker was almost completely written out. The Ro/Lavelle romance seemed very forced. The ending was decently written at least.
49 reviews1 follower
March 31, 2009
The novel completes the story begun in Dominion War #1. (Dominion War #2 and #4 dealt with Deep Space Nine and since they weren’t available at my local used book store, I haven’t read them.) Another good read.
Profile Image for Mikael Kuoppala.
936 reviews60 followers
May 27, 2012
The story moves forward very fluidly and has some really good points to make. It also uses some of our favorite supporting characters well and msanages to rise above its rather action adventure premise with meaningful prose.
Profile Image for Angela.
2,577 reviews71 followers
August 21, 2012
A direct sequel to Book 1, and significantly better. Picard has to destroy the artificial wormhole with just a trading ship and a very unusual crew. On the way they encounter ghosts, Founders and Romulans. The plot is quite fast moving and enjoyable. A good read.
Profile Image for Todd R.
248 reviews17 followers
June 4, 2015
A good conclusion to the 2 novels of this 4 novel set that detail what the NexGen was up to during the Dominion War days. Worth the read, with good characters and a moving plot.
I only read #2 and #4 of this series as the other novels are just rewrites of DS9 episodes.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews

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