Although I'm sure that the number of people who give a darn about my opinion could be numbered on one hand, I nonetheless post a list of my favorite Star Trek episodes, movies, and fanfic here, along with why I liked them.

(#1 favorites for each series are marked with an *)
Star Trek
#11 The Menagerie - Spock is placed on court martial for taking the Enterprise to Talos IV, an off-limits world. Through footage of the original pilot episode, The Cage, he shows his reason - he wants to give the crippled Christopher Pike, his former commander, the opportunity to live in the lovely illusions painted by the Talosians.
#27 City on the Edge of Forever - THE classic Trek episode, in which a OD-ed McCoy changes history. To set it right, Kirk must let his love interest of the week, Edith Keeler, die; her pacifist movement would otherwise have let the Nazis win WWII.
#32 Mirror, Mirror - Kirk and friends trade places with their doubles from an alternative universe, where the Federation is cruel and domineering; Kirk convinces the AU Spock to start the inevitable rebellion, paving the way for some great DS9 episodes.
*#66 The Empath - Gem (Kathryn Hays), the mute empath mentioned in the title, is held with Kirk, Spock and McCoy; her abilities allow her to absorb the pain of others, and their captors are trying to see if her race will learn self-sacrifice. I love the way she expresses herself with smooth body language, almost like a dance.

Ep I'd like to see:
#53 Bread and Circuses - ancient Roman values in a 20th-century equivalent society, with some allusions to sun - er, Son - worship.

Other thoughts:
#62 For the World is Hollow, and I Have Touched the Sky - the ep sounds interesting enough, but what I really like is the title :)
#64 Plato's Stepchildren - I think it's neat that Star Trek had TV's first inter-racial kiss, though the fact that it was a big deal then tells you how far we still had to go. I would like to see it sometime.


Star Trek: The Animated Series
I've only seen a part of one of these, and that a long time ago, but there are a couple that look really interesting:
#1 Yesteryear - Spock uses the Gaurdian of Forever to fix a problem with his past; he helps himself as a child through a rite of passage, and his younger self must put his pet to sleep
#19 Practical Joker - an energy field takes over the ship and starts playing practicle jokes; I'm sure it was silly, but after all, everyone liked "Tribbles"!
Star Trek II
--The Series That Never Was--
Right before deciding to make the first movie, TPTB settled on a new live-action TV show, sans Spock. The actors were signed, the scripts were written, and then...Star Wars and such convinced them that a movie would be a better idea after all. Twelve episodes in all were written, and I liked these:
#7 Tomorrow and the Stars - Kirk is accidentally beamed back to Pearl Harbor in 1941 a few days before the attack. He falls for a married woman there, and must resist the temptation to warn her of the impending danger. I like the author's (Larry Alexander) original idea as well, which would have had Kirk responsible - against his will - for the destruction of a whole civilization. He compared Kirk's choice to "sending somebody back to kill Hitler in the crib, and he does it. The only irony you can have is his coming back and them saying, 'Why didn't you kill Kowalski like we asked you to?' History would be the same, but somebody else would do the job."
#8 Devil's Due - this idea was later made into a TNG episode; a decent script

