
WhenStar Trek: Deep Space Nine debuted in 1993, we had no idea how big a part of our lives it
would become. For seven years, we ate, drank, and sleptDeep Space Nine, gathering the details that
one day would appear within our book, theStar Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion. Watching those
176 hours of television over and over again could have become an onerous chore. But it never did,
thanks to the largely unsung efforts of the brilliant writers, the phenomenal actors, and all those
behind-the-scenes people whose names, we suspect, too few viewers remember. The show kept getting
better and better, with storylines that grew ever richer and more complex. The primary characters came
to feel like friends, completely capturing our hearts. And not since Shakespeare has a more fascinating
group of spear-carriers supported the ranks.
When the series completed its seven-season run, the two of us would have gone into serious withdrawal
if we hadn’t had our temporary crutch. For nearly a year after the series ended, we continued to be
absorbed in completing the work on that doorstop of a tome mentioned above. During those months, we
could almost imagine that the characters were still around. While we were writing, Kira commanded a
daily portion of our lives. Odo insinuated his way into every conversation. Garak skulked about in our
heads as we reviewed the galleys.
Then we finished theCompanion, and our connection to those characters was severed. Marco Palmieri
and the other fine folks at Pocket Books launched a series of wonderful novels that move the characters
forward, exploring their lives after the close of the Dominion War, after Sisko had joined the Prophets,
after Odo had gone home. But still we missed that seven-year period when they all were together on the
station, living their day-to-day lives. When O’Brien could count on meeting Bashir at Quark’s for an
evening round of darts. When Jake and Nog could hang out together, their legs dangling above the
Promenade. When the characters were learning as much about one another as we were learning about
them.
Now, thanks to this book, we have brand-new stories from that extraordinary period that bring our
friends back to us, exactly as they were.
Some of these stories convey the moments that must have taken place for the characters, either between
scenes or between episodes, but that we didn’t get to see on-screen: The triumphant moment when Nog
makes a decision that will change the course of his life; The bittersweet moment when Jadzia opens her
mind to the prospect of a future of hope, rather than numbing sorrow.
Some of the stories take the characters into new adventures that would have made wonderful episodes
of their own: A visit from the former chief of security on Deep Space 9 draws Odo into a compelling
mystery; Romance leads Quark to a not-so-pleasant realization about his true nature; Garak sends a
fascinating communication to Doctor Bashir ... but would you expect anythingless than fascinating from
the likes of Garak? Particularly in a story written by the plain, simple tailor’s alter ego, Andy Robinson?
As Vic Fontaine once observed, “Nothing lasts forever.” But on the pages that follow, you’ll find
everything it takes to get you back into the “zone” (as O’Brien might have put it), at least for a while.
Depends how fast you read, pallie.
Terry J. Erdmann and Paula M. Block
Los Angeles,