| |||||
[[Image:{{{image}}}|200px|Battlestar Galactica (2005 Novel)]] | ||
Battlestar Galactica (2005 Novel) A book of the {{{series}}} line | ||
---|---|---|
Book No. | {{{bookno}}} | |
Author(s) | {{{author}}} | |
Adaptation of | {{{episode}}} | |
No. of Pages | {{{pages}}} | |
Published | {{{published}}} | |
ISBN | [[Special:Booksources/{{{isbn}}}|{{{isbn}}}]] | |
Chronology | ||
Previous | Next | |
{{{prev}}} | {{{title}}} | {{{next}}} |
Paperback Version | ||
Available at Amazon.com – Purchase | ||
Available at Amazon.co.uk – Purchase | ||
Available at BOOKSAMILLION.COM - Purchase | ||
Available at Half.com by eBay - Purchase | ||
Audiobook Version | ||
Available at iTunes – [{{{itunes}}} Purchase] |
Overview[edit]
A novelization of the Re-imagined "Battlestar Galactica" Miniseries was published by Tor Books on December 27, 2005. Content and page numbers are from the trade paperback edition (ISBN=0765315416 ), First Edition: January 2006.
The book, written by science fiction author Jeffrey A. Carver, includes a few background elements not shown in the aired Miniseries, and incorporates some deleted scenes. Since the Miniseries article information (Overview, Summary, etc) covers the novelization, the focus of this article is a comparsion of the two very similar versions of the same story.
Notes[edit]
Interesting additions to the novelization include:
- Colonel Wakefield: The name given to the first human, the Armistice Officer, that viewers see in the Miniseries (pg. 16). He meets a unexpected arrival of a Cylon "diplomatic group"--and his death--on the Armistice Station. This also suggests that his son, Boxey, shares his father's last name.
- Triad: The name given to the card game Full Colors (pg. 33).
- The motive for the controversial murder of the infant by a Cylon who will be later be know as Number Six (and during the series as Caprica-Six) is explicitly explained as to spare the infant any suffering in the upcoming attack (pg. 45).
- Natasi: The name given to this copy of Number Six (later, Caprica-Six) (pg. 47).
- The light emitted by the illuminated spine of an aroused Cylon is explained as being mostly infrared, with a small amount of gamma radiation, and nearly invisible to the human eye (pg. 50)
Error(s) in the novelizations include:
- Commander William Adama's callsign is stenciled on his old Viper Mark II as "HUSHER" (pg. 30).