Star Trek: The Next Generation
I've seen almost all of the 178 episodes - more than 2/3, at least, which is a good number. There have been, of course, the good, the bad, and the just plain weird. These are my favorites:
#22 Symbiosis - one of the preachy ones, I nonetheless liked the way Picard handled the problem at hand; the "plague cure" which the Enterprise is delivering turns out to be an addictive drug on which an entire planet is hooked. The Prime Directive keeps them from interfereing with its delivery, but Picard also refuses to help arrange for future shipments from the neighboring planet; the culture will have to get over their addiction when this last supply runs out.
#35 The Measure of a Man - Data is to be taken apart for study, and he resigns to avoid it. Maddox, the scientist, objects, claiming Data is just a machine, and there is a hearing in which Riker is forced to argue against his friend. Picard, with help from Guinan, realizes that reproducing Data would result in a race of slaves, and proves in court - or nearly so - that Data is sentient. For more from me on the subject, read my essay entitled "Hnau."
#36 The Dauphin - despite all the Wesley-bashing going on these days, I rather liked the kid (actually, I thought he was cute, but then I was only 14). In this episode he falls for an alien princess who's being ferried to a planet where she will be a mediator; she sacrifices a chance at happiness with Wes to fulfill her duties.
#41 Pen Pals - Data responds to a little girl's distress call, despite the Prime Directive, and Wesley makes the decision to save her planet. I loved the interaction of Data with his little friend.
#52 Who Watches the Watchers? - I just saw it again this afternoon, and I realized how anti-religion the message is; when a culture not quite as advanced as the Native American tribes a couple of centuries ago gets a glimpse of Federation marvels, they proclaim Picard as a god. This return to formerly abandoned superstition and religion is horrifying to the crew; it sets back the people's progress greatly. He finally convinces them that he is not, in fact, omnipotet. I think the reason I like it in spite of the whole anti-religion message is that I enjoy seeing Picard deal with Nuria and her people, convincing them that he is mortal, even at the risk of his own life.
#64 The Offspring - I think I missed the first part of this episode, but I loved the rest of it so much that it's made the list. Data creates a daughter for himself, named Lal. She begins to experience very strong emotions, which destablize her positronic brain, and eventually she dies. :( Frakes' first directing job.
#102 Darmok - A favorite for many; it is my second: Picard is trapped on a planet with an alien captain who speaks in metaphors. At first Picard distrusts him, but eventually he realizes that the captain is using this forced encounter to attempt to break the understanding-barrier. While the crews of both ships wait in orbit - the Enterprise quite unhappily - the two captains battle an energy creature. The alien captain dies of wounds, but not before he and Picard make contact, and the Federation and the alien race can now begin to become allies. Piller calls it "the prototype of what 'Star Trek' should be."
#119 The First Duty - RDM makes his Star Trek debut in an episode not far from Paris' back-story. Robert Duncan McNeil, later co-star of Voyager, plays a classmate of Wesley's who pressures his squadron into covering up a deadly accident. Picard discovers that the group was practicing an outlawed manouver when one of the group was killed. He threatens that he will tell if Wes doesn't, reminding the boy that his first duty is to the truth, and Wesley makes the right decision.
#123 I, Borg - A classic, though what came of it later was far from good. A member of the collective is rescued by the Enterprise despite the misgivings of Picard and Guinan, who have both suffered by this race. The drone befriends Geordi and is given the name Hugh. When the resentful Picard, who is planning to use the drone to destroy the Borg, finally confronts his enemy, he finds an individual who does not wish to assimilate anyone. The crew gives Hugh the choice of asylum or a return to the Borg vessle which is coming to pick him up, and though he values his individuality, he does not want to endanger his friends, and returns to the collective.
*#125 Inner Light - Picard is seemingly attacked by a strange probe, which causes him to live out a lifetime in a long-dead culture while his body lies unconcious on the bridge for all of 25 minutes. In his dream, he has a wife, and once he accepts that he is trapped there, he builds a life with her, raising two children and becoming involved in the community. He discovers that the planet is dying - the sun is going nova - and as an old man he sees the launching of the probe that will preserve their way of life - the very same one that finds him 1,000 years later. When he awakens, the probe has shut itself off, and all that is inside the the flute he learned to play on his other life. He can still play it, and he carries the memories of that ancient culture with him as a living witness.
#132 True Q - Amanda, too new aboard the ship to know better than to fall for Riker, is revealed by everyone's favorite guest star to be a member of the continuum. She is given little choice in the matter of her future; she goes with Q at the end to take her rightful place. My favorite scene is their game of hide-and-seek.
Found you!
#136-137 Chain of Command, Parts I & II - not one for the kiddies. Picard, Worf and Crusher are sent on an undercover mission from which they may not return, while the rest of the crew must adjust to a new and very different captain. Picard is captured by the Cardassians and tortured (there's a scene in which, while it doesn't show much, it is obvious that he is stripped). He is, of course, rescued, but not necessarily in the nick of time. In the closing segment he confides in Troi that right before his rescue he actually did "see four lights" - the Romulan had convinced him, through torture and brainwashing, that there were four, not five, lightbulbs. It's an ending that gives you shivers and makes you realize that Jean-Luc is human.
My apologies to all fans of the Romulans for mistakenly naming them as the bad guys earlier! It was definately the Cardassians.
#162 Inheritance - Data meets his "mother," actually another android like himself into whom his creator transferred the memories of his dying wife. Once he knows the truth, Data makes the decision not to tell the woman of her true state - she thinks she is still human, and Data knows the will eventually grow old and die - and so he gives up the chance to not be alone and one of a kind in the universe. A beautiful story; I especially liked it when they played their instruemnts together.
#165 Homeward - Nikolai, Worf's human foster brother, forces the Enterprise to save one village of a race whose planet is dying by transporting them to a holodeck. While en route to the designated new home for the people the holodeck suffers malfunctions, making Nikolai's and Worf's jobs of leading the people harder. Worf is an unwilling accomplice, but at the end comes to terms with his brother's chosen path.
#167 Lower Decks - A unique episode, this one dealt with the POV of those who DON'T get to sit at the table and discus the classified details of each mission. The subordinate officers wonder, speculate, and eventually all but one know something of what's going on. One of the women is sent on a very dangerous mission to help a Cardassian spy return to his homeworld to continue his work for the Federation, and she doesn't make it back alive. :( Star Trek isn't afraid to let people die (especially if they're not in the credits at the beginning), and this is a good thing - it's not all a bed of roses out there. I liked how they showed the POV of the rest of the ship for once - both the officers who were out of the loop and the civilian who fraternized with all levels of command.
#176 Preemptive Strike - Ensign Ro is recruited to infiltrate the Maquis. As she gets to know the people she must betray, she finds that she sympathizes with them and their plight, and ultimately turns on Starfleet instead. Her only regret is the disappointment she causes Picard; yet another "Star Trek" ending, where everything winds up wrong, yet somehow it's right, and realistic as well. You've gotta suspect that at least a few undercover agents turn on their country or organization when they really get to know the other side. The episode was poignant and well-acted. The last one before "All Good Things."

