Much like Doctor Who, the longevity of Star
Trek has allowed much iteration with many stories, not only on TV, film, and
fan made shows on the internet, but in novels as well. While Doctor Who waited until it was close to
thirty years old before allowing original novels to be released, Star Trek has been giving us new (and
non-conical) tales almost since the show ended its run back in 1969. And since
1979, there has been one continuous run of original novels.
But Star Trek has a uniqueness to it that has allowed novelists to continue
to release new adventures. What a lot of writers have done is take minor elements
(and major ones) within the continuity of the franchise and go off in tangents
both good and bad. They’ve been able to expand minor characters (both guest
casts and other crew members who did get names) and give them a full back-story
–whether you care or not.
Greg Cox’s Legacies: Captain to Captain is designed to tie-into the fiftieth
anniversary of Star
Trek: The Original Series, and is the opening story in a new
trilogy that stretches from the earliest years of the Starship Enterprise under Captain Robert
April to Captain Kirk’s historic five-year-mission, as well as one universe to
another. Hidden aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise is a
secret that has been passed from captain to captain, from Robert April to
Christopher Pike to James T. Kirk. Now the return of the enigmatic woman once
known as Number One has brought that secret to light, and Kirk and his crew
must risk everything to finish a mission that began with April so many years
ago. Nearly two decades earlier, April and his crew first visited the planet
Usilde, where they found both tragedy and a thorny moral dilemma. Today, the
legacy of that fateful occasion will compel Kirk to embark on a risky voyage
back to that forbidden world—which is now deep in territory claimed by the
Klingon Empire!
As always, the novels are not “official”
Star Trek. But Cox, who has written
a number of other titles in the franchise including the duology Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh,
does a fair job of exploring the unmade TV years of Captain April and Captain
Pike (beyond the TV series first pilot) along with giving us a look into the
Number One character that vanished in the re-writes the series went through
when NBC gave Star Trek a second
chance. In Cox’s tale, we learn that Number One is Illyrian who goes by the
name Una. The moniker of “Number One” comes from the fact that she was a high
achiever in everything she did, not only on her home planet, but in her rise
through Starfleet.
Of course, we get references of
Kirk era stories, in particular Mirror, Mirror (even though the
Captain and crew are more supporting characters here) and that mysterious Tantalus
Device that the alternate Kirk used, which connects the
plot along. Cox does spend an insufferable amount of time giving us minute detail
about the landing party and them walking the six
kilometers (and if Usildar is a rainforest, why do the original inhabitants of
the planet need misters? They’re only beneficial in areas like a desert where
there is low humidity) which, sadly, enabled me to skip a number of pages (and a reason I read it so fast -though having the day off from work helped). Then
there is Una’s plan to rescue her fellow crew members, which is nearly the same
plan as Older Captain Janeway from Star
Trek: Voyagers series finale.
It’s an okay
book, but it is a reminder to me why I eventually gave up trying to read these
them. Part of it, of course, there are so many novels, not only in TOS line, but The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Enterprise (but since I dislike the
last two, I’ve never taken the time to read those spin-off novels).
I have so
much other stuff I want to read that I cannot lock myself into one series, one
genre anymore.
The other
part of my issues with them is that these tales are always (well it seems) connected
to past episode stories; at least when Bantam was releasing titles back in the
early 1970s, they writers tried to do original science fiction stories. Now everyone
seems to have its roots in previous television episodes.
I suppose
there is some logic to that. Online fan shows, in particular New Voyages and Continues, are setting their stories within TOS TV run and usually feature some sort of continuation of tales
started there. It’s comforting and familiar, I guess, to those old school fans.
But current Star Trek, in whatever form
it comes in now, seems more concerned with rehashing previous episodes than
actually telling a great science fiction story with a moral dilemma.
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