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Yet anyone looking to dive into the world of Trek literature could easily become overwhelmed. Since James Blish began writing novels based on TOS episodes, over 800 Trek books have been published, and attempting to read them in chronological order may lead even the most dedicated fans into the weeds. Instead, long-time readers tend to recommend a handful of standouts that are both entry points into a new Trek medium and so essential to the lore, characters, and world that they might as well be canon. Here are our top five picks.
5) The Final Reflection by John M. Ford

Fans describe John M. Ford’s pre-TNG novel The Final Reflection as a sacred Klingon text and one that has had a heavy influence on the culture and philosophy of Klingons across the greater franchise. Published when Klingons were still being portrayed primarily as one-note villains, the book reimagined their society as complex and philosophical. In this book, Ford presented Klingon culture as a layered honor system centered around a fictional chess-like game called klin zha.
The novel follows Captain Krenn of the Imperial Klingon Navy and explores the Federation–Klingon conflict from the opposing perspective. Even though the later official canon partially diverged from Ford’s interpretation, some elements, such as the emphasis on honor and strategy, survived in the shows and movies. An in-universe historical text and bold expansion of an alien world, The Final Reflection should be required reading for Trekkies.
4) Vendetta by Peter David

Peter David is one of the best Trek authors ever to do it, and while he has many incredible entries to choose from (like Imzadi or Q Squared), his 1991 novel Vendetta is regarded by book fans as one of the definitive Borg stories, even considering anything in the official canon. Set during the TNG era, the story begins when the Enterprise-D encounters a mysterious woman who claims to possess the power to destroy the Borg once and for all.
Vendetta is not only a fun, action-packed tale, but it does a lot of heavy lifting for Trek lore. It introduced the Planet Killer as a weapon destined to destroy the Borg, and foreshadowed concepts later used in shows like Voyager and Picard. A fan-favorite, Vendetta brings a more epic spectacle than some of the intimate or historical stories on this list, but never sacrifices character development for Captain Picard and company. Easily one of the most cinematic Trek novels ever written, Vendetta rivals many of the most exciting TNG episodes.