Would like to see:
#85 Data' Day - My sole reason for wanting to see this one, besides my admiration of Spiner's Data, is a picture from an old ST daily calendar. It depicts Data walking a kimono-clad Keiko (Chao - good actress!) down the aisle on her and Chief O'Brien's wedding day. The costume is gorgeous!
#94 Q-Pid - another one I want to see for the costumes, as well as Worf's classic quote "I am NOT a merry man." Q transports Picard and company to Sherwood Forest; as Robin Hood, the captain must rescue Maid Marian (Vash).
#118 Cause and Effect - I have GOT to see how this one ends! The crew begins to experience deja vu as they keep being destroyed over and over in a time warp...Doctor Crusher begins to suspect, when--my video runs out! I'd taped it while I slept, and it hit the end halfway through the episode. (aargh!) I'm also interested in seeing it again from the standpoint of a communications student; they had to film (and show) the same scenes over and over again, and keep it interesting, which I am told the director (Frakes) managed to pull off.

The Worst:
#171 Genesis - I didn't like it when I read about it, and it only went downhill from there. Picard and Data return to the Enterprise to find everyone de-evolving, and they must stop the disease before it's too late. The whole evolution thing irked me, and though some of it was well done, the basis of the episode was awful. It was great up until when Picard and Data returned, but the next 4 acts stunk. Please tell me how we would devolve into different species! On the up-side, it was a Barclay episode, and I think he's cool (especially after *Voyager*'s "Pathfinder"). And I like Spot.

Other thoughts:
#55 The Enemy - I like the very Star Trek-ian ending; Worf was the only compatible blood donor for a mortally wounded Romulan, but his sense of honor and his loathing for the race cause him to resist. The audience, of course, expects him to come around at the last moment, but he doesn't; he lets the Romulan die. After his initial (strong) reaction, Dorn (Worf) decided he liked the idea; his character had been becoming too human, and this was something that showed that he was different. It's his favorite episode, despite his small part in it (the A-plot was about Geordi and another Romulan).
#87 Devil's Due - a premise from the aborted series, Picard must prove that a woman claiming to be the devil isn't; if she is who she claims to be, she has according to an ancient contract the rights to a certain planet, which includes the orbiting Enterprise. Not five stars, but a very fun episode.
#89 First Contact - I liked how they took the woman scientist with them in the end (hey guys, come pick me up, too!). It can't be a favorite though because of Riker's actions with that awful nurse.


The Movies
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country - the enterprise is sent to begin peace talks with the Klingons (to the best of my memory). My favorite scene is the dinner aboard the Enterprise-whatever-the-letter-is. Although the Klingon is wrong as to the meaning of that Shakespear line (Hamlet is talking about death, not the future), I really would like to hear it "in its original Klingon," and I liked the "we're a long way from Federation headquarters" idea when they pulled out the alcohol. :)
*Star Trek IX: Insurrection - Although I thought the other two "Next-Gen" movies were OK (especially the character named after me in "First Contact"!), I really didn't think they were anything special. I preferred the story-line of "Insurrection." Maybe that's because I read it before the movie came out (I'll never read spoilers again, but this time it was OK), and I could not only follow along more easily and feel smart when I noticed changes in the final version, but I also knew when to close my eyes to avoid the face-lifting-to-death of that admiral. I also appreciated the lines Jean-Luc had in his arguments with the admiral - "How many people does it take before it becomes wrong?" - and the bits of humor added in. They really lightened and (in my opinion) helped the movie. *Mamba*!
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
#??? Duet - Kira springs to action when a man who appears to be a mass-murdering war criminal shows up on DS9. It turns out that it's really his underling with a face lift; he claimed to be Gul Darheel to martyr himself and force the Cardassian government to admit its fault in the Bajoran occupation. When Kira discovers his supposed identity, she is upset, to put it lightly; when she finds out who he truly is, she begins to realize that his entire race can't be judged on the actions or a few, or even of many. The end is tragic - as she escorts the pardoned Cardassian to his transport, he is stabbed in the back by another bitter Bajoran. Kira asks him why he did it and he replies that Cardassians are all the same and deserve death. She realizes that this used to be her attitude, but now she responds "No, they're not."
#??? Paradise - Sisko and O'Brien stumble across a federation colony founded by a group that crashed 10 years ago. It turns out the leader planned the crash - as well as the "atmosphere" that makes technology worthless - to prove her theories about the evils of technology and how much better life is without it. And she will go to any lengths to keep her colony the way it is. Recently, I've come to think she could be right - Tolkien would certainly have taken her view point, though he certainly wouldn't have forced it on anyone.
#??? Crossover - Kira and Bashir find themselves in the mirror universe first visited in TOS, where humans are slaves, thanks to Kirk's well-intentioned meddling. I liked it for the costumes Kira wore and for getting to see everyone acting like different people. Very fun, as long as you can ignore the absurdity of everyone still being born despite such huge differences (apparently their great-grandparents all survived the rebellion and met each other, etc?)
#??? House of Quark - Quark finds himself married to the widow of a Klingon that dies in his bar. I liked the scene where he faced down the Klingon who had been destroying her household; an honorable Ferengi? Yep, looks like he out-honorable-ed the Klingon!
#???The Quickening - Like Who Watches the Watchers, I don't necessarily agree with Star Trek's view on the issues at hand. However, I like the fact that the episode makes me think. The Defiant comes across a civilization which the Dominion infected with a virus that eventually "quickens" into a horrible disease for which there is no cure. When they quicken, a person has a feast, then committs suicide. Bashir is appaled by the Dr. Kvorkian of the society, and tries to develop a cure. His staunchest supporter, a pregnant widow, suffers through the disease which his medicines cannot cure, to live to hold her healthy baby. It turns out Bashir's concoction works as a vaccine - which can help only the unborn - and not a cure. Hope is born anew on the planet, and Kvorkian happily takes on the job of administering it to expectant mothers, proving that he's not such a bad guy after all. Thankfully (in my POV) Bashir doesn't ever come to agree with his practice of euthenasia. The episode made me think a lot about my views on the sanctity of life, but I decided that a Star Trek scenario is just the same as the normal one here on earth; we're almost all going to be close to death someday (unless we go suddenly in an accident or such), and I think almost everyone wishes at some point that they could just end it all right away. But I maintain that it's not for us to decide. If we start that now, it will lead down the slippery slope to killing elderly who are merely a financial burden or who are just unwanted by their families. Legallized abortion is already leading to debates about killing children after birth (they ARE killed partially-birthed), and euthenasia of any sort would follow suit.
#??? Meridian - DS9 does "Brigadoon." Dax falls for a man on a planet that shifts out of our universe and only resurfaces every 70 or 80(?) years. This is the first DS9 episode I ever saw, I guess in its first run, long before I began to watch regularly. I thought that everyone lived in those tiny Defiant quarters ;) Of course, unlike the movie, she can't stay with her man at the end.
#??? Through the Looking Glass - Sisko and friends visit the mirror universe to free the human race from slavery.
#??? Past Tense, Parts I & II - Sisko, Bashir and Dax are thrown back into our future, right before the pivotal Bell Riots. They accidentally alter the time line, and must fix things before history re-writes itself. I'd hate to think that our future will look like this, but it's scarily accurate as far as we can see with our three-dimensional vision.
#??? Little Green Men - Quark, Rom and Nog are thrown back to 1947, crash-landing on a military base in - you guessed it - Roswell. A very fun episode.
*#??? Children of Time - The crew of the Defiant land on a gamma-quad planet to find it populated with their descendants. They are (were?) fated to hit a temporal-something-or-other on their way off the planet and crash 200 years in the past. It is a beautiful show, and also the one in which my O/K tendancies got their first satisfaction - the Odo from the planet tells Kira of his feelings for her. The only thing I didn't like was the last scene. The crew, touched by their descendants, had decided to repeat history, only to have the auto-pilot take them out of harms' way. Everyone on the planet vanished - ceased to exist (I still get teary-eyed when I watch it). In the last scene, Odo tells Kira that his alternate from the planet changed the controls and killed all those people to save her life (she was to die soon after the crash). You knew they were going to escape, but that Odo did it...! :( All in all, however, it's a wonderful episode.
#??? Honor Among Theives - O'Brien goes undercover to infiltrate the Orion Syndicate, but he finds himself getting attached to the man he must betray. Unlike Ensign Ro in Preemptive Strike, he makes the "right" decision, but it's SO hard.
#??? In the Pale Moonlight - The road to hell is paved with good intentions. My reaction to this show was "Woah!" Sisko recruits Garak to help Starfleet get the Romulans into the war, and it goes farther - maybe - than he meant it to. It opens with him recording a log entry about the last few weeks, which is when the bulk of the story takes place, and I think the hardest-hitting part is at the end, when he says, "Computer, delete the entire log entry." Ouch. It's his and his alone to bear on his conscience.
#??? His Way - Odo takes lessons on the finer points of romance from Vic Fontaine, a lounge singer in a holosuite program. I loved just about everything in this episode - the music, especially. (James Daren, the actor who played Vic, has an album out in honor of his work on DS9, which started with the episode. It's called "This One's From the Heart," and is pretty good.) It was also great for the O/K-er in me that had been waiting since "Children of Time" for their first kiss. :) Read my re-write of the lyrics (which has nothing to do with the show) of the song that a hologram played by Nana sings.
#??? Valient - Jake and Nog are rescued by a crew of elite Starfleet cadets who are trapped behind enemy lines; the leader of the crew reminds me of the captain of the Equinox in Voyager - he will do whatever he has to to accomplish his mission. Jake denounces them, while Nog joins up. DS9 does Lord of the Flies.

Like to see:
#??? In The Hands of the Prophets - I want to see this one because it was referred to extensively and described in detail in "Captain's Logs," my main ST refernece book. I know the story so well, now I want to what the guest stars look like and such
#??? Shodowplay - Dax and Odo try to save a civilization that turns out to be entirely holographic. Odo forms a bond with a little girl, revealing his softer side. This episode sounds charming.
#??? Our Man Bashir - The senior staff is accidentally transported into one of the doctor's holodeck programs, and Bashir and Garak have to finish the 20th-century spy novel to get the our safely. Sounds like fun; I especially like the holosuites. Wish I had one!
#??? Shattered Mirror - Jake is kidnapped to the mirror universe set up in TOS and continued earlier in DS9.
#???-??? The Entire 8-episode arc from the end of the series - I missed it all, and when I saw a re-run When It Rains, about 4 from the end, I didn't even recognize half of the characters!


Star Trek: Voyager
Initiating
#128 Resistance - Janeway is mistaken for the daughter of a confused old man on an away mission, and must help him break his wife out of prison to rescue the rest of her away team. It has a very sad ending.
#135 Investigations - the episode that made me love Paris (no, not like that). The reformed Leutenant has been acting up of late; in this episode he decides to leave the ship. It turns out to be a plan to expose a spy; after the guilty party is found and suffers the name-not-in-credits obligatory death, Tom returns to the ship and is his old new self again.
#141 Resolutions - Chakotay and Janeway, infected with a disease that is only dormant when they are within the host planet's atmosphere, are left behind. Chakotay tells his famous Angry Warrior tale, telling Janeway that he will love and serve her forever. *sniff, sniff* As she finally begins to accept that they're stuck there permanently, Voyager returns with a cure. Of course. Somebody shoot Kim and Tuvok, please!
#147 The Chute - TPTB give Tom & Harry an excuse to go postal, and they almost do. As they spend some male bonding time in prison, Janeway comes to the rescue with Betsy. Very powerful performances by Wang and Robbie.
#150&151 Future's End, Parts I & II - Janeway has to stop a 1997 man from exploiting a 29th century vessel he found. While I agree with her that temporal stuff gives me headaches, I liked the other contemporary characters.
#152 Warlord - I love Jennifer Lein in this episode! Kes gets her body hijacked by a not-so-nice guy whose most recent body is dying. The actress gets to do a character TOTALLY unlike her usual one, and plot-wise, the struggle in Kes' mind between her consciesness and the usurper's is fascinating.
#153 The Q and the Grey - "I want you to have my child." Not a line Janeway gets every day, and certainly not from a Q. I just really like seeing Mulgrew and DeLancie - real life friends - interact.
#154 Macrocosm - I suppose I liked this one because I was in AP Biology that year; a macrovirus infects everybody and Janeway has to save the ship in her tank top. GREAT graphics with the viruses that were practically as big as Kes.
#157 Blood Fever - Star Trek and abstinence. No, I didn't just write a paradox; the universe will not collapse. It actually happens. B'Elanna catches blood fever from a Vulcan in heat and tries to get Paris to fix it for her. He refuses (you go, boy!), because he knows it'll ruin their relationship of mutual respect. I was shocked and amazed. If I didn't like Tom Paris by this point (which I did), I would have needed no further evidence. Please write more like this!
#167 Worst Case Scenario - Tom and Tuvok try their hand at holoprograming, with dangerous results. Seska attempts revenge from beyond the grave - and almost gets it. I like the whole holodeck idea (if I were in "Farenheight 451", I would be the wife); it's fun to watch Tom play along with the program.
#171 Nemesis - Chakotay is recruited for an alien army when his shuttle is shot down, and is brainwashed to hate the other side, who just happen to be the people Janeway contacts to help locate him. Which side is telling the truth about the other? It would seem Janeway chose the right people - when they say the others are evil, they don't use holograms or mess with your mind. Chakotay says at the end, "I wish it were as easy to stop hating as it is to start." Powerful performance by Beltran.
#186&187 The Killing Game, Parts I & II - OK, so the only reasons I really liked it were the singing, the holodeck, the time period, and the fact that they effectively used Dawson's real-life pregnancy after weeks of hiding it beneath a smock. The plot was only OK, but those other elements were great.
#191 Living Witness - Doc's backup is uncovered by a planet that was impacted by Voyager - 400 years after the incident. He finds out how well history keeps the facts straight (who knew that the Prime Directive said to use force if words don't work?), and helps set the co-existing races on the right path. After a couple more centuries, he heads for Earth to check on everyone's great-great-great......grandkids.
#917 (don't ask, I don't have a clue why they changed the numbering system) 11:59 - the millenium episode (though it takes place on the REAL millenium's eve, Dec. 2000). The senior staff discusses their ancestors, and we see Janeway's not-so-famous great-something-grandmother, Shannon O'Donnell, meet Mr. Janeway. (Boy, Shannon sure looks a lot like Katherine for such a distant relation!)

Would like to see: (I didn't have access to UPN after high school, so I missed most of the last couple years of the series. These are ones that I've liked after reading Jim Wright's thorough reviews.)
#182 Message in a Bottle - After four long years, Voyager makes contact with the Federation. But to do so, Doc must be sent clear there through an alien communication system and then save the Federation's newest toy from hijackers. He must also put up with the neewest EMH. I would pay dearly to see this episode.
#902 Thirty Days - Tom finds a good cause, refuses to give it up, and gets demoted. Sounds like a great episode as he does some serious introspection and drafts a letter to his dad.
#916 Someone to Watch Over Me - Seven's first date, where the Doctor discovers he is in love with her. *sigh* :) Music again, too.
#930 Pathfinder - Meanwhile, back in the Alpha Quad... Barclay and Troi costar with Tom's dad, as they attempt to make contact with Voyager - without losing contact with Barclay's grip on reality. Another chance for the cast to act differently as Barclay interacts with a holoprogram of them that he's created for himself.
#931&937 Fair Haven & Spirit Folk - the latest holo-outing; Tom and Harry program an early 20th-century Ireland, and everyone enjoys the deversion. By now you know how much I like holodecks. I'm neutral on the whole Janeway-Michael thing (though a roll in the hay with ANYONE is going a bit far, I'm glad she's taken advantage of the opportunity to have a romantic relationship with SOMEONE). And please do remember, if you get mad over their risking lives to save the program, that the Voyager characters aren't real either, so caring about their lives is just as pointless. :) Friendly reminder. (And caring about Janeway's love life is just as bad, I s'pose!)
#938 Ashes to Ashes - Jim Wright called it the textbook definition of a Mary Sue, and I would have to agree. An ensign shows up and dazzles the crew, making friends with Janeway and something more with Harry. The only problem - she was killed a few years ago, and her body re-animated by a culture that procreates in that way. They lay claim her, and she finds she's changed so much that she has trouble fitting in on Voyager, so like all guest stars, she leaves. Poor Harry.


Fan Fic
From Me to Q - by Julia Houston
Q as Christ? Not really, but there's a certain bit of symbolism here. The sequel is even better!
--Q Music - by Julia Houston
I love it, especially for the parts that most surprised (the main character is a Christian, and likes the Chronicles of Narnia just as much as I do). Also, I've read it at least four times now, and every time it makes me laugh again and brightens my day.
Over the Edge - by Annita K. Smith
Following the events of "Blood Fever," a misunderstanding brings Tom's life crashing down around him.
Wart - by Catherine Weller
A war orphan is discovered on DS9.
--Broken, I'm trying to find them, wish me luck!--
A Rose By Any Other Name - by Heather Romberg
In this alternate ending to Sacrifice of the Angels. Odo saves the station but dies in the process. Or does he?
Cracks in the Wall - by The P/T Collective (a round robin story, copyright 1996)
Everyone's favorite Leutenants (well, he was one when this story was written) are captured by the Borg -- sort of.
Rest and Relaxation - by Kris Schuler
After weeks of over-work, B'Elanna and Tom are ordered to take some time off - together.
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